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International Athletics

aka: Olympic Games 92
Moby ID: 27947
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Description official description

International Athletics is an arcade track & field game by the Spanish developer True Emotions. It was initially published by Opera Soft in Spain in 1992 under the title Olympic Games '92, then licensed by Zeppelin in 1993 for their "International" series of sports simulations.

International Athletics consists of eight events, grouped in three basic categories:

  • Running - 100m, 110m hurdles
  • Jumping - Long Jump, High Jump, Triple Jump
  • Throwing - Javelin, Shot Putt, Discus

Rather than the traditional rhythmic key tapping or joystick rattling of the Decathlon offspring, International Athletics requires only timing, with most events mastered with only two key presses. To run the 100 meters for instance, you hit the action key once to get your athlete started, then adjust his target speed on a slider. Once that's done, you lean back and watch him race to the finishing line. Events such as triple jump and 110m hurdles require several accurately times keystrokes in order to succeed. In general, mastering the events and even setting new world records is a matter of only one or two repeats.

Practice mode lets you exercise your timing, competition mode plays through all eight events in set order. If you fail to meet the qualification requirement on one event, you are out instantly. Up to four players can compete on one PC in split-screen mode.

The game's presentation is thin, with digitized photos of the eight events as the main eye-candy and a complete lack of atmospheric stadium sequences, ceremonies or national anthems; in this respect, International Athletics doesn't even meet the standards set by Summer Games and Epyx' other late-80s sports classics.

Options include three difficulty levels, changing wind and different weather conditions, which are not visually represented but affect the achievable event result. Likely one of the most esoteric options seen in a track & field game so far is the possibility to activate doping. This doesn't mean that players can actively dope their athletes, but they may fail random doping checks after each event, which results in immediate disqualification - essentially a form of Russian Roulette.

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Screenshots

Credits (DOS version)

19 People · View all

Design by
Written by
Artwork by
Programmed by
Screenplay by
Tested by
  • Alberto
  • Ivan
  • Luis
  • Fer
  • David
  • Julian Fermin
  • Israel
Additional Testing by
  • Ivan
  • Ana
  • Juan
  • Yolanda
Choreography and Soundtrack by
Sound Effects by
True Emotions Graphic System by
  • Opera Plus
Produced by
[ full credits ]

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 35% (based on 3 ratings)

Players

Average score: 1.3 out of 5 (based on 2 ratings with 0 reviews)

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Trivia

Version differences

Astonishingly, the original Spanish version of the game (titled Olympic Games 92) of 1992 has better graphics than the 1993 Zeppelin release. The original version displays true 256 color VGA graphics (see screenshots), while the Zeppelin version's EGA and VGA options both use 16 colors, only with different palettes.

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Related Games

International Championship Athletics
Released 1991 on Amiga, Atari ST
Olympic Games: Atlanta 1996
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ESPN International Track & Field
Released 2000 on Game Boy Color
International Track & Field 2000
Released 1999 on PlayStation, Nintendo 64
F1 Circus '92
Released 1992 on TurboGrafx-16
Olympic Boxing
Released 2020 on Macintosh, 2021 on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4...
Numan Athletics
Released 1993 on Arcade, 2009 on Wii
Winter Olympics: Lillehammer '94
Released 1993 on DOS, 1994 on SNES, Genesis...

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 27947
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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by -Chris.

Additional contributors: Patrick Bregger.

Game added May 7, 2007. Last modified January 23, 2024.