Gorf

Moby ID: 10212
Arcade Specs
See Also

Description official descriptions

Gorf is a game that consists of five levels:

  • The first level called Astro Battles has the player's ship behind a defensive shield, defending against an alien attack. The level is a top-down view, with the player's ship and shield on one side and the aliens on the other side; this level bears the most resemblance to Space Invaders.
  • The second level called Laser Attack is made up of a formation of ships, with some that swoop down and a laser that fires at the player's ship. Bonus ships also tend to appear in this level.
  • The third level is called Galaxians, and as the name suggests it is very similar to the game Galaxian with ships constantly dive bombing the player's spaceship. This mission only appears in the Arcade version.
  • The fourth level called Space Warp, has the player entering hyperspace.. The viewpoint switches from a top-down view to a behind-the-ship view. One by one, alien vessels will come out and fly in a circular formation shooting at the player's ship with the players goal being to destroy each one.
  • The fifth and final level is called Flag Ship. In this level, the player does not fight a wave of enemies, but a single one which happens to be a large Flag Ship with a weak spot which is its core. Hitting the weak spot will instantly destroy it, but the player must first shoot through a similar shield that the player had in the first level.

Finishing the game increases the player's rank and starts the game over at level 1 with a faster game speed for more challenge.

Groups +

Screenshots

Credits (Arcade version)

Gorf DNA

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 70% (based on 13 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.4 out of 5 (based on 38 ratings with 3 reviews)

An excellent port of the arcade game that combines those classic shoot-em-ups into one game

The Good
When I was a child growing up in the late '70s, shoot-em-ups were quite popular in the arcades. Almost everyone got home from school or work to go to their favorite arcade and insert a quarter into the likes of any popular shoot-em-up that was available there. They were so popular, in fact, that Jamie Fenton, a Bally/Midway employee, took it upon herself to combine all these shoot-em-ups into one big game. The result was Gorf, a game that is overlooked to this day.

The main objective of Gorf is to shoot down enough aliens to proceed to the next level, but what's unique about this game is that each level is different. One minute you shoot down aliens that attack Space Invaders style, the next you're trying to kill a “flag ship”. Each level has a unique name, and you advance to a new rank after completing the final level.

Fenton's work was popular enough to warrant several home ports, including the VIC-20, which was done by Midway themselves, and just like the arcade version, it features an attract mode that shows you what to expect in each level. Due to the VIC's resolution (176x184), each sprite is slightly bigger, and they always stand out against the black background. The flag ship is just huge. The animations are quite nice, with the little explosion that occurs when you are hit by an alien being one of my favorites.

The VIC-20 version omits level three of the arcade version, and understandably so, The VIC only has 3K of memory in its unexpanded form, which is not enough to get all the action in. Also omitted is the ability of the game to mimic the excellent speech synthesis of the Votrax SC-01 chip built (through the use of a chip installed inside the cartridge).

The Bad
If you try to play Gorf on a PAL machine (ie: use a VIC-20 outside the US), the game doesn't make use of the VIC's entire screen. If this annoys you, you can adjust its position during the attract mode, but even then, you can't move this window into the center.

The Bottom Line
In conclusion, Gorf for the VIC-20 is a very faithful port of the arcade game, with large sprites and great animations. There are four levels in the game, each of which you are doing the same thing. Once you have completed all four, you advance to the next rank available and wrap around to level one with a much higher difficulty. The only drawbacks are the limited screen and the lack of a “Galaxians” level, but this fact alone should not stop you from getting yourself a VIC-20 so that you can buy this game and start zapping those aliens.

VIC-20 · by Katakis | ă‚«ă‚żă‚­ă‚ą (43092) · 2018

Four games in one? What a bonus!

The Good
Gorf is a strange game. There are four levels in the game, and the aim of each level is to shoot all the invaders on screen to go to the next level. You may think that it is another one of those shooting games that you used to play at the arcades in the early eighties, in which each level looks exactly the same as the previous one, and the gameplay never changes. This in not the case with Gorf, as the gameplay differs between the levels.

You see, in the first level titled "Astro Battles", you control a ship that must attack four rows of invaders that shoot back at you. This is similar to Space Invaders, but you are protected by a defensive shield that will block an invader's shot, but that part of the shield is destroyed once hit. Occasionally, A spaceship will make its way toward the middle of the screen, and you receive extra points for shooting at it. The second level, "Laser Attack", is similar to Galaxian where the enemy ships are in groups of three, and will kamikaze attack. One of the enemy ships will emit a deadly laser beam. In "Space Warp", you must shoot the ships that will appear at the center of the screen, circle out, fire some shots at you, and make you explode if you get in their way. Finally , in "Flag ship". you must destroy pieces of a huge ship that goes back and forth, avoiding its shots.

Once you have completed all four levels, you start the game again, this time with your rank being increased, as well as the difficulty. Three of the ranks are "Space Cadet", "Space Captain", and "Space Colonel". I haven't get much further in the game, so I can't tell you what other ranks that they are, but there might also be a "Space Corporal" as well.

Gorf was released for consoles only such as the Atari 2600 and the Atari 5200, but it was also released for one home computer only - Commodore 64. The game remains faithful to the coin-op version. Not only does it have the same gameplay and detailed graphics, but it also has the same sounds. i like shooting games like this one. It's just unfortunately for me that I didn't see this one in the arcades.

The Bad
I think that there is a bug in the C64 version of the game. You can't shoot two bullets. When you attempt to do this, the bullet that you last fired disappears without a trace to make way for your current bullet.

The Bottom Line
Four levels to be excited about. Complete all these levels and the game increases in difficulty and speed. See how many ranks you pass without losing all of your lives.

Rating: ***

Commodore 64 · by Katakis | ă‚«ă‚żă‚­ă‚ą (43092) · 2004

"Long Live Gorf!" 4 Levels including: Space Invaders, Galaxians, and Mothership.

The Good
It was very advanced for it time and much like games in the Arcades, and Motorway Service Station Games areas. I spent many hours of my childhood playing it on my 3.5 kByte RAM VIC 20 Computer. It actually came as an 8 kByte ROM Plug-in VIC 20 Cartridge [Code: Vic-1923] so loaded instantly. No waiting for ages for the tape cassette drive to load it.

Gorf was one of the first video games to have more than 1 level. There are 4 different levels in this classic space shooter. Play was controlled with a center mounted joystick ("flight stick") type controller that plugged into a 9-way D-type connector (UP, DOWN, LEFT, RIGHT, FIRE, and COMMON GROUND lines). It was fun controlling the game this way. PC's seem to have lost Joystick attachments for some reason. Perhaps the PC designers regarded them as too Nerdy.

The Bad
It got a bit repetitive after a while repeating the same 4 levels over and over again.

It you took the Cartridge out while the Computer was still on it blow it up!!!!!! This happened with my Galaxian Cartridge and my VIC NEVER worked again :-( I even ordered an expensive chip to fix it, but that didn't help.

The Commodore VIC 20 originally cost ÂŁ300 [GBP]. A lot of money in 1982. The Commodore 64 came out 6 months later for the SAME price with a whopping 64 kByte of RAM as opposed to the VIC's 3.5 kByte! It was largely based on the Colour VIC but also had 40 chars./line instead of 22. Luckily the Cartridge added 8 kbyte of extra ROM. Both used TV's as monitors.

The Bottom Line
Produced by: Commodore Electrics Ltd. Year of Release: 1982

Gorf had the following four levels:

ASTRO-BATTLES: The first level was a Space Invaders clone with a few minor differences. You had a full curving force field instead of the four shields used in classic Space Invaders. You can also move all around the lower half of the screen, instead of being confined to the very bottom.

LASER ATTACK: You are up against 2 ships armed with deadly lasers, which are defended by several Galaxian style escort ships. This is a quick and easy level, although you may find yourself zapped if you aren't careful. The laser ships regenerate every few seconds as long as other ships remain on screen. But there are so few ships that a good player can beat this level in seconds.

SPACE WARP: A whirlpool like vortex fills the center of the screen. Enemy ships spiral out from the middle growing larger as the get closer. They only attack one at a time. So this level isn't very difficult (at least not the first time around).

FLAG SHIP: Avoid the rockets of the Mothership while you try and score a hit on its only weak spot (the internal power reactor vent). Once that is hit the ship explodes and you start the game over at a higher difficulty setting.

From the manual: MESSAGE FROM INTERSTELLAR SPACE FORCE COMMAND. “Space Cadet: By the time you read this communiqué, we of the Interstellar Space Force Command will have been destroyed. The evil Gorfian Empire has launched an all-out attack. You are Earth's last hope! Your assignment is to repel the invasion and launch a counterattack. You will engage various hostile spacecraft as you journey toward a dramatic confrontation with the enemy Flag Ship! You will be rewarded for your success with promotions in rank and praise from a grateful planet. But you must act quickly, Space Cadet! Brief yourself on the Gorfian Robot Armada and then attack before it's...TOO LATE!!”

VIC-20 · by David Ledgard (58) · 2006

Discussion

Subject By Date
4 levels? NĂ©lio (1980) Jun 3, 2014

Trivia

1001 Video Games

The Arcade version of Gorf appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.

Planned sequel

A prototype sequel to Gorf titled Ms. Gorf exists only as source code stored on a series of 8-inch floppy disks that unfortunately can't be compiled apparently due to the obscurity of the programming language it was written in (Forth) and being done in a software environment that cannot be reproduced. However, some gameplay footage of the the game exists in a demo reel of a never aired television show Wired In.

References of the game

Arcade machine play screens of Gorf can be seen in these movies - 1982's Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and 1983's Joysticks. An arcade cabinet can also be seen in 2006's The Benchwarmers.

Title

The programmer called it Gorf since it's Frog spelled backwards. It is also an acronym for 'Galactic Orbital Robot Force'.

Information also contributed by John Wallace and Scaryfun

Analytics

MobyPro Early Access

Upgrade to MobyPro to view research rankings!

Related Games

Gorf-Land
Released 1987 on TRS-80 CoCo
VGEvo Gorf
Released 2008 on Atari 2600

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 10212
  • [ Please login / register to view all identifiers ]

Contribute

Are you familiar with this game? Help document and preserve this entry in video game history! If your contribution is approved, you will earn points and be credited as a contributor.

Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Shoddyan.

Jaguar added by Roberth Martinez. VIC-20 added by Kabushi. Atari 8-bit added by Martin Smith. Arcade added by Pseudo_Intellectual. Atari 2600, Commodore 64, Atari 5200 added by Servo.

Additional contributors: Scott Monster, Alaka, Patrick Bregger, FatherJack.

Game added September 1, 2003. Last modified January 25, 2024.