Difference between revisions of "Dogs 1"

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'''Related games:''' ''[[Street Wolf]]'', ''[[The Head]]''
 
'''Related games:''' ''[[Street Wolf]]'', ''[[The Head]]''
 
}}{{PendingHeader}}
 
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Hey, this is very slightly different.
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Most of Gary Acord's games categorize themselves into one of two overlapping threads: his own personal league of [[Superheroes|superheros]], and his obsession with ''[[Zapak|Pac-Man]]''. Some superhero games borrow from ''Pac-Man'''s design; Acord's knock-off Pac characters tend to show up in his superhero crossovers. Ergo, most of his games sit somewhere on a complex web of relationship.
  
An inscrutable web of levels and links, nearly impossible to rationally navigate...
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A few games, though, like ''Dogs'' and ''[[The Head]]'', make an effort to stand apart as their own smaller works, with only a shared design sensibility and audio-video library to associate them with the greater Acord cosmos. The games remain baffling, yet this isolation and comparable modesty make the games easier to digest and may therefore offer the player a clearer window into the technicolor chaos that defines Acord as a designer.  
  
 
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(Three levels are nearly identical, and shared with ''[[Street Wolf]]''.)
Most of Acord's games categorize themselves into one of two overlapping threads: his own personal league of superheros, and his obsession with Pac-Man. Some superhero games borrow from Pac-Man's design; Acord's knock-off Pac characters tend to show up in his superhero crossovers. Ergo, most of his games sit somewhere on a complex web of relationship.
 
 
 
A few games, though, like Dogs and The Head, make an effort to stand apart as their own smaller works, with only a shared design sensibility and audio-video library to associate them with the greater Acord cosmos. The games remain baffling, yet this isolation and comparable modesty make the games easier to digest and may therefore offer the player a clearer window into the technicolor chaos that defines Acord as a designer.
 
 
 
(Three levels are nearly identical, and shared with Street Wolf.)
 
  
 
== Story ==
 
== Story ==

Revision as of 20:04, 16 April 2018

Pending.png
Dogs
Dogs.gif

Release type: Shareware
Release date: ~1992-1993 (original release)
Levels: 7
Author: Gary Acord
Website: Acord Games
Registration bonus: Dogs 2 and Dogs 3, hint sheet, secret bonus game, copies of all shareware games, membership in the Zapper Game Club
Registration price: $20
Related games: Street Wolf, The Head


THIS ARTICLE IS INCOMPLETE
FULL ENTRY COMING SOON!


Most of Gary Acord's games categorize themselves into one of two overlapping threads: his own personal league of superheros, and his obsession with Pac-Man. Some superhero games borrow from Pac-Man's design; Acord's knock-off Pac characters tend to show up in his superhero crossovers. Ergo, most of his games sit somewhere on a complex web of relationship.

A few games, though, like Dogs and The Head, make an effort to stand apart as their own smaller works, with only a shared design sensibility and audio-video library to associate them with the greater Acord cosmos. The games remain baffling, yet this isolation and comparable modesty make the games easier to digest and may therefore offer the player a clearer window into the technicolor chaos that defines Acord as a designer.

(Three levels are nearly identical, and shared with Street Wolf.)

Story

Dog.gif

You'll begin to think the world has gone to the dogs, as you become entranced into a surrealistic dimension, viewed from the perspective of a dog, as you run jump and shoot your way through this fast moving VGA arcade game and its 4 way scrolling screens and gargantuan worlds.

Instructions

Leading the pack in Dogs
Arrow keys - move around.
[X] - jump right. [Z] - jump left.
[Space] - shoot low.
[A] - shoot high.
[P] - pick up objects.
[M] - small right jump.
[N] - small left jump.
[F1] - instructions.
[F2] - inventory.
[F4] - toggle sound.
[F5] - save game. [F6] - load game
[F7] - joystick setup.
[F1O] - about Acord Games.

Credits

Acord Games

Resources

As with The Head, the levels are all variations of a level from Street Wolf.

Availability

Distributed through contemporary bulletin boards, through the author's Website, and through several third-party mirror archives.

Archive History

On November 7, 2010, Demu.org maintainer Swizzle pointed out the archive of Gary Acord material on the site -- which was swiftly added to the Game-Maker Archive.

Links

Listings

Misc. Links

Downloads