Puneet Varma (Editor)

Juno First

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Cabinet
  
Standard upright

Developer
  
Initial release date
  
1983

Genre
  
Shoot 'em up


Mode(s)
  
1-2 players alternating

CPU
  
Motorola 6809, Zilog Z80

Sound
  
Intel 8039, AY-3-8910, DAC, (3x) RC

Display
  
224 x 256 pixels, 16 color Raster graphics

Platforms
  
Arcade game, MSX, Xbox 360, Commodore 64, Atari 8-bit family

Publishers
  
Konami, Gottlieb, Sony Corporation, Datasoft

Similar
  
Gottlieb games, Shoot 'em up games

Arcade game juno first 1983 konami


Juno First (ジュノファースト) is a shoot 'em up arcade game developed by Konami and released in 1983. It was licensed to Gottlieb in the United States. The game is a vertical scrolling shooter, with a third-person perspective like Radar Scope. It follows in the tradition of space-themed shooting-galleries such as Space Invaders and Galaga. Juno First, however, is notable for its frenetic gameplay (like Defender and Xevious).

Contents

Juno First Juno First Videogame by Konami

Juno First was ported to the Commodore 64 and Atari 8-bit by Greg Hiscott and published by Datasoft.

Classic game room juno first arcade game review


Gameplay

Juno First JUNO FIRST arcade game by KONAMI 1983 retro oldskool video game

Juno First presents a set number of enemies per level, but they do not make a gallery formation. Instead, the player's ship can move forward and backward (in addition to left and right) to hunt enemies in an orientation that is vertical, but has some horizon-oriented tilt. This style of gameplay would be re-used in a later Konami shooter, Axelay.

Juno First Atari 400 800 XL XE Juno First scans dump download screenshots

The player destroys waves of enemies to finish levels. Starting formations vary from stage to stage. In addition, the player can pick up a humanoid, upon which the screen will have a red tint. While this happens, every enemy the player shoots will earn the player 200 more points than the previous enemy destroyed. The original score for shooting an enemy while in humanoid mode depends on the stage.

Clones

An unofficial Atari 2600 homebrew clone was programmed by Chris Walton, and released on cartridge by AtariAge.

Juno First Play Juno First Online MSX Game Rom MSX Emulation on Retro Game Room

References

Juno First Wikipedia