Puneet Varma (Editor)

Mouse Trap (video game)

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Designer(s)
  
Larry W. Hutcherson

Cabinet
  
Upright

Initial release date
  
1981

Genre(s)
  
CPU
  
M6502 (@ 705.562 kHz)

Developers
  
Mouse Trap (video game) The Arcade Flyer Archive Video Game Flyers Mouse Trap Exidy Inc

Mode(s)
  
Up to 2 players, alternating turns

Sound
  
M6502 (@ 894.886 kHz), Z80 (@ 1.789772 MHz)Custom (@ 1.789772 MHz), HC55516 (@ 1.789772 MHz)

Publishers
  
Exidy, Coleco, Atari, CBS Electronics

Similar
  
Coleco games, Other games

Mouse Trap is a 1981 arcade maze game developed by Exidy. The game design is similar to Pac-Man, replacing Pac-Man with a mouse, the dots with cheese, the ghosts with cats, and the power pills with bones. The unique element of Mouse Trap is that color-coded doors in the maze can be toggled by pressing a button of the same color.

Contents

Mouse Trap (video game) Atari 2600 Reviews MM by The Video Game Critic

The game was ported by Coleco as a ColecoVision launch title in 1982, then later to the Intellivision and Atari 2600.

Mouse Trap (video game) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenffaMou

Gameplay

Mouse Trap (video game) Mouse Trap Videogame by Exidy

The player uses a four-position joystick to maneuver a mouse throughout a maze and eat pieces of cheese scattered along the paths. Six cats patrol the maze and chase the player, with two present at the outset and four more being released one at a time. The maze has three sets of color-coded doors, which the player can open or close by pressing the corresponding buttons in order to block the cats' approach. The player can also escape the cats by entering the "IN" box at the center of the screen, which will teleport the mouse to one of the four corners at random. Contact between the mouse and a cat costs the player one life.

Mouse Trap (video game) MOUSE TRAP ARCADE EXIDY 1981 CLASSIC RETRO VIDEO GAME YouTube

The player can pick up bones from the corners of the maze, then use them later by pressing a fourth button. Doing so turns the mouse into a dog for a short time, during which it can eat the cats for bonus points and temporarily remove them from the maze. However, the cats will move at a faster speed when they re-spawn into the maze. Unused bones carry over from one level to the next, and from one life to the next.

Mouse Trap (video game) Atari 8bit game Mouse Trap Final YouTube

At times, a hawk will fly through the maze, trying to catch the player. The hawk can eat both the mouse and the dog, costing the player one life, and can fly over the walls. It can only be foiled by using the "IN" box, which causes it to fly randomly and then leave the maze.

At any given time, a bonus object is present in the maze and can be eaten for points, causing a more valuable object to appear elsewhere. The bonus sequence restarts when the player either loses a life or eats the most valuable object in the sequence. When all of the cheese has been eaten, the player earns a bonus and moves to the next level.

Reception

According to Electronic Games in 1983, Mouse Trap was unsuccessful because arcade owners viewed it "as basically another maze game."

Ports

Coleco ported Mouse Trap to its own ColecoVision console, with 15 prizes instead of 32, an option to leave the hawk out, and different sound effects. Coleco's Intellivision port adds an audio warning when a cat is about to enter the maze, but suffers from blocky graphics. The score differs: cheese is worth 90 points and, cats are worth 100, 300, 500, 700, 900 and 1100 points.

Coleco also ported Mouse Trap to the Atari 2600, simplifying graphics and gameplay. The maze is more squat with brighter walls, and doors form a single colored set that flickers. Gameplay basics are the same, but the hawk, the "IN" area, and the bonus prizes are missing, there are three cats instead of six, and all doors move at once. Scoring is also reduced significantly: cheese is worth 1 point instead of 10 points, cats are worth 10 points and do not increase in value, and clearing a maze awards only 100 points.

In 1982, Buckner & Garcia recorded the song "Mousetrap" using sound effects from the game, and released it on the album Pac-Man Fever. When they re-recorded the album in 1999, they were unable to find a machine and used sounds from nature, instead.

References

Mouse Trap (video game) Wikipedia