September 21, 1998: "The future of gaming can be summed up in two words -- Pong and Joust."
...with these prophetic words in the Usenet group rec.games.video.classic,
"Otter" planted the seeds for the game you have before you now. Two of
the greatest names in the history of video games have been brought
together at last on your Atari 2600...FlapPing is an old school round of Pong
(the original deathmatch!) combined with the famous "Flap" button
of Joust. Pterry the Pterodactyl is here to keep things lively,
and even the wall from the Atari classic "Warlords" makes a cameo appearance.
How To Play
"Press Button to Flap. Avoid Missing Ball for High Score."
Each player controls a FlapPing knight...a classic rectangular Pong paddle
with angelic ostrich wings stretching out of its back. Player 1 controls
the left knight with a joystick plugged into the 2600's left controller
jack. The right knight is controlled by the computer,
or by Player 2 using a joystick plugged into the right controller jack.
The game program starts with a title screen. Here the game variation can be selected
with the Game Select switch or by pressing the left joystick (right/up to select the next variation, left/down to select the previous variation). The Game Reset
switch or the left joystick firebutton starts the game. A countdown appears, and
then the ball is launched in a random direction.
During gameplay, only the joystick's firebutton is used. Pressing the button
flaps the knight's wings, giving an upward push against the constant pull
of gravity.
When the ball hits a knight, it is deflected and heads back towards the
other knight. If the ball makes it past a knight (and the knight's castle
wall in the "Poorlords" game variant) the other player scores a point.
The first player to score 10 points (or 3, in the case of "Poorlords") is
declared the victor and the game is over.
When hit by a knight, the ball takes on some of that knight's vertical speed,
so a collision with a fast moving knight will result in a faster moving ball.
Pterry the Pterodactyl flies across the center of the screen. If the ball
hits Pterry, it will be deflected. Also, if Pterry hits a knight the
knight will be thrown down to the ground and Pterry will squawk in glee.
At any time, Game Select will return to the title screen and Game Reset
will start a new game.
Game Variations
There are 6 game variations. Cycle through them with the left joystick
or the Game Select switch on the title screen.
"Classic" FlapPing is a first-to-10-points death match. "Poorlords"
gives each player a defensive wall, and the first player to get
3 points wins. (The "Poorlords" variant takes its cue from the
Atari classic Warlords...alas, these poor knights can only afford a
single layer of wall to guard against intrusion, unlike Warlords'
mightier fortresses.)
Vs. Computer, Classic
Vs. Computer, Poorlords
Vs. Easy Computer, Classic
Vs. Easy Computer, Poorlords
Two Player, Classic
Two Player, Poorlords
The Left Difficulty switch can be used to adjust the horizontal speed of the ball:
Setting
Ball Speed
A/Expert
Fast
B/Novice
Slow
The right difficulty switch is not used in FlapPing.
About the Game
The idea for FlapPing came from a 1998 Usenet thread in rec.games.video.classic
entitled "Gaming 2001--The Future of Gaming!" A group called "Fairfield
Research" was doing market research on the gaming industry, and "Otter" neatly
summarized the situation by saying, "The future of gaming can be summed up in two words --
Pong and Joust". Dan Mazurowski started tossing out some ideas based on a
hybrid concept (and noted that it was an arcade game that requires only a single button
to play) and Jon Kade even suggested it as an Atari project.
This is Kirk Israel's fourth version of FlapPing.
Older versions as well as the first release for the Atari 2600
were titled "JoustPong", more strongly reflecting the game's roots.
You can see the original 1998
version for Windows, the 1999 PalmPilot version, and the 2000 Java update at
http://alienbill.com/abp/ .
The Atari 2600 port is the first version to include Pterry, theme music,
and the "Poorlords" variants.
Despite these additions, the game still stands as arguably the
most satisfying game requiring only a single button to play.
To learn more about the making of this
game, check out its development journal at http://alienbill.com/2600/flapping/
where you can see its progress from a simple learning experiment to today's full game.
About the Programmer
Kirk Israel is a software developer currently living in the suburbs of Boston.
He is fluent in Java, Perl, and several other computer languages. FlapPing is
Kirk's first foray into Atari programming.
Kirk maintains a daily "quotes and links" blog at http://kisrael.com/ .
Gamers interested in minimalistic games may be interested in Kirk's
Gamebutton Arcade, games entirely contained in a single HTML pushbutton: http://kisrael.com/features/gb.html
Feel free to drop Kirk a line at flapping@alienbill.com .
Acknowledgements
It is safe to say that without the smart and supportive programmers
on the Stella mailing list this game could never have happened.
The latest version of FlapPing's kernal
(the really difficult to write part that 'makes it go')
was pretty much handed to me by Paul Slocum. Other invaluable contributors
include Thomas Jentzsch (who also suggested the "FlapPing" name),
Dennis Debro, Erik Mooney, Christopher Tumber, and
Andrew Davie. Their patience and generosity with this 6502/6507 newbie was
outstanding. Actually it seems like almost everyone on the Stella list
helped in one way or the other, so apologies to anyone I'm leaving out.
Christian Scott, Scott "Club Ninja" Bertulli, Joe Grand, and everyone
else with the New England Classic Gamers--you've been a great inspiration as well.
Thanks to David "Liveinabin" Exton for his wonderful art design and logo work.
And extra special thanks to Albert "AtariAge" Yarusso. His site has
become the web's premier stop for all things Atari, he brings the
hardware knowledge that lets programmer's binary dreams become silicon
reality, and his feedback, support, and encouragment to add in that
"one last feature" really made the difference in letting FlapPing
become a full-fledged game rather than a tech demo novelty.