Description

In 1982, a sequel to Pac-Man was introduced in the form of his girlfriend, Ms. Pac-Man. This sequel continued on the "eat the dots/avoid the ghosts" gameplay of the original game, but added new features to keep the title fresh.

Like her boyfriend, Ms. Pac-Man attempts to clear four various and challenging mazes filled with dots and ever-moving bouncing fruit while avoiding Inky, Blinky, Pinky and Sue, each with their own personalities and tactics. One touch from any of these ghosts means a loss of life for Ms. Pac-Man.

Ms. Pac-Man can turn the tables on her pursuers by eating one of the four Energizers located within the maze. During this time, the ghosts turn blue, and Ms. Pac-Man can eat them for bonus points (ranging from 200, 400, 800 and 1600, progressively). The Energizer power only lasts for a limited amount of time, as the ghost's eyes float back to their center box, and regenerate to chase after Ms. Pac-Man again.

Survive a few rounds of gameplay, and the player will be treated to humorous intermissions showing the growing romantic relationship between Pac-Man and Ms. Pac-Man, leading all the way up to the arrival of "Junior".

Part of the Following Groups


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Ms. Pac-Man Game Boy $0.14  
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User Reviews

A nice improvement over the original. woods01 (154) 4.5 Stars4.5 Stars4.5 Stars4.5 Stars4.5 Stars

The Press Says

Electronic Gaming Monthly (EGM) Feb, 1994 7 out of 10 70
Total!! UK Magazine 1994 60 out of 100 60
Player One Jul, 1994 45 out of 100 45
Total! (Germany) Apr, 1994 3.75 out of 6 45

Forums

Topic # Posts Last Post
Ms. Pac-Man chased through New York by ghosts 3 chirinea (31388)
Oct 31, 2007

Trivia

The arcade game Ms. Pac-Man was not created or authorized by Namco, who holds the original license. The idea behind this game was to make an upgrade for Pac-Man called "Crazy Otto", developed by General Computer Corporation (GCC). GCC approached Midway Manufacturing about buying the upgrade, which Midway did. Midway (Namco's American distributor) then altered Crazy Otto to make Ms. Pac-Man.

Midway (a division of Bally, at the time) released Ms. Pac-Man (unauthorized), but after a year they passed the rights of the game and character to Namco so that Namco would not sue them or withdraw their licensing agreement.

Unfortunately, Midway did not learn its lesson and created a number of other unlicensed versions of Pac-Man (like Pac-Man Plus, Baby Pac-Man and Jr. Pac-Man), which caused Namco to finally withdraw their agreement.


This entry was contributed by Corn Popper (69584), Trixter Bronze Star Contributing Member (8729), PCGamer77 Bronze Star Contributing Member (3027), RKL Bronze Star Contributing Member (5615), Sciere Bronze Star Contributing Member (205632), Kabushi (104338), Opipeuter Inconnivus Bronze Star Contributing Member (15140), Servo (55941), Ben K Bronze Star Contributing Member (22963), *Katakis* (37456), quizzley7 (21236) and Jeanne Bronze Star Contributing Member (75620)
 

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