Maze Craze: A Game of Cops n’ Robbers is a game for the Atari Video Computer System (later renamed the Atari 2600) developed by Rick Maurer and published by Atari, Inc. in 1980. In Maze Craze, two players compete to be the first to escape a randomly generated, top-down maze. Though primarily a two player game, any of the variations that don't involve interaction with the second player can be played solo. Sears rebranded Maze Craze as Maze Mania for its Tele-Games system.[1]
Gameplay
The manual describes the situation as a "maze of city blocks" and the player a red or blue cop on patrol. The cops are represented as squares. The goal is to reach the exit. In multiplayer games, the first player to find their way out wins.
Some variants add robber blocks to the maze which either need to be avoided or captured, depending. Others make the maze either partially or fully invisible, and maze is periodically revealed for a moment or only when the joystick button is pressed. In the "Blockcade" variant, each player can drop a false wall to trick the other player. There are settings to increase or decrease the speed of the cops and robbers and the number of robbers in the maze.
Development
Rick Maurer had been working on a clone of Space Invaders in 1978 for the Atari Video Computer System.[2] After a few months of development, he had a playable version of the game. The consumer division of Atari later instructed Maurer to cease further the game, which led to Maurer focusing on coding what would become Maze Craze (1980). Maurer reflected on developing the game, saying he believed it would help him hone his coding skills for the console.[3]
Release
Maze Craze was released for the Atari Video Computer System in 1980.[4]
Maze Craze was re-released in various compilation formats. This includes the Atari 80 in One for Windows in 2003 and the Atari Anthology for PlayStation 2 and Xbox in 2004.[5][6] In 2023, it was released as a free DLC for the Atari 50 (2022) compilation and as part of the pack-in compilation title with the release of the Atari 2600+. [7][8][9][10] It was released on portable devices as part of the Atari Greatest Hits Volume 2 release for the Nintendo DS in 2011.[11]
See also
- The Amazing Maze Game (1976)
External links
References
- Maze Mania AtariAge^
- Brett Weiss. The 100 Greatest Console Video Games 1977-1987 Schiffer Publishing, 2014^
- Steve Fulton. Atari: The Golden Years -- A History, 1978-1981 Game Developer, August 20, 2008, retrieved February 18, 2024^
- New Games Join Home Video Craze The Shreveport Journal, November 19, 1980, retrieved September 9, 2025^
- Scott Humphries. Atari: 80 Classic Games in One Review IGN, January 27, 2004, retrieved October 7, 2024^
- Craig Harris. Atari Anthology IGN, November 30, 2004, retrieved October 7, 2024^
- Ollie Reynolds. 'Atari 50' is Getting More Games Via Free Updates, 12 Dropping Next Week NintendoLife, November 30, 2023, retrieved November 30, 2023^
- Darryn Bonthuys. Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration Gets a Few More Forgotten Classics Today GameSpot, December 5, 2023, retrieved December 5, 2023^
- Brendan Sinclair. Atari reveals Atari 2600+ console Gameindustry.biz, August 22, 2023, retrieved September 9, 2025^
- Chris Reed. Atari 2600+ Console, Games, and Accessories Are Out Tomorrow IGN, November 16, 2023, retrieved September 9, 2025^
- Atari Greatest Hits Volume 2 Code Mystics, retrieved October 17, 2024^
- Maze Craze Manual archive.org, Atari, Inc., 1978^