Tubeway
1982 video game
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tubeway (sometimes stylized as Tubeway ][) is a video game for the Apple II programmed by David Arthur Van Brink and published by Datamost in 1983.[1] It is similar to the 1981 Atari arcade game Tempest.
| Tubeway | |
|---|---|
| Developer | Datamost |
| Publisher | Datamost |
| Programmer | David Arthur Van Brink[1] |
| Platform | Apple II |
| Release | 1982 |
| Genre | Tube shooter |
| Mode | Single-player |
Gameplay

Tubeway is a tube shooter in which the player uses paddles to move a small white crosshair around the top of a "tube" or wall while firing down at the computer-controlled opponents attempting to scale their way up it. The opponents, known as the Tubeway Army (one of several references to Gary Numan in the game),[citation needed] consist of triangular green homers (100 points) and triangular blue seekers (200 points), both of which can return fire. A special opponent called the germ occasionally emerges from a white box in the lower left corner of the screen. The goal of the game is to clear as many levels as possible before running out of lives. An extra life is granted every 20,000 points.
Reception
See also
- Axis Assassin, another Tempest-inspired game for the Apple II