Tapper

Reviewed by Jim Short

 

Issue 20

Mar/Apr 86

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Sega/US Gold
48K cassette £9.95
48K disk £14.95
1/2 players
Joystick

Sega's range of Atari computer games is gradually becoming available in this country thanks to US Gold. TAPPER is one of their new releases and, in this game, you play the part of a frenzied bartender whose job it is to serve a never ending flow of thirsty customers. You guide the bartender between the bartops, pressing the fire button to 'sling' sodas at the customers. The aim is to knock them back through the doors of the saloon (the customers, that is!) in an effort to clear the bar and progress to the next round of play. You must only serve one soda per customer, otherwise you lose one of your five allotted lives. Sometimes the customers will remain in the saloon and try to catch you out by slinging their empty glasses back at you. If you allow any of these to drop off the end of the bar you also lose a life.

After a set number of rounds you are required to tackle the bonus round. Here, the mysterious Soda Bandit shuffles five out of six soda cans on a solitary bartop and challenges you to choose the only unshaken one. If you guess correctly you gain 3000 bonus points. If you guess wrongly, however, all you get is a face full of soda!

The disk version of TAPPER features five different screens - Old West Saloon, Jock Bar, Punk Bar, Space Bar and, of course, the Bonus Round - but the cassette version has only three (the Punk and Space Bars are missing). There is a very good reason for this. The cassette version is really only the Rom version of the game transferred directly onto tape. In effect it's a 16K game but it still requires 48K as it retains the original Rom memory addresses.

I can thoroughly recommend the disk version of TAPPER. It's ridiculously simple to play and highly addictive into the bargain. The cassette version is okay, but lacks variety. One more thing - do not be fooled by the on-screen photos on the cassette inlay as these come from the arcade game and the graphics shown are much better than any computer version. Sega have gotten into a habit of displaying arcade screen-shots on their computer software and I, for one, don't approve. Apart from being misleading, it surely contravenes the Trades Description's Act in some way?

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