Bagman (video game)

Bagman
Arcade flyer featuring the titular character
Developer(s) Valadon Automation
Publisher(s) Valadon Automation
Platform(s) Arcade
Release 1982
Genre(s) Platform
Mode(s) Single player, Up to 2 players, alternating turns
Cabinet Vertical
CPU Z80
Sound AY8910, TMS5110
Display Raster, 224 x 256 pixels, 64 colors

Bagman is a platform arcade game released by Valadon Automation in 1982.[1][2] It was licensed to Stern for U.S. distribution the same year. In France and Japan, the game is titled Le Bagnard. Bagman was followed-up with Super Bagman in 1984.

Gameplay

The objective of the game is to maneuver the bagman through various mine shafts, picking up money bags and placing them in a wheelbarrow at the surface of the mine. The player must avoid pursuing guards, moving ore carts, and descending elevators. The player may temporarily stun the guards by striking them with a pickaxe or by dropping money bags on them when they are below the player on the same ladder. The player may move between the three screens which make up the level via shafts and on the surface.

Bagman is played using one 4-way joystick and one action button. The joystick is also used to jump out of the ore cart. The action button is used to perform the following tasks:

  1. Pick up and drop money bags
  2. Pick up and drop pickaxe
  3. Grab and release the ceiling beam to avoid the ore cart (this can be done while carrying a money bag)
  4. Placing a money bag in the wheelbarrow
  5. Pick up and drop the wheelbarrow

Points are scored for each horizontal step the player takes, for each money bag placed in the wheelbarrow, and for each guard stunned.

Legacy

Ocean Software released a clone for the Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum in 1984 titled Gilligan's Gold.[3]

In 2010 a French programmer reconstructed source code from the game to port it to modern platforms.[4]

References

  1. Bagman at the Killer List of Videogames
  2. "En Saône-et-Loire, sur les traces des premiers jeux vidéo français" [In Saône-et-Loire, on the tracks of the first French video games]. Le Monde.fr (in French). Retrieved 2018-02-15.
  3. Gilligan's Gold at SpectrumComputing.co.uk
  4. bagman on jotd.pagesperso-orange.fr
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