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The Movie Monster Game

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Movie Monster Game
BERJAYA
DeveloperEpyx
PublisherEpyx
PlatformsApple II, Commodore 64
Release
GenreAction
ModeSingle-player

The Movie Monster Game is an action video game released by Epyx for the Apple II and Commodore 64 in 1986. It includes a variety of scenarios, playable monsters, and cities to demolish (complete with famous landmarks, such as Tokyo Tower, Eiffel Tower, Statue of Liberty, Golden Gate Bridge, Saint Basil's Cathedral and Big Ben). Most of the monsters are original characters based on movie monsters such as The Blob, Mothra, Tarantula, the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man, and the Transformers. The one exception is Godzilla, which Epyx was able to officially license.[1]

The game was re-released on Evercade part of THEC64 Collection 1.[2]

Gameplay

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The player chooses one of six movie monsters to play as, a scenario, and a city for the scenario to take place. The gameplay is depicted on a movie screen in front of a movie theater crowd simulating an actual monster movie. Each scenario even starts off with an advertisement, (for popcorn and "Gummi Glogs"; in the Apple II version "Godzilla Mouthwash" is also featured), and other attractions, (such as promotions for Epyx's own Summer Games) before the "Feature Presentation" of the game begins.[3]

Monsters

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Scenarios

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  • Berserk. The player must accumulate a certain number of points by destroying as many buildings and vehicles as possible.
  • Escape. The player must flee the city before being killed by the military.
  • Search. The player must use the monster to rescue its offspring hidden in a building. Godzilla's son is depicted as Minilla.
  • Destroy Landmark. The player must destroy a specific landmark within the city such as the Statue of Liberty in New York City, the Tokyo Tower in Tokyo, Big Ben in London, etc.
  • Lunch. The player must satisfy the monster's hunger by eating vehicles and civilians until the monster's hunger meter is depleted.

Cities

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Reception

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In Dragon #114's "The Role of Computers" column, reviewers Hartley and Pattie Lesser stated that "this is a game that is a great deal of fun to play!"[4]

Computer Gaming World said that The Movie Monster Game "gets a little tedious after a while".[5]

See also

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References

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  1. "Commodore Magazine Interviews Epyx (1989)". Retrieved 30 May 2025.
  2. https://evercade.co.uk/cartridges/thec64-collection-1/
  3. Commodore 64 version manual. Epyx. 1984 via archive.org.
  4. Lesser, Hartley; Lesser, Pattie (October 1986). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (114): 72–76.
  5. Ardai, Charles (April 1987). "Titans of the Computer Gaming World / Part 1 of V: Ardai on Epyx". Computer Gaming World. p. 12.
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