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tapper

 
Dictionary: tap·per   (tăp'ər) pronunciation
n.
One that taps.


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Games: Tapper
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  • Release Date: 1983
  • Genre: Action
  • Style: 2D Action
  • Similar Games: Root Beer Tapper (Arcade)

Game Description

In Tapper (also known as "Budweiser Tapper"), you become a bartender who is so successful that he needs to send his customers away! The trick is to send them away happy -- with a freshly poured drink. Using your lightning-fast skills of tapping a keg, filling a liter mug with Budweiser beer, flinging it towards a patron, and hopping almost instantly to any of the four bars on the screen. The object of the game is to keep all of your customers happy by constantly dishing out drinks.

Customers range from cowboys, to punks, even aliens might show up. They all move slowly but steadily towards you, up the four long bars, demanding their share of the golden liquid. Serve them quickly enough and they'll disappear, but wait too long and they'll send back their mugs, demanding another round. If a customer makes it all the way to your end of the bar, you'll lose. Watch out for empty mugs, and aggressive beer-drinkers too. If you thought the life of the bartender was easy...think again.
~ Evan A. Mauser, All Game Guide

Review: Overall

A relatively simple concept spawned into a really challenging game. Tapper starts out easy, and you feel confident with your beer filling, mug slinging, empty mug recieving skills.. and then it turns on you. The lines fill up faster, and you hurl the beer their way.. quicker, and quicker as they graciously hurl the mugs back down the counter at you where you must catch the fragile glass.

Faster than a crowd of Canadian Oktoberfest celebrators, the people demand more and more beer..

You'll find yourself sweating and your fingers aching from the effort of continuous repetative action. Surprisingly, this game isn't boring but extremely addictive and exciting. With games like Tetris and Tapper, the fun thing about the game is having to be quick in both thought and action and being under pressure.

Like most arcade games, Tapper takes your first quarter and makes you think you're wonderful at the game with it. It's this false sense of greatness that keeps you paying quarter after quarter.

But it's worth it. Tapper is essentially just some mindless fun that tests your reflexes in a fun way. It's great to have around in a bar where there's tons of people with lots of time on their hands to kill. Well, tons of drunk people with spare change at least!
~ Chris Couper, All Game Guide

Review: Enjoyment

Mindless, yet fun!
~ Chris Couper, All Game Guide

Review: Graphics

Bar patrons look serious and scary, right down to silly.
~ Chris Couper, All Game Guide

Review: Sound

Great ol' time bar music!
~ Chris Couper, All Game Guide

Review: Replay Value

It all depends on your reflexes! You could play all day.
~ Chris Couper, All Game Guide

Review: Documentation

Title screen tells you all you need to know.
~ Chris Couper, All Game Guide
WordNet: tapper
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 5 meanings:

Meaning #1: a tavern keeper who taps kegs or casks
  Synonym: tapster

Meaning #2: a person who strikes a surface lightly and usually repeatedly

Meaning #3: a worker who uses a tap to cut screw threads

Meaning #4: someone who wiretaps a telephone or telegraph wire
  Synonyms: wiretapper, phone tapper

Meaning #5: a dancer who who sounds out rhythms by using metal taps on the toes and heels of the shoes
  Synonym: tap dancer


Wikipedia: Tapper
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Tapper
Tapper title screen
Developer(s) Marvin Glass and Associates
Publisher(s) Bally Midway
Designer(s) Steve Meyer (programming), Scott Morrison (graphics), Rick Hicaro (sound), Elaine Ditton (support)
Platform(s) Arcade, Atari 2600, Atari 8-bit, ColecoVision, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, BBC Micro, PC, Mobile phone, Xbox 360 (XBLA)
Release date(s) 1983
Genre(s) Action
Mode(s) Up to 2 players, alternating turns
Input methods Joystick, 1 button (constructed as a lever, like a keg tap)
Cabinet Upright and cocktail
Display Horizontal orientation, Raster, standard resolution (Used: 512 x 480)

Tapper, also known as Root Beer Tapper, is a 1983 arcade game released by Bally Midway. The goal of the game is to serve beer and collect empty mugs and tips.

Contents

Overview

Tapper puts the player in the shoes of a bartender. The player must serve eager, thirsty patrons before their patience expires.

Description

The Tapper game screen features four bars. Patrons arrive periodically at the end of the bar opposite the player and demand drinks. The player must draw and serve drinks to the patrons as they slowly advance towards the player. If any customers reach the player's end of the bar, they grab the player-as-bartender and toss him out the far end of the bar, costing the player a life.

In Tapper, the player plays the part of a bartender serving drinks to eager customers. The Budweiser logo is clearly visible in the version pictured here.

The player serves customers by filling a mug at one of the four taps. Once the mug is full, the player releases the tap which automatically slides the mug towards the advancing customer. Customers catch mugs that are slid towards them, as long as they are not already drinking a beer, or otherwise distracted. If a mug is not caught by a customer (whether the customer is already drinking or distracted, or if there is no customer), then it falls off the bar on the other end, resulting in a loss of a life for the player. If a customer does catch the mug, though, then he or she is pushed back some amount towards the opposite end of the screen. The goal is to push the customer completely off the screen, but if they are not then they will stay and consume their drink in place. When a customer finishes his drink, he slides the empty mug back towards the player, after which the customer resumes his advance on the player. The player must collect the empty mugs before they reach the end of the bar and fall to the ground. A mug falling to the ground costs a life.

Periodically, customers will leave tips on the bar for the player. These tips can be left at any place on the bar. The tip will appear after a specific number of empty mugs are released by the customers, and will appear wherever the customer who releases the required mug is standing. For example, in all levels, the first tip is left by the customer who returns the second empty mug, and will be left beside wherever this customer is standing. By collecting the tip, the player earns extra points and initiates "entertainment" for that level (dancing girls on the wild-west level, cheerleaders on the sports level, etc). While the entertainment is active, some fraction of the customers will be distracted and stop advancing towards the player, but they will also stop catching mugs.

In order to complete a level, the player must clear the entire bar of customers. Once this is done, the player is presented with a short vignette in which the bartender draws a drink for himself, drinks it, then tosses the empty mug into the air with varying (usually humorous) results.

As the game progresses, the customers appear more frequently, move faster along the bar, and are pushed back shorter distances when they catch their drinks. In addition, the maximum number of customers per bar gradually increases until every bar can have up to four customers at a time.

In between levels of different settings, the player is presented with a "challenge" round. In this segue, the player is presented with a single bar that has six cans of beer or root beer sitting on top of it. A masked villain shakes every can except one and then pounds on the bar, causing the cans to shuffle their positions. It is in essence a shell game where the player is rewarded with extra points for picking the one unshaken can. If any other can is picked, it explodes in the bartender/soda jerk's face, after which the right can is revealed.

There are four settings for the game, each setting lasting for two to four levels. The settings of the game are:

  1. A country-western bar with cowboys (2 levels)
  2. A sporting event with athletes (3 levels)
  3. A punk rock bar with rockers (4 levels)
  4. A space bar with aliens (4 levels)

After completing all the levels, thirteen in all, the player starts at the first again, harder than the first time through, and with some minor variations.

Root Beer Tapper is almost identical to the Budweiser version, except the player is a soda jerk serving non-alcoholic root beer.

Originally intended to be sold only to bars, many of the cabinets were designed to look like bars—with a brass rail footrest and drink holders. The controller was designed to look like the tap handles on a real keg. Digitized belches were recorded, but never used.

Versions

Several variants of the game were released, with similar gameplay but different graphics and music. The first was with Budweiser branding, followed in 1984 by Root Beer Tapper, which was developed specifically for arcades because the original version was construed as advertising alcohol to minors (since many of the games appeared in video game arcades).

The Tom Mix Software Company made a clone called Brewmaster for the TRS-80 Color Computer.

In 1984, Coleco made versions of Root Beer Tapper for their proprietary ColecoVision game console, as well as the Atari 2600 console and the Commodore 64, Apple II and IBM PC computer systems, designed by David James Ritchie.

There are also some boards with Suntory branding, supposedly made by Sega, which they deny.

In July 2000, Midway licensed Root Beer Tapper, along with other Williams Electronics games, to Macromedia for use in an online applet to demonstrate the power of the Shockwave web content platform, entitled Shockwave Arcade Collection. The conversion was created by Digital Eclipse. It is currently freely available to be played online.

Root Beer Tapper was included as one of the 24 games on Midway Arcade Treasures for PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, and the PC.

Root Beer Tapper is a leaderboard game on Gametap.

Root Beer Tapper was released on Microsoft's Xbox Live Arcade service for the Xbox 360 on February 7, 2007 for 400 Microsoft Points ($5.00). This release adds high definition support, achievements, leaderboards, and new online and local co-op modes.

Legacy

The programming and art style are almost identical to a later game called Timber and another called Domino Man. All three were designed and programmed by the same team at Marvin Glass and Associates. Members of this team later created Golden Tee Golf after leaving MGA.

External links


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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Games. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Game Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tapper" Read more

 

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