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originally called ''Puck Man'' in Japan, is a 1980 maze action video game developed and released by
Namco was a Japanese multinational video game and entertainment company, headquartered in Ōta, Tokyo. It held several international branches, including Namco America in Santa Clara, California, Namco Europe in London, Namco Taiwan in Kaohsiung, ...
for arcades. In North America, the game was released by Midway Manufacturing as part of its licensing agreement with Namco America. The player controls Pac-Man, who must eat all the dots inside an enclosed maze while avoiding four colored ghosts. Eating large flashing dots called "Power Pellets" causes the ghosts to temporarily turn blue, allowing Pac-Man to eat them for bonus points. Game development began in early 1979, directed by Toru Iwatani with a nine-man team. Iwatani wanted to create a game that could appeal to women as well as men, because most video games of the time had themes of war or sports. Although the inspiration for the Pac-Man character was the image of a pizza with a slice removed, Iwatani has said he also rounded out the Japanese character for mouth, kuchi ( ja, ). The in-game characters were made to be cute and colorful to appeal to younger players. The original Japanese title of ''Puck Man'' was derived from the titular character's hockey puck–like shape; the title was changed for the North American release to mitigate vandalism. ''Pac-Man'' was a widespread critical and commercial success, leading to several
sequels A sequel is a work of literature, film, theatre, television, music or video game that continues the story of, or expands upon, some earlier work. In the common context of a narrative work of fiction, a sequel portrays events set in the same ...
, merchandise, and two television series, as well as a hit single by Buckner & Garcia. The character of Pac-Man is now the mascot and flagship icon of Bandai Namco Entertainment. The game remains one of the highest-grossing and best-selling games, generating more than $14 billion in revenue () and 43 million units in sales combined, and has an enduring commercial and cultural legacy, commonly listed as one of the
greatest video games of all time This is a list of video games that multiple reputable video game journalists or magazines have considered to be among the best of all time. The games listed here are included on at least six separate "best/greatest of all time" lists from differ ...
.


Gameplay

''Pac-Man'' is an
action Action may refer to: * Action (narrative), a literary mode * Action fiction, a type of genre fiction * Action game, a genre of video game Film * Action film, a genre of film * ''Action'' (1921 film), a film by John Ford * ''Action'' (1980 fil ...
maze chase video game; the player controls the eponymous character through an enclosed maze. The objective of the game is to eat all of the dots placed in the maze while avoiding four colored ghosts — Blinky (red), Pinky (pink), Inky (cyan), and Clyde (orange) — that pursue Pac-Man. When Pac-Man eats all of the dots, the player advances to the next level. Levels are indicated by fruit icons at the bottom of the screen. In between levels are short cutscenes featuring Pac-Man and Blinky in humorous, comical situations. If Pac-Man is caught by a ghost, he will lose a life; the game ends when all lives are lost. Each of the four ghosts has their own unique
artificial intelligence Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence—perceiving, synthesizing, and inferring information—demonstrated by machines, as opposed to intelligence displayed by animals and humans. Example tasks in which this is done include speech r ...
(A.I.), or "personality": Blinky gives direct chase to Pac-Man; Pinky and Inky try to position themselves in front of Pac-Man, usually by cornering him; and Clyde will switch between chasing Pac-Man and fleeing from him. Placed at the four corners of the maze are large flashing "energizers" or "power pellets." Eating these will cause the ghosts to turn blue with a dizzied expression and to reverse direction. Pac-Man can eat blue ghosts for bonus points; when a ghost is eaten, their eyes make their way back to the center box in the maze, where the ghost "regenerates" and resumes their normal activity. Eating multiple blue ghosts in succession increases their point value. After a certain amount of time, blue-colored ghosts will flash white before turning back into their normal form. Eating a certain number of dots in a level will cause a bonus item — usually in the form of a fruit — to appear underneath the center box; the item can be eaten for bonus points. To the sides of the maze are two "warp tunnels", which allow Pac-Man and the ghosts to travel to the opposite side of the screen. Ghosts become slower when entering and exiting these tunnels. The game increases in difficulty as the player progresses: the ghosts become faster, and the energizers' effect decreases in duration, eventually disappearing entirely. Due to an
integer overflow In computer programming, an integer overflow occurs when an arithmetic operation attempts to create a numeric value that is outside of the range that can be represented with a given number of digits – either higher than the maximum or lower ...
, the 256th level loads improperly, rendering it impossible to complete.


Development

After acquiring the struggling Japanese division of Atari in 1974, video game developer
Namco was a Japanese multinational video game and entertainment company, headquartered in Ōta, Tokyo. It held several international branches, including Namco America in Santa Clara, California, Namco Europe in London, Namco Taiwan in Kaohsiung, ...
began producing its own video games in-house, as opposed to simply licensing them from other developers and distributing them in Japan. Company president Masaya Nakamura created a small video game development group within the company and ordered them to study several
NEC is a Japanese multinational information technology and electronics corporation, headquartered in Minato, Tokyo. The company was known as the Nippon Electric Company, Limited, before rebranding in 1983 as NEC. It provides IT and network soluti ...
-produced microcomputers to potentially create new games with. One of the first people assigned to this division was a young 24-year-old employee named
Toru Iwatani is a Japanese video game designer who spent much of his career working for Namco. He is best known as the creator of the arcade game ''Pac-Man'' (1980). Early life Iwatani was born in the Meguro ward of Tokyo, Japan on January 25, 1955. While ...
. He created Namco's first video game '' Gee Bee'' in 1978, which while unsuccessful helped the company gain a stronger foothold in the quickly-growing video game industry. He also assisted in the production of two sequels, ''
Bomb Bee is a Japanese arcade game that was released by Namco in 1979. It is the sequel to '' Gee Bee'', which was released in the previous year. Gameplay The maximum number of players is two, and the two players have to alternate. The control is a rota ...
'' and ''
Cutie Q is a 1979 block breaker/video pinball hybrid arcade game developed and published by Namco in Japan. The player controls a set of paddles with a rotary knob, the objective being to score as many points possible by deflecting a ball against bloc ...
'', both released in 1979. The Japanese video game industry had surged in popularity with games such as ''Space Invaders'' and ''Breakout (video game), Breakout'', which led to the market being flooded with similar titles from other manufacturers in an attempt to cash in on the success. Iwatani felt that arcade games only appealed to men for their crude graphics and violence, and that arcades in general were seen as seedy environments. For his next project, Iwatani chose to create a non-violent, cheerful video game that appealed mostly to women, as he believed that attracting women and couples into arcades would potentially make them appear to be much more family friendly in tone. Iwatani began thinking of things that women liked to do in their time; he decided to center his game around eating, basing this on women liking to eat desserts and other sweets. His game was initially called ''Pakkuman'', based on the Japanese onomatopoeia term “paku paku taberu”, referencing the mouth movement of opening and closing in succession. The game that later became ''Pac-Man'' began development in early 1979 and took a year and five months to complete, the longest ever for a video game up to that point. Iwatani enlisted the help of nine other Namco employees to assist in production, including composer Toshio Kai, programmer Shigeo Funaki, and hardware engineer Shigeichi Ishimura. Care was taken to make the game appeal to a “non-violent” audience, particularly women, with its usage of simple gameplay and cute, attractive character designs. When the game was being developed, Namco was underway with designing ''Galaxian'', which used a then-revolutionary RGB color display, allowing sprites to use several colors at once instead of using colored strips of cellophane that was commonplace at the time; this technological accomplishment allowed Iwatani to greatly enhance his game with bright pastel colors, which he felt would help attract players. The idea for energizers was a concept Iwatani borrowed from Popeye the Sailor, a cartoon character that temporarily acquires superhuman strength after eating a can of spinach; it is also believed that Iwatani was also partly inspired by a Japanese children's story about a creature that protected children from monsters by devouring them. Frank Fogleman, the co-founder of Gremlin Industries, believes that the maze-chase gameplay of ''Pac-Man'' was inspired by Sega's ''Head On (video game), Head On'' (1979), a similar arcade game that was popular in Japan. Iwatani has often claimed that the character of Pac-Man himself was designed after the shape of a pizza with a missing slice while he was at lunch; in a 1986 interview he said that this was only half-truth, and that the Pac-Man character was also based on him rounding out and simplifying the Japanese character “kuchi” (wikt:口, 口), meaning “mouth”. The four ghosts were made to be cute, colorful and appealing, using bright, pastel colors and expressive blue eyes. Iwatani had used this idea before in ''Cutie Q'', which features similar ghost-like characters, and decided to incorporate it into ''Pac-Man''. He was also inspired by the television series ''Casper the Friendly Ghost'' and the manga ''Little Ghost Q-Taro, Obake no Q-Taro''. Ghosts were chosen as the game's main antagonists due to them being used as villainous characters in animation. The idea for the fruit bonuses was based on graphics displayed on slot machines, which often use symbols such as cherries and bells. Originally, Namco president Masaya Nakamura had requested that all of the ghosts be red and thus indistinguishable from one another. Iwatani believed that the ghosts should be different colors, and he received unanimous support from his colleagues for this idea. Each of the ghosts were programmed to have their own distinct personalities, so as to keep the game from becoming too boring or impossibly difficult to play. Each ghost's name gives a hint to its strategy for tracking down Pac-Man: Shadow ("Blinky") always chases Pac-Man, Speedy ("Pinky") tries to get ahead of him, Bashful ("Inky") uses a more complicated strategy to zero in on him, and Pokey ("Clyde") alternates between chasing him and running away. (The ghosts' Japanese names, translated into English, are Chaser, Ambusher, Fickle, and Stupid, respectively.) To break up the tension of constantly being pursued, humorous intermissions between Pac-Man and Blinky were added. The sound effects were among the last things added to the game, created by Toshio Kai. In a design session, Iwatani noisily ate fruit and made gurgling noises to describe to Kai how he wanted the eating effect to sound. Upon completion, the game was titled ''Puck Man'', based on the working title and the titular character's distinct hockey puck-like shape.


Release

Location testing for ''Puck Man'' began on May 22, 1980 in Shibuya, Tokyo, to a relatively positive fanfare from players. A private showing for the game was done in June, followed by a nationwide release in July. Eyeing the game's success in Japan, Namco initialized plans to bring the game to the international market, particularly the United States. Before showing the game to distributors, Namco America made a number of changes, such as altering the names of the ghosts. The biggest of these was the game's title; executives at Namco were worried that vandals would change the “P” in ''Puck Man'' to an “F”, forming an Fuck, obscene name. Masaya Nakamura chose to rename it to ''Pac-Man'', as he felt it was closer to the game's original Japanese title of ''Pakkuman''. In Europe, the game was released under both titles, ''Pac-Man'' and ''Puck Man''. When Namco presented ''Pac-Man'' and ''Rally-X'' to potential distributors at the 1980 AMOA tradeshow in November, executives believed that ''Rally-X'' would be the best-selling game of that year. According to ''Play Meter'' magazine, both ''Pac-Man'' and ''Rally-X'' received mild attention at the show. Namco had initially approached Atari, Inc., Atari to distribute ''Pac-Man'', but Atari refused the offer. Midway Manufacturing subsequently agreed to distribute both ''Pac-Man'' and ''Rally-X'' in North America, announcing their acquisition of the manufacturing rights on November 22 and releasing them in December.


Ports

''Pac-Man'' was ported to a plethora of home video game systems and personal computers; the most infamous of these is the 1982 Pac-Man (Atari 2600), Atari 2600 conversion, designed by Tod Frye and published by Atari, Inc., Atari. This version of the game was widely criticized for its inaccurate portrayal of the arcade version and for its peculiar design choices, most notably the flickering effect of the ghosts. However, it was a commercial success, having sold over seven million copies. Atari also released versions for the Intellivision, VIC-20, Commodore 64, Apple II series, Apple II, IBM Personal Computer, IBM PC, TI-99/4A, ZX Spectrum, and the Atari 8-bit family of computers. A port for the Atari 5200 was released in 1983, a version that many have seen as a significant improvement over the Atari 2600 version. Namco released a version for the Nintendo Entertainment System, Family Computer in 1984 as one of the console's first third-party titles, as well as a port for the MSX computer. The Famicom version was later released in North America for the Nintendo Entertainment System by Tengen (company), Tengen, a subsidiary of Atari Games. Tengen also produced an unlicensed version of the game in a black cartridge shell, released during a time where Tengen and Nintendo were in bitter disagreements over the latter's stance on quality control for their consoles; this version was later re-released by Namco as an official title in 1993, featuring a new cartridge label and box. The Famicom version was released for the Famicom Disk System in 1990 as a budget title for the Disk Writer kiosks in retail stores. The same year, Namco released a port of ''Pac-Man'' for the Game Boy, which allowed for two-player co-operative play via the Game Link Cable peripheral. A version for the Game Gear was released a year later, which also enabled support for multiplayer. In celebration of the game's 20th anniversary in 1999, Namco re-released the Game Boy version for the Game Boy Color, bundled with ''Pac-Attack'' and titled ''Pac-Man: Special Color Edition''. The same year, Namco and SNK co-published a port for the Neo Geo Pocket Color, which came with a circular "Cross Ring" that attached to the d-pad to restrict it to four-directional movement. In 2001, Namco released a port of ''Pac-Man'' for various Japanese mobile phones, being one of the company's first mobile game releases. The Famicom version of the game was re-released for the Game Boy Advance in 2004 as part of the ''Famicom Mini'' series, released to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Famicom; this version was also released in North America and Europe under the ''Classic NES Series'' label. Namco Networks released ''Pac-Man'' for Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless, BREW mobile devices in 2005. The arcade original was released for the Xbox Live Arcade service in 2006, featuring achievements and online leaderboards. In 2009 a version for iOS devices was published; this release was later rebranded as ''Pac-Man + Tournaments'' in 2013, featuring new mazes and leaderboards. The NES version was released for the Wii Virtual Console in 2007. A Roku version was released in 2011, alongside a port of the Game Boy release for the 3DS Virtual Console. ''Pac-Man'' was one of four titles released under the ''Arcade Game Series'' brand, which was published for the Xbox One, PlayStation 4 and Personal computer, PC in 2016. In 2021, according to Nintendo Direct, it was announced that Hamster Corporation would release ''Pac-Man'', along with ''Xevious'', for the Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4 as part of their ''Arcade Archives'' series, marking the first two Namco games to be included as part of the series. ''Pac-Man'' is included in many List of Bandai Namco video game compilations, Namco compilations, including ''Namco Museum Vol. 1'' (1995), ''Namco Museum 64'' (1999), ''Namco Museum Battle Collection'' (2005), ''Namco Museum DS'' (2007), ''Namco Museum Essentials'' (2009), and ''Namco Museum Megamix'' (2010). In 1996, it was re-released for arcades as part of ''Namco Classic Collection Vol. 2'', alongside ''Dig Dug'', ''Rally-X'' and special "Arrangement" remakes of all three titles. Microsoft included ''Pac-Man'' in ''Microsoft Return of Arcade'' (1995) as a way to help attract video game companies to their Windows 95 operating system. Namco released the game in the third volume of ''Namco History'' in Japan in 1998. The 2001 Game Boy Advance compilation ''Pac-Man Collection'' compiles ''Pac-Man'', ''Pac-Mania'', ''Pac-Attack'' and ''Namco Classic Collection Vol. 2#Pac-Man Arrangement, Pac-Man Arrangement'' onto one cartridge. ''Pac-Man'' is also a hidden extra in the arcade game ''Ms. Pac-Man/Galaga - Class of 1981'' (2001). A similar cabinet was released in 2005 that featured ''Pac-Man'' as the centerpiece. ''Pac-Man 2: The New Adventures'' (1993) and ''Pac-Man World 2'' (2002) have ''Pac-Man'' as an unlockable extra. Alongside the Xbox 360 remake ''Pac-Man Championship Edition'', it was ported to the Nintendo 3DS in 2012 as part of ''Pac-Man & Galaga Dimensions''. The 2010 Wii game ''Pac-Man Party'' and its 2011 3DS remake also include ''Pac-Man'' as a bonus game, alongside the arcade versions of ''Dig Dug'' and ''Galaga''. In 2014, ''Pac-Man'' was included in the compilation title ''Pac-Man Museum'' for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and PC, alongside several other ''Pac-Man'' games. The NES version is one of 30 games included in the NES Classic Edition.


Reception

Upon its North American debut at AMOA 1980, the game initially received a mild response. ''Play Meter'' magazine previewed the game and called it "a cute game which appears to grow on players, something which cute games are not prone to do." They said there's "more to the game than at first appears" but criticized the sound as a drawback, saying it's "good for awhile, then becomes annoying." Upon release, the game exceeded expectations with wide critical and commercial success.


Commercial performance

When it was first released in Japan, ''Pac-Man'' was initially only a modest success; Namco's own ''Galaxian'' (1979) had quickly outdone the game in popularity, due to the predominately male player base being familiar with its shooting gameplay as opposed to ''Pac-Man''s cute characters and maze-chase theme. ''Pac-Man'' eventually became very successful in Japan, where it went on to be Japan's highest-grossing 1980 in video games, arcade game of 1980 according to the annual '':ja:ゲームマシン, Game Machine'' charts, dethroning ''Space Invaders'' (1978) which had topped the annual charts for two years in a row and leading to a shift in the Japanese market away from space shooters towards action games featuring comical characters. ''Pac-Man'' was also Japan's fourth highest-grossing arcade game of 1981. In North America, Midway had limited expectations prior to release, initially manufacturing 5,000 units for the US, before it caught on immediately upon release there. Some arcades purchased entire rows of ''Pac-Man'' cabinets. It soon became a nationwide success. Upon release in 1980, it was earning about per week in the United States. Within one year, more than 100,000 arcade units had been sold which grossed more than in Quarter (United States coin), quarters. It overtook Atari, Inc., Atari's ''Asteroids (video game), Asteroids'' (1979) as the best-selling arcade game in the country, and surpassed the film ''Star Wars: A New Hope'' (1977) with more than in revenue. ''Pac-Man'' was America's highest-grossing 1981 in video games, arcade game of 1981, and second highest 1982 in video games, game of 1982. By 1982, it was estimated to have had 30 million active players across the United States. The game's success was partly driven by its popularity among female audiences, becoming "the first commercial videogame to involve large numbers of women as players" according to Midway's Stan Jarocki, with ''Pac-Man'' being the favorite coin-op game among female gamers through 1982. Among the nine arcade games covered by ''How to Win Video Games'' (1982), ''Pac-Man'' was the only one with females accounting for a majority of players. The number of arcade units sold had tripled to 400,000 by 1982, receiving an estimated total of between seven billion coins and . In a 1983 interview, Nakamura said that though he did expect ''Pac-Man'' to be successful, "I never thought it would be this big." ''Pac-Man'' is the best-selling arcade game of all time (surpassing ''Space Invaders''), with total estimated earnings ranging from coins and $3.5 billion ($7.7 billion adjusted for inflation) to ( adjusted for inflation) in arcades. ''Pac-Man'' and ''Ms. Pac-Man'' also topped the US ''RePlay'' cocktail arcade cabinet charts for 23 months, from 1982 in video games, February 1982 through 1983 in video games, 1983 up until 1984 in video games, February 1984. The Atari 2600 version of the game sold over copies, making it the List of best-selling Atari 2600 video games, console's best-selling title. In addition, Coleco's tabletop mini-arcade unit sold over units in 1982, the ''Pac-Man'' Nelsonic Game Watch sold more than 500,000 units the same year, the Family Computer (Famicom) version and its 2004 Game Boy Advance re-release sold a combined 598,000 copies in Japan, the Atari 5200 version sold cartridges between 1986 and 1988, the Atari XE computer version sold copies in 1986 and 1990, Thunder Mountain's 1986 budget release for home computers received a Diamond certification from the Software Publishers Association in 1989 for selling over 500,000 copies, and mobile phone ports have sold over paid downloads . ''II Computing'' also listed the Atarisoft port tenth on the magazine's list of top Apple II games as of late 1985, based on sales and market-share data. , all versions of ''Pac-Man'' are estimated to have grossed a total of more than in revenue.


Accolades

''Pac-Man'' was awarded "Best Commercial Arcade Game" at the Electronic Games#1982 Arcade Awards (1981), 1982 Arcade Awards."1981 Arcade Awards" – ''Electronic Games'' March 1982, pages 46–49. ''Pac-Man'' also won the Video Software Dealers Association's VSDA Award for Best Videogame. In 2001, ''Pac-Man'' was voted the greatest video game of all time by a Dixons Retail, Dixons poll in the UK. The ''Killer List of Videogames'' listed ''Pac-Man'' as the most popular game of all time. The list aggregator site Playthatgame currently ranks Pac-Man as the #53rd top game of all-time & game of the year.


Impact

''Pac-Man'' is considered by many to be one of the most influential video games of all time; The game established the List of maze chase games, maze chase game genre, the first video game with power-ups, and the individual ghosts have deterministic Artificial intelligence (video games), artificial intelligence (AI) that reacts to player actions. ''Pac-Man'' is considered one of the first video games to have demonstrated the potential of Player character, characters in the medium; its title character was the first original gaming mascot, it increased the appeal of video games with Girl gamer, female audiences, and it was gaming's first broad licensing success. It is often cited as the first game with cutscenes (in the form of brief comical interludes about Pac-Man and Blinky (Pac-Man), Blinky chasing each other), though actually ''Space Invaders Part II'' employed a similar style of between-level intermissions in 1979. ''Pac-Man'' was a turning point for the arcade video game industry, which had previously been dominated by space shoot 'em ups since ''Space Invaders'' (1978). ''Pac-Man'' popularized a genre of "character-led" action games, leading to a wave of character action games involving player characters in 1981, such as Nintendo's prototypical platform game ''Donkey Kong (video game), Donkey Kong'', Konami's ''Frogger'' and Universal Entertainment's ''Lady Bug (video game), Lady Bug''. ''Pac-Man'' was one of the first popular non-shooting action games, defining key elements of the genre such as "parallel visual processing" which requires simultaneously keeping track of multiple entities, including the player's location, the enemies, and the energizers. "Maze chase" games exploded on home computers after the release of ''Pac-Man''. Some of them appeared before official ports and garnered more attention from consumers, and sometimes lawyers, as a result. These include ''Taxman (video game), Taxman'' (1981) and ''Snack Attack'' (1982) for the Apple II, ''Jawbreaker (video game), Jawbreaker'' (1981) for the Atari 8-bit family, ''Scarfman'' (1981) for the TRS-80, and ''K.C. Munchkin!'' (1981) for the Odyssey². Namco themselves produced several other maze chase games, including ''Rally-X'' (1980), ''Dig Dug'' (1982), ''Exvania'' (1992), and ''Tinkle Pit'' (1994). Atari sued Philips for creating ''K.C. Munchkin'' in the case ''Atari, Inc. v. North American Philips Consumer Electronics Corp.'', leading to ''Munchkin'' being pulled from store shelves under court order. No major competitors emerged to challenge ''Pac-Man'' in the maze-chase subgenre. ''Pac-Man'' also inspired 3D variants of the concept, such as ''Monster Maze'' (1982), ''Spectre (Apple II video game), Spectre'' (1982), and early first-person shooters such as ''MIDI Maze'' (1987; which also had similar character designs). John Romero credited ''Pac-Man'' as the game that had the biggest influence on his career; ''Wolfenstein 3D'' includes a ''Pac-Man'' level from a first-person perspective. Many post-''Pac-Man'' titles include power-ups that briefly turn the tables on the enemy. The game's artificial intelligence inspired programmers who later worked for companies like Bethesda Softworks, Bethesda.


Legacy

Guinness World Records has awarded the ''Pac-Man'' series eight records in ''Guinness World Records: Gamer's Edition 2008'', including "Most Successful Coin-Operated Game". On June 3, 2010, at the NLGD Festival of Games, the game's creator, Toru Iwatani, officially received the certificate from Guinness World Records for ''Pac-Man'' having had the most "coin-operated arcade machines" installed worldwide: 293,822. The record was set and recognized in 2005 and mentioned in the ''Guinness World Records: Gamer's Edition 2008'', but finally actually awarded in 2010. In 2009, ''Guinness World Records'' listed Pac-Man as the most recognizable video game character in the United States, recognized by 94% of the population, above Mario who was recognized by 93% of the population. In 2015, The Strong National Museum of Play inducted ''Pac-Man'' to its World Video Game Hall of Fame. The Pac-Man character and game series became an icon of 1980s in video games, video game culture during the 1980s. The game has inspired various real-life recreations, involving real people or robots. One event called Pac-Manhattan set a Guinness World Record for "Largest ''Pac-Man'' Game" in 2004. The business term "Pac-Man defense" in mergers and acquisitions refers to a Takeover, hostile takeover target that attempts to reverse the situation and instead acquire its attempted acquirer, a reference to ''Pac-Man''s energizers. The "Pac-Man renormalization" is named for a cosmetic resemblance to the character, in the mathematical study of the Mandelbrot set. The game's popularity has also led to "Pac-Man" being adopted as a nickname, such as by boxer Manny Pacquiao and the American football player Adam Jones (American football), Adam Jones. On August 21, 2016, in the 2016 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, during a video which showcases Tokyo as the host of the 2020 Summer Olympics, a small segment shows Pac-Man and the ghosts racing and eating dots on a All-weather running track, running track.


Merchandise

A wide variety of ''Pac-Man'' merchandise have been marketed with the character's image. By 1982, Midway had about 95-105 licensees selling ''Pac-Man'' merchandise, including major companies, such as AT&T selling a ''Pac-Man'' telephone. There were more than 500 ''Pac-Man'' related products. ''Pac-Man'' themed merchandise sales had exceeded ( adjusted for inflation) in the US by 1982. ''Pac-Man'' related merchandise products included bumper stickers, jewellery, accessories (such as a $20,000 ''Ms. Pac-Man'' choker with 14 karat gold), bicycles, breakfast cereals, popsicles, t-shirts, toys, handheld electronic game imitations, and pasta.


Television

The ''Pac-Man (TV series), Pac-Man'' animated television series produced by Hanna–Barbera aired on American Broadcasting Company, ABC from 1982 to 1983. It was the highest-rated Saturday morning cartoon show in the US during late 1982. A computer-generated animated series titled ''Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures'' aired on Disney XD in June 2013, and also on Discovery Family in November 2019.


Music

The Buckner & Garcia song "Pac-Man Fever (song), Pac-Man Fever" (1981) went to No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100, ''Billboard'' Hot 100 charts, and received a RIAA certification, Gold certification for more than 1 million records sold by 1982, and a total of 2.5 million copies sold as of 2008. More than one million copies of the group's ''Pac-Man Fever (album), Pac-Man Fever'' album (1982) were sold. In 1982, "Weird Al" Yankovic recorded a parody of "Taxman" by the Beatles as "Pac-Man". It was eventually released in 2017 as part of ''Squeeze Box: The Complete Works of "Weird Al" Yankovic''. In 1992, Aphex Twin (with the name Power-Pill) released ''Pac-Man (album), Pac-Man'', a techno album which consists mostly of samples from the game. The character appears in the music video for Bloodhound Gang's "Mope", released in 2000. Here, the character is portrayed as a cocaine addict. On July 20, 2020, Gorillaz and Schoolboy Q, ScHoolboy Q, released a track entitled "PAC-MAN (Gorillaz song), PAC-MAN" as a part of Gorillaz' Song Machine series to commemorate the game's Pac-Man 40th Anniversary, 40th anniversary, with the music video depicting the band's frontman, 2-D (character), 2-D, playing a Gorillaz-themed Pac-Man arcade game.


Film

The Pac-Man character appears in the film ''Pixels (2015 film), Pixels'' (2015), with Denis Akiyama playing series creator Toru Iwatani. Iwatani makes a cameo at the beginning of the film as an arcade technician. ''Pac-Man'' is referenced and makes an appearance in the 2017 film, ''Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2'', and the video game, ''Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy''. The game, the character, and the ghosts all also appear in the film ''Wreck-It Ralph'', as well as the sequel ''Ralph Breaks the Internet''. In ''Sword Art Online The Movie: Ordinal Scale'' where Kirito and his friends beat a virtual reality game called ''PAC-Man 2026'', which is loosely based on ''Pac-Man 256''. In the Japanese tokusatsu film ''Kamen Rider Heisei Generations: Dr. Pac-Man vs. Ex-Aid & Ghost with Legend Riders'', a Pac-Man-like character is the main villain. The 2018 film ''Relaxer (film), Relaxer'' uses ''Pac-Man'' as a strong plot element in the story of a 1999 couch-bound man who attempts to beat the game (and encounters the famous Level 256 glitch) before the year 2000 problem occurs. ''Pac-Man'' is referenced in a 2018 Black Mirror interactive film called Black Mirror: Bandersnatch. In the movie, the character Colin Ritman (Will Poulter) begins to tell Stefan about ''Pac-Man'' and how the game has a much deeper meaning. The conspiracy is that choice and free will is an illusion. Colin’s theory is that Pac (P.A.C.) stands for Program And Control. ''Pac-Man'' is “Program And Control Man” and a metaphor of someone being chased by their own demons, leaving them unable to do anything except consume to no end. Because, if they don’t, then they’ll be consumed. A cool conspiracy, but likely untrue. Various attempts for a feature film based on Pac-Man have been planned since the peak of the original game's popularity. Following the release of Ms. Pac-Man, a feature film was being developed, but never reached an agreement. In 2008, a live-action film based on the series was in development at Crystal Sky. In 2022, plans for a live-action Pac-Man film were revived at Wayfarer Studios, based on an idea by Chuck Williams.


Other gaming media

In 1982, Milton Bradley released a board game based on ''Pac-Man''. Players move up to four Pac-Man characters (traditional yellow plus red, green, and blue) plus two ghosts as per the throws of a pair of dice. The two ghost pieces were randomly packed with one of four colors. Sticker manufacturer Fleer included Scratchcard, rub-off game cards with its ''Pac-Man'' stickers. The card packages contain a ''Pac-Man'' style maze with all points along the path hidden with opaque coverings. From the starting position, the player moves around the maze while scratching off the coverings to score points. A ''Pac-Man''-themed downloadable content package for ''Minecraft'' was released in 2020 in commemoration of the game's Pac-Man 40th Anniversary, 40th anniversary. This pack introduced a new ghost called 'Creepy', based on the Creeper (Minecraft), Creeper.


Perfect scores and other records

A perfect score on the original ''Pac-Man'' arcade game is 3,333,360 points, achieved when the player obtains the maximum score on the first 255 levels by eating every dot, energizer, fruit and blue ghost without losing a man, then uses all six men to obtain the maximum possible number of points on level 256. The first person to achieve a publicly witnessed and verified perfect score without manipulating the game's hardware to freeze play was Billy Mitchell (gamer), Billy Mitchell, who performed the feat on July 3, 1999. Some recordkeeping organizations removed Mitchell's score after a 2018 investigation by Twin Galaxies concluded that two unrelated ''Donkey Kong (video game), Donkey Kong'' score performances submitted by Mitchell had not used an unmodified original circuit board. As of July 2020, seven other gamers had achieved perfect ''Pac-Man'' scores on original arcade hardware. The world record for the fastest completion of a perfect score, according to Twin Galaxies, is currently held by David Race with a time of 3 hours, 28 minutes, 49 seconds. In December 1982, eight-year-old boy Jeffrey R. Yee received a letter from United States president Ronald Reagan congratulating him on a world record score of 6,131,940 points, possible only if he had passed level 256. In September 1983, Walter Day, chief scorekeeper at Twin Galaxies at the time, took the U.S. National Video Game Team on a tour of the East Coast to visit gamers who claimed the ability to pass that level. None demonstrated such an ability. In 1999, Billy Mitchell offered $100,000 to anyone who could pass level 256 before January 1, 2000. The offer expired with the prize unclaimed. After announcing in 2018 that it would no longer recognize the first perfect score on ''Pac-Man'', Guinness World Records reversed that decision and reinstated Billy Mitchell's 1999 performance on June 18, 2020.


Remakes and sequels

''Pac-Man'' inspired a long series of sequels, remakes, and re-imaginings, and is one of the longest-running video game franchises in history. The first of these was ''Ms. Pac-Man'', developed by the American-based General Computer Corporation and published by Midway in 1982. The character's gender was changed to female in response to ''Pac-Man''s popularity with women, with new mazes, moving bonus items, and faster gameplay being implemented to increase its appeal. ''Ms. Pac-Man'' is one of the best-selling arcade games in North America, where ''Pac-Man'' and ''Ms. Pac-Man'' had become the most successful machines in the history of the amusement arcade industry. Legal concerns raised over who owned the game caused ''Ms. Pac-Man'' to become owned by Namco, who assisted in production of the game. ''Ms. Pac-Man'' inspired its own line of remakes, including ''Ms. Pac-Man Maze Madness'' (2000), and ''Ms. Pac-Man: Quest for the Golden Maze'', and is also included in many Namco and ''Pac-Man'' collections for consoles. Namco's own follow-up to the original was ''Super Pac-Man'', released in 1982. This was followed by the Japan-exclusive ''Pac & Pal'' in 1983. Midway produced many other ''Pac-Man'' sequels during the early 1980s, including ''Pac-Man Plus'' (1982), ''Jr. Pac-Man'' (1983), ''Baby Pac-Man'' (1983), and ''Professor Pac-Man'' (1984). Other games include the isometric ''Pac-Mania'' (1987), the side-scrollers ''Pac-Land'' (1984), ''Pac-Man 2: The New Adventures, Hello! Pac-Man'' (1994), and ''Pac-In-Time'' (1995), the 3D platformer ''Pac-Man World'' (1999), and the puzzle games ''Pac-Attack'' (1991) and ''Pac-Pix'' (2005). Iwatani designed ''Pac-Land'' and ''Pac-Mania'', both of which remain his favorite games in the series. ''Pac-Man Championship Edition'', published for the Xbox 360 in 2007, was Iwatani's final game before leaving the company. Its neon visuals and fast-paced gameplay was met with acclaim, leading to the creation of ''Pac-Man Championship Edition DX'' (2010) and ''Pac-Man Championship Edition 2'' (2016). Coleco's Handheld electronic game, tabletop Coleco#History, Mini-Arcade versions of the game yielded 1.5 million units sold in 1982. Nelsonic Industries produced a ''Pac-Man'' LCD wristwatch game with a simplified maze also in 1982. Namco Networks sold a downloadable Windows PC version of ''Pac-Man'' in 2009 which also includes an enhanced mode which replaces all of the original sprites with the sprites from ''Pac-Man Championship Edition''. Namco Networks made a downloadable bundle which includes its PC version of ''Pac-Man'' and its port of ''Dig Dug'' called ''List of Namco retro video game compilations#Namco All-Stars: Pac-Man and Dig Dug, Namco All-Stars: Pac-Man and Dig Dug''. In 2010, Namco Bandai announced the release of the game on Windows Phone 7 as an Xbox Live game. For the weekend of May 21–23, 2010, Google changed the logo on its homepage to a playable version of the game in recognition of the 30th anniversary of the game's release. The Google Doodle version of ''Pac-Man'' was estimated to have been played by more than 1 billion people worldwide in 2010, so Google later gave the game its own page. In April 2011, Soap Creative published ''World's Biggest Pac-Man'', working together with Microsoft and Namco-Bandai to celebrate ''Pac-Man''s 30th anniversary. It is a multiplayer browser-based game with user-created, interlocking mazes. For April Fools' Day in 2017, Google created a playable of the game on Google Maps where users were able to play the game using the map onscreen.


Technology

The original arcade system board had one Z80, Z80A processor, running at 3.072 Mhz, 16 kbyte of ROM and 3 kbyte of static RAM. Of those 1 kbyte each was for video ram, color ram and generic program ram. There were 2 custom chips on the board: the 285 sync bus controller and the 284 video ram addresser, but daughterboards made only from standard parts were also widely used instead. Video output was (analog) component video with composite sync. A futher 8 kbyte of character rom was used for characters, background tiles and sprites and an additional 1 kbit of static ram was used to hold 4bpp sprite data for one scanline and was written to during the horizontal blanking period preceeding each line. Sprite size was always 16x16 pixels, one of the 4 colors per pixel was for transparency (of the background). The monitor was installed 90 degree rotated clockwise, the first visible scanline started in the top right corner and ends in the bottom right corner. The horizontal blanking period, which starts after the level indicator at the bottom is drawn, had a duration of 96 pixel clock ticks, enough time to fetch 4 bytes of sprite data per 16 clock ticks for 6 sprites. Although attribute memory exists for them, sprite 0 and 7 are unusable, their pixel fetch timing window occupied by the bottom level indicator (which just precedes the hblank) for sprite 0 and two rows of characters at the top of the screen, which just follow the hblank, for sprite 7.


Notes


References


Further reading

* Comprehensive coverage on the history of the entire series up through 1999. * Morris, Chris (May 10, 2005).
Pac Man Turns 25
. ''CNN Money''. * Vargas, Jose Antonio (June 22, 2005).
Still Love at First Bite: At 25, Pac-Man Remains a Hot Pursuit
. ''The Washington Post''. * Hirschfeld, Tom. ''How to Master the Video Games'', Bantam Books, 1981. Strategy guide for a variety of arcade games including ''Pac-Man''. Includes drawings of some of the common patterns.


External links

*
''Pac-Man'' highscores
on Twin Galaxies
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