Knights in Armor (lost arcade game; 1976): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Really hope this doesn't get taken down, this is all I can work with for the time being.)
 
(Added new section.)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
}}
'''''Knights in Armor''''' was an arcade game developed by the company  Project Support Engineering, or "PSE" for short. There is only one known owner of a cabinet named "Seth Soffer", who runs a museum of various arcade machines from the 70's called "Arcade 72". The game runs on discrete logic hardware that would be difficult to emulate, but the graphics are possibly stored on a ROM chip which can be dumped. The game's graphics are gray monochrome but displayed on a green monochrome screen.
'''''Knights in Armor''''' was an arcade game developed by the company  "Project Support Engineering", or "PSE" for short. There is only one known owner of a cabinet named "Seth Soffer", who runs a museum of various arcade machines from the 70's called "Arcade 72". The game runs on discrete logic hardware that would be difficult to emulate, but the graphics are possibly stored on a ROM chip which can be dumped. The game's graphics are gray monochrome but are displayed on a green monochrome screen.
 
The game's manufacturer "Project Support Engineering" seemed to have dissolved before 1980, making information very scarce to find.


==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
The game has 2 players in a jousting match, a player must rotate their lance in the right angle to hit their opponent before the horses start moving. For such simplistic gameplay, this is technically considered the first ever game about martial arts, with [https://lostmediawiki.com/Heavyweight_Champ_(lost_SEGA_arcade_boxing_game;_1976) Heavyweight Champ] debuting in October of the same year.
The game has 2 players in a jousting match, a player must rotate their lance in the right angle to hit their opponent before the horses start moving. For such simplistic gameplay, this is technically considered the first ever game about martial arts, with [[Heavyweight Champ (lost SEGA arcade boxing game; 1976)|Heavyweight Champ]] debuting in October of the same year. The game according to the flyer had a mechanic that displayed an error message when a coin/token had gotten lodged in the slot, as well as a digital score display (Which was considered new at the time).
 
==Availability==
It's unclear how many units were sold or how common it was in arcades. Other than Arcade 72 having a machine in their museum there are no other unknown whereabouts of any other copies.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Latest revision as of 06:53, 11 September 2024

KiAarcade.jpg

Photo of arcade cabinet.

Status: Lost

Knights in Armor was an arcade game developed by the company "Project Support Engineering", or "PSE" for short. There is only one known owner of a cabinet named "Seth Soffer", who runs a museum of various arcade machines from the 70's called "Arcade 72". The game runs on discrete logic hardware that would be difficult to emulate, but the graphics are possibly stored on a ROM chip which can be dumped. The game's graphics are gray monochrome but are displayed on a green monochrome screen.

The game's manufacturer "Project Support Engineering" seemed to have dissolved before 1980, making information very scarce to find.

Gameplay

The game has 2 players in a jousting match, a player must rotate their lance in the right angle to hit their opponent before the horses start moving. For such simplistic gameplay, this is technically considered the first ever game about martial arts, with Heavyweight Champ debuting in October of the same year. The game according to the flyer had a mechanic that displayed an error message when a coin/token had gotten lodged in the slot, as well as a digital score display (Which was considered new at the time).

Availability

It's unclear how many units were sold or how common it was in arcades. Other than Arcade 72 having a machine in their museum there are no other unknown whereabouts of any other copies.

Gallery

The footage by the owner

External Link

Sources