Fire Trap © 1986 Woodplace, Incorporated.
An abstract arcade game in which a single player takes on the role of a firefighter, who must climb a burning building rescuing the people and animals who are trapped inside. As well as the fires, the firefighter must also avoid or deflect (the latter with his extinguisher) a number of falling objects and debris, including cars, couches, hammers, chairs, lamps, stoves and refrigerators.
Fire Trap is very similar, gameplay-wise, to Nichibutsu's 1980 classic, ''Crazy Climber''. As the firefighter climbs the building, he must use his fire extinguisher to put out the fires which include burning papers, flame-gushing windows and moving fireballs. The fire extinguisher contains only a limited amount of water, so must be used it wisely. Certain extinguished fires, however, reveal cannisters of extinguisher fuel to be collected. Other extinguished fires reveal bonuses and, very occasionally, springboards; which shoot the player higher up the skyscraper.
The firefighter's ultimate aim is to reach the roof of the skyscraper and rescue a young woman who is trapped there. As the firefighter reaches the roof, a giant fireball appears and circles the tower; this must be either avoided or extinguished. After the firefighter has rescued the woman, he must fly down the building with his jet pack and extinguish any fires remaining on the building; before finally landing safely on the ground. The firefighter will then move on to another burning building to make another rescue attempt.
Main CPU : Zilog Z80 (@ 6 Mhz)
Sound CPU : MOS Technology M6502 (@ 1.536 Mhz)
Sound Chips : Yamaha YM3526 (@ 3 Mhz), OKI MSM5205 (@ 384 Khz)
Players : 2
Control : doublejoy 4-way
Buttons : 1
Fire Trap was released in October 1986 in Japan.
The stylized looking flame to the left of the word 'Fire Trap' on the title screen is actually the kanji character 'honoo', which means 'flame'.
The game has a bug in test mode: when lives are set to 2, it displays 1.
Gary Hatt holds the official record for this game with 417,740 points.
* Japanese version:
Intials: 5 letters
* US Version:
Licensed to Data East
MCU missing and simulated
No Warning Screen
Intials: 3 letters
* Bootleg version:
Based on the Japanese version.
Most MCU writes are patched while reads are handled differently.
Additional ROM with code to simulate the MCU initialisation routine.
No warning screen.
COMPUTERS:
Amstrad CPC (1986)
Commodore C64 (1987)
Sinclair ZX Spectrum (1988)
Game's ROM.
Machine's picture.