Home > Arcade Game, Game, Tech, toys > Nitroball

Nitroball

July 23rd, 2009

For the past few days I’ve been glued to my arcade machine, unable and unwilling to tear myself away for any great length of time.  I’ve found myself addicted to a game I had somehow managed to miss during my arcade-hopping years in the late 80′s to early 90′s.  Lost in a shuffle of neon lights, Vegas-style low-shag high-traffic carpeting, change machines, and questionable chain smoking characters lurking behind glass counters, eyeing the kids with malicious intent was this game that I had only, in these recent days, come to discover and absolutely embrace.

This game goes by the name Nitroball, and it currently owns my soul.

Nitroball can best be described as a cross between Smash TV and NFL Football, set inside a gigantic pinball machine.  I know how funky that sounds (heck, the logistics and costs of constructing such a massive pinball machine located at the edge of space in and of itself boggles the mind), and that’s part of the appeal of this game.  In Nitroball, you play the part of a “soldier” in a futuristic game show, and your goal is simple; kill the baddies and grab the prizes.  Thin on plot, but interesting gameplay and unusual visuals keeps you pumping in quarter after quarter.

Nitroball

Not much thought went into the design of the tease screen...

Apparently

Apparently this game takes place inside a huge pinball machine floating at the edge of space

At

You play Gary, an ex-Navy "sregeant" (whatever that is). At over 6' and weighing in at a gangly 177lbs, I don't think our hero stands much of a chance against the upcoming onslaught.

bababa

Look at the kind of crap Gary has to contend with: spelling competitions, crazed overall-wearing ducks, villains in purple leisure suits, and autonomous robots showering the field with high explosives.

Mini

Mini-boss time!

Laying waste to

Laying waste to "Ghost Town"

Not sure

Ghosts, and zombies, and truckers...oh my!

battle field

It's nice to see that, in the distant future, dual cassette tape decks are considered "big prizes"

You can keep your XBoxes, your PS3s, and your newfangled Atari 5200s.  I’m keeping it real, rocking the original games that made going to the arcades so much fun back in the day…

Bookmark and Share

Arcade Game, Game, Tech, toys , ,

  1. July 23rd, 2009 at 05:40 | #1

    Nice one! Man this is getting me all excited to relive my emulator playing days all over again.

  2. July 23rd, 2009 at 12:35 | #2

    Arcade games are fun and as long as you enjoy them, that’s all that matters. It’s a shame that many Arcade galleries have gone out of business within the last 15-20 years.

    I do like Xbox but no longer have access to one. I wrote a Super Mario Bros. article earlier this year over on Associated Content and now I want a Super Mario Bros. game but not on the Wii or Xbox or whatever they may have it on now. I want a Super Nintendo! Those were fun gaming consoles that with Mortal Combat, Street Fighter and such. I played Tekken once on Xbox and it was very entertaining.

  3. July 23rd, 2009 at 12:50 | #3

    I have to admit that I do own a 360 and a PS3, but they don’t get nearly the amount of game time as my MAME arcade machine does. It’s all about the game play and less about the graphics that makes a game fun.

    Heck, I’m currently working my way through Zork (just crossed the rainbow bridge and accessed the Land of the Dead this afternoon). Let me tell ya, the old text adventures are more entertaining than some of the current-Gen console games available today.

    And I agree, Nicole. The old console games have a great vibe to ‘em! :-)

  1. No trackbacks yet.