Joust is the perfect arcade game. Discuss.
p.s. can anyone point me to a Joust cabinet in the greater Delaware area?
I basically killed my wrist on Joust for the 2600. I spent a lot of quarters in the arcades as well. For its era, at least, Joust was top form. And very portable.
Lots of friendships ended because of Joust. Worth it.
First video game to have a “Flap” button?
Itds basically 2x Flappy Bird in an open arena
I played Glypha, a Joust clone on the Mac.
Apparently now one can emulate a classic Mac in one’s Web browser and run it directly.
Not remotely the same genre, but my vote for perfect arcade game is Time Crisis 2.
I wouldn’t call Joust the perfect arcade game, because there are many categories of arcade games that Joust does not fit into. However, Joust is an exceptional game and one that certainly is one of my favorites.
If you want an arcade cabinet but dont have the space, I recommend cannibalizing a 3/4 cabinet from Arcade1Up. You can get a decal set for any cabinet or custom design and put any internals and controls you need. Its a bit smaller than the full size cabinet, but perfect for not taking up a large footprint in the home.
Joust was an extreme form of frustration and victory for me as a kid
Bastard of a game. Every loss is horrible.
I know people are split on this, but from my perspective, Joust is and will always be better than Balloon Fight.
Notably, the NES port of Joust was programmed by future Nintendo president Satoru Iwata. The game was developed in two months, for release in September 1983, but was ultimately shelved. With his Joust seemingly not happening, Iwata developed Balloon Fight instead, which saw release in 1985. Eventually, his Joust was also released, in 1987. For what it’s worth, I love them both.
Man, loved Balloon Fight. I remember many Saturday nights where me and my sis were allowed on the Micro Genius (bootleg NES with lots of games) for an hour.
That’s so cool. It’s crazy how many bootleg NES/Famicoms there were targeting all the markets Nintendo couldn’t or wouldn’t sell them. Did you know they were NES games as a kid, or were they just Micro Genius games to you?