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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

A Gorf is apparently an unknown creature (although it could be type of food). One of the Apeoid guards referred to his fellow guard, as having "Gorf breath", after they learned there hovercraft was out of fuel..

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  • Gorf
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  • A Gorf is apparently an unknown creature (although it could be type of food). One of the Apeoid guards referred to his fellow guard, as having "Gorf breath", after they learned there hovercraft was out of fuel..
  • Gorf is a compilation arcade game with five mini-games included, all being bottom of the screen, fixed shooters. It was for solitary play and two players alternating, being released by Midway in 1981 and ported to the Atari 2600, 5200, and 8-bit computer line, ColecoVision, BBC Micro, Commodore 64 and VIC-20, which those ports were released from 1982-1983 through CBS Electronics and Roklan.
  • Gorf is an arcade game released in 1981 by Midway Games, whose name was advertised as an acronym for "Galactic Orbiting Robot Force" . It is a multiple-mission fixed shooter with five distinct modes of play, essentially making it five games in one. An innovation at the time, since video games had a level to clear only to have different level that looked the same but was a bit harder. It is well-known for its use of synthesized speech, a new feature at the time. Gorf has examples of:
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abstract
  • A Gorf is apparently an unknown creature (although it could be type of food). One of the Apeoid guards referred to his fellow guard, as having "Gorf breath", after they learned there hovercraft was out of fuel..
  • Gorf is an arcade game released in 1981 by Midway Games, whose name was advertised as an acronym for "Galactic Orbiting Robot Force" . It is a multiple-mission fixed shooter with five distinct modes of play, essentially making it five games in one. An innovation at the time, since video games had a level to clear only to have different level that looked the same but was a bit harder. It is well-known for its use of synthesized speech, a new feature at the time. Gorf's objective is to simply destroy all enemies. The player controls a spaceship that can move slowly left, right, up and down. (Its vertical movement is limited to the lower one-third of the screen.) The ship can fire a single shot (called a "quark laser" in this game), which travels slowly up the screen. Unlike similar games, where the player cannot fire again until their existing shot has disappeared, the player can "re-fire" their laser at any time, causing their existing shot to disappear immediately (if it hasn't already). Gameplay is broken up into five distinct "missions", each one essentially a minigame in its own right. Successfully completing all five missions will increase the player's rank and loop back to the first mission. The game continues until the player loses all of their lives. The player can advance through the ranks of Space Cadet, Space Captain, Space Colonel, Space General, Space Warrior, and Space Avenger, with a higher difficulty level at each rank. Along the way, a robotic, synthesized voice heckles and threatens the player, often calling the player by their current rank (for example, "Some galactic defender you are, Space Cadet!"). Some versions of Gorf also display the player's current rank via a series of lit panels in the cabinet. Vague collision detection was a feature of the game intended to shorten the playing time - enemy shots that did not appear to actually impact on the ship object would still destroy it if they passed in close proximity. Gorf is well-known for introducing or popularizing two new features (for its time) to the video game market. Its most notable feature is its robotic voice, powered by the Votrax speech synthesis chip. Most games, even today, that feature human and robot speech use digitized voice samples rather than a speech synthesizer. Also, Gorf is one of the first games to allow the player to buy additional lives before starting the game. Most games offer a predetermined number of lives (usually three) and allow the player to earn additional lives throughout the game. Gorf, which was usually set to offer two lives per coin, allows the player to insert extra coins to buy up to seven starting lives. Gorf was originally intended to be a tie-in with Star Trek the Motion Picture, but when the game designers read the film's script, they realized that the concept would not work as a video game and changed its title. Even so, the player's ship bears a passing resemblance to the Starship Enterprise flipped upside-down. Gorf has examples of: * Attack Its Weak Point: The flagship on Misson 5. * Boss Battle * The Eighties * Final Boss: Widely credited with creating the concept. * Galaxian (the third level is actually called "Galaxians") * Gameplay Roulette: Each stage plays out somewhat differently. * Hitbox Dissonance: The player's hitbox is larger than it appears to be. * Lag Cancel: Firing while a shot is still on the screen will erase that shot and fire a new one. * Robo Speak * Shoot'Em Up * Space Invaders (the first level)
  • Gorf is a compilation arcade game with five mini-games included, all being bottom of the screen, fixed shooters. It was for solitary play and two players alternating, being released by Midway in 1981 and ported to the Atari 2600, 5200, and 8-bit computer line, ColecoVision, BBC Micro, Commodore 64 and VIC-20, which those ports were released from 1982-1983 through CBS Electronics and Roklan.
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