Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Harley Davidson and L.A. Riders

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Composer(s)
  
Masanori Takeuchi

Arcade system
  
Sega Model 3

Developer
  
Sega Wow

Genre
  
Racing video game

Cabinet
  
Deluxe, standard

Initial release date
  
December 1997

Publisher
  
Sega

Platform
  
Arcade game

Harley-Davidson & L.A. Riders httpswwwarcademuseumcomimages118118124212

Modes
  
Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game

Similar
  
Emergency Call Ambulance, Scud Race, The Ocean Hunter, Star Wars Trilogy Arcade, LA Machine Guns

Harley-Davidson & L.A. Riders (known as ハーレーダビッドソン&L.A.ライダーズ in Japan) is a Sega arcade game developed by AM1 and released in 1997. The game was built on the Sega Model 3 arcade hardware, and was officially the first one to use the Step 2.0 revision of the Model 3 hardware.

Contents

Harley-Davidson & L.A. Riders was sold in two cabinet variants: a deluxe version that uses a 50-inch projection monitor and motorcycle hydraulics. The other variant is a more standard sit-down cabinet with a smaller 25-inch monitor, including the same gameplay physics minus the hydraulics.

Gameplay

In Harley-Davidson & L.A. Riders, the player rides one of five Harley-Davidson models. The objective is to complete a series of checkpoints around Los Angeles under a time limit. The number of stages allotted depends on the machine's settings. It can be three, four, or five stages. The player also has to collect as many hidden items (such as "tokens" that resemble the Harley-Davidson logo) as possible, in order to earn bonus points. The token points range anywhere from 1,000 to 100,000 points. The tokens which are more lucrative (that range in larger point sizes from 10,000-100,000) are located in more obscure and irrelevant areas of Los Angeles. Tokens that are worth 3,000 points are located through street corners. Others that are worth 10,000-50,000 points are located in special areas such as the golf course in Beverly Hills, where a token worth 30,000 is located. Tokens worth 100,000 are more difficult to get and are located in obscure areas. Occasionally, the player will find red-yellow-colored tokens floating around more irrelevant areas that allow you to earn 5 or 10 seconds of bonus time.

Other useful controls and buttons in the game are pushing the start button, which activates a honking sound from the bike. The player can also change the perspective of the bike from three different views: a second-person view which is right behind your bike, a view that displays far behind the bike, and a first-person view which displays only the front of the bike (handlebars and speedometer). You can also select 7 different pieces of background music, five of which are associated with each playable bike. A few songs were recycled from other Sega arcade games developed by the same team such as Dynamite Baseball (a Japanese baseball game) and Sega Ski Super G, which were both released in 1996.

When a game is completed, each bike and rider has different ending material.

When your time runs out in a game, each rider has different failure animations. The announcer will also say "Don't worry!" or "Try again!" depending on your progress.

Soundtrack

An official soundtrack for Harley-Davidson & L.A. Riders was released on March 18, 1998 by Marvelous Entertainment.

References

Harley-Davidson & L.A. Riders Wikipedia