Category:Dig Dug: Difference between revisions

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'''Dig Dug''' is a series of three maze arcade games that were released by [[Namco]] between [[1982]] and [[1996]]. They all focus on a vegetable gardener named Taizo Hori (whose name is a pun on that Japanese phrase "Horitai zo", lit. "I want to dig"). The first game in the series runs on Namco's [[Galaga]] hardware (three Zilog Z80 microprocessors, run at 3.125 MHz), the second runs on their [[Super Pac-Man]] hardware (two Motorola M6809 microprocessors run at 1.536 MHz), and the third was released as part of the compilation [[Namco Classics Collection Vol. 2]].
'''Dig Dug''' is a series of three maze arcade games that were released by [[Namco]] between [[1982]] and [[1996]]. They all focus on a vegetable gardener named Taizo Hori (whose name is a pun on that Japanese phrase "Horitai zo", lit. "I want to dig"). The first game in the series runs on Namco's [[Galaga]] hardware (three Zilog Z80 microprocessors, run at 3.125 MHz), the second runs on their [[Super Pac-Man]] hardware (two Motorola M6809 microprocessors run at 1.536 MHz), and the third was released as part of the compilation [[Namco Classics Collection Vol. 2]].


*'''[[Dig Dug]]''' ([[1982]]): The original title in the series was the first game from Namco to be licensed to [[Atari|Atari Games]] for US manufacture and distribution, and featured a song that would only be heard as long as the main character was moving. The [[Galaxian]] flagship also made its third cameo on the fifteenth and sixteenth rounds, after [[Pac-Man]] ([[1980]]) and [[Galaga]] ([[1981]]).
* '''[[Dig Dug]]''' ([[1982]]): The original title in the series was the first game from Namco to be licensed to [[Atari|Atari Games]] for US manufacture and distribution, and featured a song that would only be heard as long as the main character was moving. The [[Galaxian]] flagship also made its third cameo on the fifteenth and sixteenth rounds, after [[Pac-Man]] ([[1980]]) and [[Galaga]] ([[1981]]).


*'''[[Dig Dug II]]''' ([[1985]]): The second title in the series was released directly by Namco and gifted Hori with a new weapon in the form of a jackhammer to drill on the fault lines in the islands. It also featured a pseudo-three-dimensional view, that Namco later re-used for [[Hopping Mappy]] ([[1986]]) - which was the first game from the company to allow scores not ending in "0".
* '''[[Dig Dug II]]''' ([[1985]]): The second title in the series was released directly by Namco and gifted Hori with a new weapon in the form of a jackhammer to drill on the fault lines in the islands. It also featured a pseudo-three-dimensional view, that Namco later re-used for [[Hopping Mappy]] ([[1986]]) - which was the first game from the company to allow scores not ending in "0".


*'''[[Dig Dug Arrangement]]''' ([[1996]]): The third and final title in the series was released as part of the compilation arcade game [[Namco Classics Collection Vol. 2]], along with a carbon copy of the original, and carbon copies and "Arrangement" versions, of [[Pac-Man]] and [[Rally-X]] (both [[1980]]). It may have relieved Hori of his jackhammer, but it also introduced eight new types of enemies, eleven new types of bonus vegetables, eighteen different types of powerups, and two different robotic bosses. A second player could also join in here as yellow-suited Hori.
* '''[[Dig Dug Arrangement]]''' ([[1996]]): The third and final title in the series was released as part of the compilation arcade game [[Namco Classics Collection Vol. 2]], along with a carbon copy of the original, and carbon copies and "Arrangement" versions, of [[Pac-Man]] and [[Rally-X]] (both [[1980]]). It may have relieved Hori of his jackhammer, but it also introduced eight new types of enemies, eleven new types of bonus vegetables, eighteen different types of powerups, and two different robotic bosses. A second player could also join in here as yellow-suited Hori.


*'''[[Mr. Driller]]''' ([[1999]]): This spin-off game was released towards the end of the 20th century, ran on Namco's System 12 hardware and featured Hori's young son Susumu in the title role.
* '''[[Mr. Driller]]''' ([[1999]]): This spin-off game was released towards the end of the 20th century, ran on Namco's System 12 hardware and featured Hori's young son Susumu in the title role.


{{Dig Dug}}
{{Dig Dug}}
[[Category:Atari Games]]
[[Category:Namco]]