I think I may have mentioned before in this blog that when I
was young, my family would all go for walks from Leigh-on-Sea to Southend,
stopping off at various watering holes (pubs) for a drink. Being young, we would have to sit in the
family rooms of such pubs like The Peterboat, Ye Old Smack, The Cliffs
Pavilion, The Shambles, and The Foresters Arms to name a few.
selling booze!) were a great assortment of arcade games, namely Carnival, Pac-Land
and Commando. I would spend a fortune on
these, but the highlight of these walks was finally reaching Southend and
spending loads of my pocket money in the arcades on one classic game that I
still love playing today…… Paperboy.
I never considered myself an expert at the game, but I used
to fly through the levels, picking up the newspapers, and throwing them at the
doors of subscribers, whilst avoiding road-workers, drunks, radio controlled
cars, break-dancers, and other obstacles. On many occasions I had a large crowd standing
behind me, watching and cheering me on.
It actually made me feel good!
was coming out on the Commodore Plus 4 (our family computer at the time). I remember getting the game from Software
Plus in Basildon, getting home, loading the game for the first time, only to
find the conversion a complete and utter pile of pooh! Actually, looking back at the game, the
conversion wasn’t all that bad considering the limitations of the Commodore
Plus 4 – As with many games on the system, it was also made to work on the
lower spec Commodore 16. I’m sure a
version made specifically for the Plus 4 would have been much better…… ANYWAY…..
games that came with the computer was the C64 conversion – and WOW…. It was amazing.
Besides the blocky graphics, it was just as good as the arcade (just without
the handlebar joystick), and included the training course which was missing in
the Plus 4 version.
was to deliver newspapers along a suburban street shown in an isometric 3D view. If you ran out of newspapers, you would have
to collect more and you could also damage/vandalise non-subscribers houses by
throwing newspapers at their windows and other items located in their front
gardens to boost your score. If you
deliver a newspaper to every subscriber’s house, a non-subscriber becomes a
subscriber the following day. If you
miss a subscriber’s house, they become a non-subscriber on the next day. The game starts on Monday and you need to get
all houses to subscribe to the newspaper by the following Sunday.
Sounds easy? It would
be if it wasn’t for break-dancers, cars, skateboarders, drunks, cats (and even
the Grim Reaper) getting in your way.
You also had to cross an intersection in the road which required the
player to dodge traffic. Some obstacles could
earn the player additional points such as throwing a newspaper at a burglar
trying to break in to a house, or hitting one of two men having a fight in the
middle of the street.
complete a training course for additional points (and to improve your throwing aim). If you crashed on the course, you would
simply just start the following day without the bonus points of completing the
course.
The game was also featured on one of my favourite shows in
the 1980s – a gameshow by the BBC called First Class which had young contestants play against
each other on a variety of popular computer games at the time (720, Hypersports, and of
course Paperboy).