During the early 1980s, my brother and I hung out at The Land of Oz in the Northeast Mall in Hurst, Texas, which is a suburb of Fort Worth. I have fond memories of playing a shooter called at that arcade, so I was stoked when AtariAge published a port of the game for the . Check out my review below, originally published in Video Game Trader.
Moon Cresta
Atari 7800
Publisher: AtariAge
Programmed by Bob Decrescenzo
3.5 Stars (Out of 5)
The original arcade version of , which Nichibutsu released in 1980, has the following attract mode
readout:
TRIP TO THE SPACE WAR
MOON CRESTA
TRY IT NOW!!
YOU CAN GET A LOT
OF FUN AND THRILL
Then the game proceeds to list the top five scores, along with the
players’ initials.
The Atari 7800 port lacks the aforementioned “Engrish,” but it
offers something more important that, obviously, the coin-up lacks: the ability
for players to select from three difficulty levels: Easy, Normal, and Hard.
While preparing to write this review, I never bothered playing Hard
mode because Normal is plenty difficult. As you guide your ship horizontally
along the bottom of the screen, firing bullets one at a time at waves of aliens
(there are five alien types, each worth a different point value), they move in
twisting, turning, circular patterns, often diving below your ship, only to
swoop upward and crash into you. In addition, they sometimes fly down, kamikaze-like,
straight for your ship.
Easy mode is similar to Normal mode in terms of basic gameplay, but
the aliens are slower and start off “unable to re-emerge under the player’s
ship once they pass below it, reappearing at the center of the screen instead.”
As with most classic games, the action does get tougher as the game wears on,
so Easy mode does offer a challenge in due time.
In any of the modes, if you reach 30,000 points, you get a fresh
stack of three ships, an accomplishment that is difficult in Normal mode.
“What is this about ‘stacked ships,’” I can hear those of you who
have never played the game asking.
In Moon Cresta, you begin
with three ships: I, II, and III. You begin controlling I, and it is small and
fires one bullet at a time. If it gets hit, ship II appears. It is medium sized
and fires bullets in side-by-side pairs. Ship III is large and also fires pairs
of bullets.
“Again, what’s this business about stacking?” you insist.
Each round of play has 10 waves of aliens. After you destroy the
first four waves, there’s an easy-to-execute docking
sequence in which you guide your ship as it floats down to a ship in reserve
below (assuming you have any ships left).
If you dock successfully, you get increased firepower, but you
become a bigger target. The same thing happens after four more waves of aliens
are eliminated. This gameplay mechanic isn’t the same as that found in a similar,
but far more famous game, but it probably did pave the way for the doubling up
of ships in Galaga (1981). Ships in Moon Cresta are stacked whereas those in
Galaga are side-by-side. Speaking of Galaga, that game, with its rapid-fire
shooting and dynamic gameplay, made similar games released before it—including Moon Cresta—seem dated to some degree.
Getting back to the fact that this homebrew is an arcade port, the
original Moon Cresta had somewhat more
vibrant colors and more robust sound effects (I only state it as a matter of
record—this is nitpicking of the highest order), but that’s perfectly understandable
given the nature of the hardware. The 7800 version is an excellent translation
(only the most strident of arcade purists would scoff at it), giving console
gamers a solid entry in the all-but-forgotten “slide-and-shoot” genre, which
includes such greats as ,
Demon Attack, MegaMania, and Phoenix.
And, as those of us who enjoyed the game in the arcades and wished
it would have been released for the Atari 2600, 5200, or ColecoVision back in
the day well know, this is the first time Moon
Cresta has been ported to a home console. So Kudos to AtariAge and
programmer Bob Decrescenzo for making this happen.
One caveat: As with most homebrews, Moon Cresta, retailing for $50 (with professionally produced
cartridge, manual, and box), is expensive. For those modern gamers accustomed
to paying just a few dollars more for the latest entry in the “Assassin’s
Creed” or “Call of Duty” series, you may find Moon Cresta to be a bit on the shallow side. However, for a few
minutes of old-school fun every now and again, it’s a blast.