Demon Attack
Description official descriptions
Demon Attack is an arcade action game with gameplay similar to Phoenix. You control a laser cannon at the bottom of the screen and need to destroy wave after wave of brightly colored demons. The demons bounce around the screen in bizarre patterns and try to destroy your cannon with bombs or lasers. When you shoot a demon, it will be replaced with another or will split into two smaller demons depending on which wave you are playing. When the required number of demons for the current round is finally destroyed, you can move on to the next, more difficult round.
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Credits (Atari 2600 version)
Designer |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 84% (based on 15 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.6 out of 5 (based on 99 ratings with 4 reviews)
Simplistic and unexciting, even by 1982 standards
The Good
The actual enemy craft are quite detailed sprites, and they vary as the game goes on.
The Bad
The gameplay is extremely repetitive, without anything close to an original idea.
The playing area doesn't cover the whole width of the screen, even though the borders aren't visually delimited, so it's all too easy to try to dodge a rain of bullets and find that you haven't got space to move.
After losing a life, you resume in the same place as before, without an invincibility period. As the baddies continue to fire while you're being regenerated, it's quite common to restart with a bullet about to hit you, meaning that you're almost certain to lose another life. In general it suffers from an old flaw - lots of extra lives, as an attempt to mask the fact that too many lives are lost arbitrarily and unfairly.
The Bottom Line
A rather pale Pheonix clone, with drab graphics and lots of gameplay frustrations. Your shots aim up the screen, attacking wave after wave of minions, some of which split when shot (the split ones drift down the screen towards you, dying if they hit the ground). It's surprising that this was released as late as it was.
Atari 2600 · by Martin Smith (81743) · 2004
Hypnotic and Zen like minimalistic shooter. A classic.
The Good
The movement of the enemy demons is rhythmic perfection. The simple sounds rising in pitch slowly raise your adrenaline through each wave. The box artwork by Imagic was fantastic compared to what Atari was putting out.
The Bad
I liked this game and had to buy it when it first came out. Not long after I got the chance to play the 8 bit computer version and loved it. It was a few years before I was able to afford the computer to play it on.
And the only quirky thing about the game is that you warp back in after getting shot at the exact same spot often right back into enemy fire.
The Bottom Line
Wave after wave of demon birds descending on you dropping bombs and lasers trying to blow you up. They are very elusive and hard to hit. Some warping in to take the place of ones you blow up until you destroy the last in each wave. At higher levels they split in two as they get hit and then dive bomb your shooter. Shoot the bottom demon last that way it won't split and ones above can't split either. Make it through a wave without getting hit and get an extra shooter. You will need them.
Atari 2600 · by gametrader (208) · 2005
A beautiful version of a fun action game
The Good
Bright, colorful graphics, and a variety of different-looking enemies.
Good use of sound (different for each wave of alien).
Good use of speech.
Fast action .
Uncomplicated game.
Two different stages.
The Bad
Single-player only.
Game gets repetitive after a while.
The Bottom Line
In "Super Demon Attack" you begin the battle on the surface of the moon. You must destroy five waves of aliens. The start out wider than they are tall, making them somewhat easier targets, then become taller than they are wide, making them more difficult to hit.
After five waves, you launch into space to take on the Demon Base. You must first destroy a wave of small defending space ships before taking on the demon itself. You then repeat the entire sequence.
The graphics are very colorful. Each wave of aliens includes several ships, and two are on screen at a time with differing color combinations. The speech is excellent, although not every version has speech.
TI-99/4A · by Andy Frueh (173) · 2016
Trivia
Lawsuit
In 1982 Atari sued Imagic due to Demon Attack being to similar to Phoenix.
Version differences
The PC Booter version of Demon Attack was available on both a PCjr cartridge and a 5.25" disk. Both versions were identical, except the disk release had a title screen which was missing on the cartridge version (probably due to the more limited size of the PCjr cartridges.)
Awards
- Retro Gamer
- Issue 46 - #13 in the “Top 25 Atari 2600 Games" poll
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Demon Attack's Wikipedia page
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Servo.
TI-99/4A added by Corn Popper. Videopac+ G7400 added by chirinea. Odyssey 2 added by Kabushi. Atari 8-bit added by Martin Smith. TRS-80 CoCo added by L. Curtis Boyle.
Additional contributors: RKL, Corn Popper, chirinea, Nélio, Patrick Bregger, S Olafsson, Rik Hideto.
Game added June 18, 2003. Last modified March 11, 2024.