Navigation:

Paperboy Nintendo

front image
Score: N/A
Publisher:Mindscape
Year:1988
Languages:English, Japanese
Developer:Atari
Players:1 - 2 (1 simultaneous)

An arcade game that originally came out in 1985, the goal of Paperboy is to go from house to house delivering papers while avoiding obstacles.

__back image

Paperboy was released to arcades in 1985 by Atari Games. It features a custom bicycle handle controller that the player can use to accelerate, brake, and turn the titular Paperboy's bicycle on screen. A button causes him to throw his paper to the left, to either deliver the paper perfectly in a mailbox or doorstep, or for more destructive purposes. There have been many console and handheld versions of Paperboy, from the Commodore 64 and TRS-80 all the way to Xbox Live Arcade.

There are three different courses on which the player can deliver papers: Easy Street, Middle Road, and Hard Way. The player scores points for each paper successfully delivered to a subscriber, but also for breaking the windows or other household features of non-subscribers. Each run through the course takes a single day, with an entire game consisting of delivering Monday through Sunday. At the end of each day any subscribers that had a paper successfully delivered gives a bonus. Any subscribers missed on that day unsubscribes for the following day. If all papers are delivered perfectly to each house the player receives double points for each subscriber, and, unless at the max, get a formerly lost subscriber back.

Each day gets progressively harder, with even Easy Street being quite challenging by Thursday or Friday. The difficulty is ramped up by adding more obstacles, making the doorsteps and mailboxes harder to get at, and increasing the speed of cross traffic on the one intersection. Each run through a particular day is the same, however, so eventually the player can memorize the various patterns.

At the end of the street is the "Training Course", which is an obstacle course with targets, jumps, and static obstacles suitable for running up more points. At the end is a grandstand filled with cheering fans.