River Raid
Description official descriptions
River Raid is a vertically scrolling action game. You fly a jet up a river in an attempt to destroy bridges that are vital to the enemy. The river is heavily guarded, however, with balloons, ships, choppers, and enemy aircraft trying to stop you. Along the way, you will need to fly over fuel stations to refuel your jet and keep flying.
The plane is armed with a cannon with unlimited ammo. It can be used to destroy enemy vehicles and bridges, but a careless player can accidentally destroy a fuel station. Colliding with the riverbanks or with the enemy aircraft destroys your plane and makes you lose a life.
Spellings
- リバーレイド - Japanese spelling
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Credits (Atari 2600 version)
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 87% (based on 19 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.7 out of 5 (based on 124 ratings with 4 reviews)
The Good
Everyone who was at least a bit in touch with gaming in 80's must know this game. Simple basic mechanics resulting in lot of fun and challenge. Regarding PC version, it's 16-color, there's PCjr/Tandy 3-way sound support and of course controller support, so everything you need for good arcading on almost Atari/Commodore level of quality.
The Bad
I'm not sure if it was only emulator issue (in both DOSBox and DOSBox-x) or it was also in original game, but game didn't have stable framerate. There were some slowdowns, then returned back to normal. It was always no matter what I tried, fast emulation, slow emulation, CPU type, cycles, etc.. This can affect playability a bit, especially in later harder levels.
The Bottom Line
I still think that 8-bit versions (with more fixed HW which was also more suited for arcades) were a little better, but this PC version is really close! Solid 4*!
PC Booter · by Vladimir Dienes · 2023
An incredible game - one of the best ever
The Good
EVERYTHING.
To me, the thing that really did it for me with River Raid was the amazing control. The game actually responded in the 2600 version at home the way that other shooters --like Defender -- responded in the arcade. This made the game a huge hit with just about everyone I know.
The graphics were good for the 2600, the refueler twist on the standard shooter, and the awesome hit detection are just a few of the things I'd mention if I were going to list everything good, but what's the point? Everything about the game was so tight, so perfect, that going on and on about what I like would be useless.
Everyone will enjoy playing this game.
The Bad
I liked everything.
The Bottom Line
If you haven't played this game, you should find a way to play it. It's easy to pick up and play for gamers of all skill levels. It is one of the best games ever on the 2600, and it deserves to be played by everyone. You will love it.
Atari 2600 · by MagFram (33) · 2005
The Good
River Raid is, if you aren't acquainted to it, one of the most famous and highest recommended games for the Atari 2600. However, my review is about the Atari 8-bit version, so I invite you to read my impressions on how it stands.
The game itself is very simple. From a top-view perspective, you are in control of a plane and fly through a river with enemies on it. You have unlimited ammo, and a fuel gauge. Your goal is to move forward, destroy enemies, and keeping yourself with enough fuel to stay on air.
Despite as plain it may sound next to current generation video games (2015), this is the very beauty of River Raid. I would like to call it more a survival game, rather than a shoot them up. Here are no power ups; your weapon serves its purpose well. You also don't have to destroy every enemy on sight, in fact on even stages - where the river splits in two sides - you can't; nor you have to complete every stage in certain amount of time. You don't even have to defeat a mighty, formidable boss to advance to the next level, as a matter of fact with just destroying bridges - even from far away - you'll do so. However, your fuel will unavoidably deplete, and just because you can fill it up by flying through air carriers, sometimes it won't be possible. The enemies will eventually make you notice seriously that you are outnumbered, and then, you will lose.
The early stages are very easy, and will allow a fair learning curve, so most players won't feel frustrated about River Raid. However, it's more likely that many will come back to do better than before.
The Bad
The graphics are very simple and to some, it may reflect how good or bad this game has aged. The colors are bright and aren't what most people would consider the standard for a war game - darker, in my opinion-. However, one has to be aware of the time it was created, and personally I have a very hard time trying to find anything bad on it.
Nevertheless, being this a version ported to a more powerful machine as the original, one could expect it had an upgrade - but fortunately, besides a few cosmetic changes, it doesn't.
The Bottom Line
River Raid is, to modern shooter games, like an early chariot wheel next to a current Formula 1 wheel. It can't have the same performance, but it's full of class. I recommend this game to anyone with an Atari 8 bit computer, and it's not even hard to get. If you are in doubt, give at least a try, there are many places online to test drive it.
Atari 8-bit · by jose vargas (22) · 2015
Trivia
German index
With this game, the German BPjS (Federal Examination Office for Youth-Endangering Publications) expanded into the area of computer games. Put on the German index for being, among other things, a "para-military training game for kids" on December 19, 1984. For about 18 years, this game was not just an adult only game in Germany, but it was also illegal to advertise for it and therefore (as advertise also means the pure presence on a store's shelf) it could only bought per request. However, it was eventually de-indexed by the BPjS in January 2003 after a verification request by Activision. Otherwise it would be on the index until December 2009 (25 year statute of limitations law appendix; originally, it wouldn't be de-indexed automatically).
Inspiration
River Raid was based on the arcade game Scramble; it was made into a vertically scrolling game as this allowed for smoother scrolling.
Programmer Bonus
The original Atari 2600 version sold very well. As a result the game's programmer Carol Shaw was awarded a cash bonus equivalent to her annual salary.
River Raider Patch
Players who were able to rack up 15,000 points or higher were eligible to receive the "River Raiders" patch from Activision if they sent in a screenshot to the company. Here is a picture of that patch at AtariAge.
Awards
- Flux Magazine
- April 1995 (Issue #4) - #87 in Top 100 Video Games of All-Time* Retro Gamer Magazine
- January 2008 (Issue 46) - #3 in the “Top 25 Atari 2600” Games poll* Zzap!
- May 1985 (Issue 1) - #50 'It's the Zzap! 64 Top 64!'
Information also contributed by Big John WV, PCGamer77, and Xoleras
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Servo.
Commodore 64, ColecoVision, Intellivision added by PCGamer77. Atari 5200 added by RKL. Windows, Xbox 360 added by Alaka. BREW added by Kabushi. Atari 8-bit added by Terok Nor.
Additional contributors: Guy Chapman, Alaka, formercontrib, LepricahnsGold, FatherJack, ZeTomes, robMSX, 64er.
Game added August 10, 2002. Last modified June 3, 2024.