Space Taxi
Space Taxi | |
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Developer(s) | Muse Software |
Publisher(s) | Muse Software |
Programmer(s) | John F. Kutcher[1] |
Composer(s) | Silas S. Warner |
Platform(s) | Commodore 64 |
Release | 1984 |
Genre(s) | Action |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Space Taxi is an action game for the Commodore 64 written by John Kutcher and published by Muse Software in 1984.[1] It simulates a flying taxi controlled by thrusters. The game features sampled speech, including "Hey taxi!", "Pad one please" (and similar samples for different pads), "Thanks" and "Up please". These are said in a variety of voice pitches, creating the feeling of different taxi customers.
Gameplay
![](../I/m/SpaceTaxiScreenshotC64.jpg)
In addition to thrusters, the taxi has landing gear that can be switched on or off. Switching landing gear on disables the side thrusters, but landing without landing gear destroys the taxi. The taxi also crashes when colliding with the environment, landing with high velocity or not landing properly (i.e. having only one of the gear stands on the platform while having the other in midair).
There are 24 different levels, all in sequential order, and the player has to complete all of them.
In each level, there is a set of numbered platforms. At regular intervals, a customer materializes out of nowhere, on a randomly selected platform. The player has to fly their taxi to that platform, whereupon the customer will enter the taxi, saying which platform he wants to go to. When the player takes him to that platform, he will pay the taxi fee and tip based upon how fast the trip takes and the smoothness of the landing. After each numbered platform has been successfully visited, the next customer will say "Up please", whereupon the gate at the top of the level will open. Flying through the gate completes the level. One must also be careful not to land on or hit the customer with the taxi, not only because he will angrily yell "HEY!" and then disappear, before appearing somewhere else on the platform, but also deduct money from your total earned. This is increasingly difficult on smaller platforms where the platform will barely fit the customer and the taxi.
Each level features a different setting or theme (such as a treat-strewn candyland or a snowy winter landscape), and most have some special feature to hinder the player's job. Some of the features include a table tennis ball bouncing across the level, snowflakes falling from the sky, a series of radar masts interfering with the controls, or teleports that send the player to a random location.
The taxi also has a limited fuel supply. The fuel level resets at the end of each level, but on some of the more complicated screens it is necessary to refuel. This is accomplished by flying to a special platform marked with an "F" and containing a gas pump. The player must pay for fuel out of the money he has earned. Passengers do not make allowances for pitstops, and their tip will continue to decrease as the player tanks up. The taxi's fuel consumption is based upon the time spent in the air, not how much the thrusters are used, so if a player needs to get from one side of the screen to the other, it consumes less fuel (though is more dangerous) to accelerate halfway across the screen and then reverse thrust, than to use one small thrust to move slowly across the screen and occasional upward thrusts to maintain altitude.
After completing all levels, the player gets to a special "mystery level", in which the player is greeted with the message "Welcome to... MUSEWORLD" and three platforms, each with a figure relating to another Muse Software game: an ambulance representing Rescue Squad (1983, also John Kutcher), the soldier with Hakenkreuz for Castle Wolfenstein (1981, Silas S. Warner), and a shooting robot relating to RobotWar (1981, Silas S. Warner).
Levels
Name | # of pads | Special |
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Morning Shift | ||
1: Short -n- Sweet | 1 | - |
2: The Beach | 3 | - |
3: Skyscrapers | 5 | - |
4: Taxi Trainer | 9+F | - |
5: Beanstalk | 1-9 | Pads grow out of a beanstalk (it's risky but possible to finish this stage with just one pad) |
6: Taxi Pong | 3 | Ping-pong ball |
7: Teleports | 5 | Teleports between enclosed areas |
8: Puzzler | 5 | Switches to open and close doors |
Day Shift | ||
9: Crossfire | 7 | Two cannons fire bullets |
10: Shooting Stars | 5+F | Stars fall down from the sky |
11: Magnets | 5 | Magnets attract the taxi |
12: Black Hole | 5 | A black hole attracts the taxi |
13: Turbo-Charged Taxi | 9+F | Controls affect the taxi more |
14: Space Mines | 7+F | Invisible barriers between coloured mines |
15: Electroids | 1 | Moving electrical rays with small gaps |
16: Blizzard | 3 | Snowflakes fall down from the sky and wind blows the taxi sideways |
Night Shift | ||
17: Interference | 7+F | Radio masts interfere with the controls |
18: Taxi Maze | 1 | A maze |
19: The Switch | 5 | Controls are switched around |
20: Fast Break | 7+F | Invisible barrier only passable with great speed |
21: Rebound | 5 | Bullets change the taxi's direction on impact |
22: Shift-o-Rama | 7 | Barriers with gaps move in opposite directions |
23: Lasers | 3 | Laser rays constantly switch on and off |
24: On The Move | 7+F | Pads are constantly moving left and right |
Developmennt
Kutcher wrote Space Taxi while a freshman at Hopkins University.[2] The physics in the game were influenced by Lunar Lander.[2]
Legacy
Space Taxi was cloned several times for the Amiga, once keeping the original name and once as AirTaxi. A similar game on the PC was called Ugh!, where the player controls a caveman with a flying contraption. For Windows Phone a remake of the first eight levels was published in 2012 as Sketch Taxi.
Space Taxi 2, an authorized sequel to Space Taxi, was released by Twilight Games in 2004. It is no longer available
References
- 1 2 Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
- 1 2 Hewston, Alan. "Space Taxi the Interview – with John F. Kutcher Jr".
External links
- Space Taxi at Lemon 64
- Space Taxi can be played for free in the browser at the Internet Archive