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Magic The Gathering: Armageddon

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Japanese Title

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - marquee

Manufacturer: Acclaim
Year: 1997
Type: Videogame

Class: Wide Release
Genre: Other
Monitor:

  • Orientation: Horizontal
  • Type: Raster: VGA Resolution
  • CRT: Color
Conversion Class: unique
Number of Simultaneous Players: 2
Maximum number of Players: 2
Gameplay: Competitive
Control Panel Layout: Multiple Player
Controls:
  • Buttons: 3 [Attack|Defend|Summon]
  • Trackball: Optical

Sound: Amplified Stereo (two channel)

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon


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Magic The Gathering: Armageddon Control Panel Image
Magic The Gathering: Armageddon PCB Image


Magic The Gathering: Armageddon Description

Two wizards square off in a magical battle based on the popular trading card game. Each wizard can summon creatures or deal direct damage to their opponent. The last wizard standing wins.

Game Introduction

Players choose one of five colors/magical disciplines: Red (fire magic, mountain creatures) White (healing/curative magic, knights/soldiers), Blue (water elements/creatures, counter magic) Green (elves, forest creatures) and Black (death magic, undead creatures) and fight another wizard on a magical playfield. Each player can summon magical creatures to do their bidding, but they can also directly attack another wizard, or they can use their magical energy for defense. Players can move around the playfield, occupying one of five spots.

Game Play

Targeting is achieved through a trackball; move the cursor to the opponent you wish to attack or to an area on the playfield where you would like to make a creature appear. The longer you hold the summon button, the more powerful the resulting creature will be, so there's a trade-off in speed for power.

The gameplay can be particulary difficult. In addition to becoming skilled with a trackball, there are lots of buttons to press as you try to create creatures to fight for you. Shifting your strategy on the fly is often necessary. You may want to create big creatures, but if your opponent is swarming you with tons of little enemies, you will have to go on the defensive.

This is an unusual game in many respects -- a mix between a strategy game and a fighting game.

VAPS Arcade Census

There are 6,993 members of the Video Arcade Preservation Society / Vintage Arcade Preservation Society, 4,022 whom participate in our arcade census project of games owned, wanted, or for sale. Census data currently includes 65,237 machines (3,799 unique titles).

Scarce - There are 4 known instances of this machine owned by Magic The Gathering: Armageddon collectors who are members. Of these, 3 of them are original dedicated machines, and 1 is a conversion in which game circuit boards (and possibly cabinet graphics) have been placed in (and on) another game cabinet

For Sale - There are 2 VAPS members with Magic The Gathering: Armageddon machines for sale. VAPS members are totally independent of VAPS and the International Arcade Museum, and we are unable to recommend, endorce, or guarantee any person or company selling games or game parts.

Wanted - There are 3 VAPS members currently looking for Magic The Gathering: Armageddon.

This game ranks a 2 on a scale out of 100 (100 = most often seen, 1=least common) in popularity based on census ownership records.

This game ranks a 7 on a scale out of 100 (100 = most often wanted, 1=least common) in popularity based on census want list records.

Rarity is NOT necessarily an indication of value. [More Information]

Technical

Acclaim's arcade chipset is called Epidemic. The 3-D polygonal graphics are powered by a dual-processor Obsidian 3Dfx board.

Trivia

Acclaim's Mountain View, California-based coin-op division went out of business shortly after creating this game. It never went into full production, which is a shame, since the title had both an innovative, complex gameplay and a hot license going for it. Only a handful of units shipped (one was spotted in the Tomorrowland arcade at Walt Disney World in 1998; another showed up at Namco's WonderPark in San Jose, CA the same year), but few people even know this game exists. Multiple previews of the game appeared in GamePro magazine, as well as other enthustiast publications.

This was Acclaim's third coin-op, joining its previous titles of NBA Jam Extreme and Batman Forever. The game was not released for any home systems, and has no relation to Acclaim's "Magic The Gathering" titles for the Sony PlayStation.

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eBay Listings

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Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Title screen image

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Title screen image

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Title screen image

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Title screen image


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Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Image

Magic The Gathering: Armageddon - Image





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