Harman Patil (Editor)

Frantic Freddie

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Initial release date
  
1983

Genre
  
Platform
  

Mode
  
Single-player video game


Designer(s)
  
Kris Hatlelid, Gregor Larson

Similar
  
Aztec Challenge, Falcon Patrol II, Blue Max, Drelbs, Apple Cider Spider

C64 longplay frantic freddie hq


Frantic Freddie is a 1983 Platform game for the Commodore 64 written by Kris Hatlelid and Gregor Larson and published by Commercial Data Systems.

Contents

Frantic Freddie httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen558Fra

Frantic freddie c64


Gameplay

Frantic Freddie C64 Longplay Frantic Freddie HQ YouTube

The player uses a joystick to control the eponymous Frantic Freddie, a telephone line engineer. Each level takes place on a single screen, each with five full-width Platform(s) connected by telegraph poles. Freddie runs along the platforms; he cannot pass through the telegraph poles but may climb up and down either side of them. The goal of the game is to collect the pots of gold resting on the platforms, as well as optional bonus items which scroll through the playing area. Each level is patrolled by three or four monstrous "Greebles" that Freddie must avoid, lest he lose a life.

Frantic Freddie Lemon Commodore 64 C64 Games Reviews amp Music

The game has a total of sixteen playable levels; as in the early Pac-Man games, the levels are punctuated by animated intermission sequences.

Soundtrack

The game was particularly noted for its synthesized soundtrack, which mingled arrangements of popular and ragtime songs:

Frantic Freddie Frantic Freddie C64Wiki
  1. "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" (Queen)
  2. "Boogie Fever" (The Sylvers)
  3. "The Easy Winners" (Scott Joplin)
  4. "Don't Bring Me Down" (Electric Light Orchestra)
  5. "Kodachrome" (Paul Simon)
  6. "A Fifth of Beethoven" (Walter Murphy)
  7. "Pine Apple Rag" (Scott Joplin)
  8. "Elite Syncopations" (Scott Joplin)
  9. "Maple Leaf Rag" (Scott Joplin)
  10. "The Sycamore" (Scott Joplin)

Reception

Frantic Freddie GB64COM C64 Games Database Music Emulation Frontends Reviews

Reviewing a budget release of the game in 1988, Pete Connor of ACE described Frantic Freddie as "a pretty tired game" that promised only "a modicum of fun".

Frantic Freddie Lemon Commodore 64 C64 Games Reviews amp Music

References

Frantic Freddie Wikipedia