Match Day (video game)

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Match Day is a football computer game, published by Ocean Software in 1984 for the ZX Spectrum. It is the first game in the Match Day series, and was the creation of programmer Jon Ritman and Chris Clarke.[1] Versions were later released for the Amstrad CPC and PCW, BBC Micro, Commodore 64 and MSX systems.[2]

Jon Ritman met Chris Clarke, formerly of Crystal Computing, at Artic Computing in 1983 where Clarke was marketing Bear Bovver, Ritman's latest game for the company.[1] They decided on going freelance to produce a football game after discovering that distributors wanted to see a ZX Spectrum game comparable to International Soccer on the Commodore 64.[3]:209 By chance Ritman met David Ward, co-founder of Ocean Software, at a computer show and told him what he was working on. Several months later Ward called Ritman and offered him a £20,000 advance for the game which he accepted immediately.[4][3]:209 Ocean licensed the theme tune from Match of the Day from the BBC but not the title,[2][3]:41 naming it Match Day instead.

Gameplay

ZX Spectrum version

This was the first soccer game for the ZX Spectrum where large moving footballers characters could dribble, throw-in, take corners, etc. The game uses modified sprites from a Ritman's previous title Bear Bovver to create an almost isometric, but still ultimately side-on football title.[5]

The game has 8 teams that the player can choose, such as Ritman Rovers, Clarke PR and Ocean United. Players can rename the teams and redefine the team colours.

Reception

Match Day was released in late 1984 and became a best-seller over the Christmas period reaching number 2 in the charts[6] behind Ghostbusters. The BBC micro version ported by Chris Roberts[2][7] reached the top of the BBC charts in September 1985.[8] Match Day sold over 50,000 copies[3]:212

In the 1985 Crash awards, it was voted the 3rd best sports game.[9]

Legacy

References

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