Tombstone City

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Tombstone City
Tombstone City Manual Cover
Tombstone City Manual (Front Cover) [1] [2]
Publisher(s) Texas Instruments (TI)
Original Retail Price $39.95 (USD)
Programmer(s) John C. Plaster
Part# PHM 3052
Format(s) Solid State SoftwareTM Command Module
Release 1981 (4th Quarter)
Genre(s) Shooter

Tombstone City is a single-player shooter video game created for the TI-99/4A home computer system. It was released by Texas Instruments (TI) during the 4th quarter of 1981. It was created by programmer John C. Plaster and released on Solid State SoftwareTM Command Module cartridge with Part #3052 retailing originally for $39.95 (USD).

Gameplay

The player in Tombstone City controls a spaceship referred to in the literature as a schooner. The object is to destroy the primary targets which are green aliens referred to in the manual as Morgs, and secondary targets which are purple tumbleweeds. The purpose of the game is to woo others back to live at an unnamed southwestern town in the United States by reducing the number of aliens and destroying these tumbleweeds. The score is labeled as "population in the game. The game is over when the player loses all his/her schooners.

The player's schooner starts out in the center of sixteen blocks right in the middle of the screen. This structure of blocks represents a safe zone where the Morgs cannot enter and kill the player. The player can kill either Morgs or tumbleweeds within the range of the safe area of blocks, however, most of the targets will require the player to leave the safety of the blocks and venture outside, making the player much more vulnerable. Each tumbleweed destroyed earns the player 100 points of population. Each Morg earns 150 points. Morgs spawn wherever two Saguaro Cacti touch, either side-by-side, above one another, or vertically. Generally, when a Morg is shot, it creates a new catus. When a Morg is killed while touching a producing pair of cacti, however, it will destroy the cacti and produce a single new Morg. The object of the game is to destroy all producing pairs of cacti. Doing so will pass a level of the game called a day, and move onto the next level or day with cacti regenerated in a new random position and earning the player a new schooner.

One caveat while killing the Morgs is to be aware that killing a Morg within one space of a single cactus will produce a new producing pair of cacti. Producing adjacent cacti pairs will extend the day or level. Also, kill Morgs at the exits/entrances of the safety zone of blocks prevents the player from leaving or entering that entrance or exit. If the player blocks all exits/entrances, and the player is within the safety zone, the player's schooner is transported to a random spot outside the zone where he/she must continue the game with no safe place to hide from the Morgs. If the player is killed at this point, new schooners will generate outside the safety zone in a random spot. The player can open up entrances/exits into the safe zone by killing Morgs adjacent to two Cacti where one happens to block the entry/exit, but this can be a lengthy and difficult process.

Advertising Blurbs

Front Cover of Manual

Your survival instinct is challenged immediately as you find yourself in a 21st Century-Old West ghost town threatened by an invading hoard of green alien monsters.

Back Cover of Manual

It's the 21st Century and you're faced with stopping a hoard of green alien monsters before they take over and Old Weest ghost town and the world! Points are added to your score as you and your security force of prairie schooners stop these villainous creatures called morgs.

Tombstone City: 21st Century module features let you

  • Destroy alien morgs.
  • Eliminate generating pairs of saguaro cactuses.
  • Wipe out tumbleweeds.

Triton Catalog - Spring 1984

You against the computer, testing your strategy and your skill. In a future Old West ghost town, you face an invading hoard of - yuk! - green alien Morgs. They live off two things - people and tumbleweeds. Stop 'em before they take over Earth! (Wired Remote Controllers recommended.)

Manual

Introduction

If you 're looking for an exciting new way to test your game-playing skills, then the Tombstone City game is the answer. Your survival instinct is challenged immediately as you find yourself in the 21st Century in an Old West ghost town threatened by an invading hoard of green alien monsters. These villainous creatures called morgs live off of only two things - tumbleweeds and people.

It's up to you and your security force of prairie schooners to stop the morgs before they infest the earth. In accomplishing this goal, you can score points by:

  • Destroying alien morgs.
  • Watching for adjacent pairs of saguaro cactuses. (It's from here that a new morg is generated!}
  • Wiping out tumbleweeds.

A one-player game, Tombstone City is designed to test your strategy, as well as your skill. Movement on the screen can be controlled by the Wired Remote Controllers or from the keyboard.

Tombstone City: the 21st Century is available as either a Solid State SoftwareTM Command Module or a diskette-based game. Note that the diskette-based version requires the TI Disk Memory System, the Memory Expansion unit, and must be used with either the TI Extended BASIC or Editor/Assembler Command Module (all sold separately}. Follow the set of directions that applies to your version of the game.

Using the Tombstone City Command Module

If the Tombstone City game is a Command Module, follow these directions.

An automatic reset feature is built into the computer. When a module is plugged into the console, the computer returns to the master title screen. All data and program material you have entered will be erased.

Note: Be sure the module is free of static electricity before inserting it into the computer (see page 7).


Downloads

References

External Links