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Motos

Arcade Video game published 39 years ago by NAMCO, Ltd.

Listed in MAME

Motos screenshot

Motos © 1985 Namco.

The object of the game is to bump your enemies - space bugs - off the solar base using Motos, your ship. When you bump all of them off, you move to the next base or round. If Motos is knocked off the base, you lose one life. The game is over when you lose all your lives.

You can collect Power parts and Jump parts lying on the solar base by simply having Motos touch them. The collected parts will be displayed in the lower left corner of the screen and you can use them in the next round. Motos can be outfitted with no more than seven power parts; the more power parts added, the more powerful Motos is. However, Motos can only be outfitted with only one jump part per round. With a jump part, Motos can jump over two squares by moving the joystick in the desired direction and pressing the Jump button. One jump on a square cracks the square and a second jump in the same spot makes a hole in the solar base.

You can outfit Motos with these parts in the Power Parts or Jump Parts screen displayed at the beginning of each round. Select the number of parts you want by moving left and right with the joystick, and lock them in place by pressing the Jump button. You can use the selected parts for one round only; they will not be available in subsequent rounds.

Linger too long on the playing field and Shooting Stars will begin to fall periodically onto the solar base. The Stars are aimed at Motos, and when they miss they crack a square or break a hole in the solar base (like they do to the base behind the Motos logo in the attract mode's title sequence).

- CAST OF CHARACTERS -

* Motos - The protagonist of the game. This is you.
* Power Parts - These give Motos extra bumping power. Motos can be equipped with a maximum of seven Power parts at a time.
* Jump Parts - These give Motos the ability to jump over the gaps in the playfield. Motos can only be equipped with one jump part at a time.
* Red Pupa (First appears in Round 1) - Weighs in at 380 kg (838 lbs) and travels 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
* Blue Pupa (First appears in Round 2) - Weighs in at 380 kg (838 lbs) and travels 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
* Polar (First appears in Round 2) - Weighs in at 400 kg (882 lbs) and travels 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
* Spirus (First appears in Round 4) - Weighs in at 2,900 kg (3.2 tons) and travels at 40 km/h (24.9 mph).
* Fire Bug (First appears in Round 7) - Weighs in at 3,800 kg (4.2 tons) and travels at 45 km/h (28.0 mph).
* Mega (First appears in Round 9) - Weighs in at 7,500 kg (8.3 tons) and travels at 10 km/h (6.2 mph).
* Taitorian (First appears in Round 11) - Weighs in at 4,100 kg (4.5 tons) and travels at 55 km/h (34.2 mph).
* Fire Bee (First appears in Round 13) - Weighs in at 3,200 kg (3.5 tons) and travels at 70 km/h (43.5 mph).
* Lady Bug (First appears in Round 17) - Weighs in at 5,120 kg (5.6 tons) and travels at 60 km/h (37.3 mph).
* Black Pupa (First appears in Round 18) - Weighs in at 400 kg (882 lbs) and travels 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
* Beetle (First appears in Round 18) - Weighs in at 5,800 kg (6.4 tons) and travels at 55 km/h (34.2 mph).
* Giga (First appears in Round 29) - The heaviest of all enemies. Weighs in at 13,400 kg (14.8 tons) and travels at 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
* Beecon (First appears in Round 2) - Scores you points whether Motos or an enemy bug bumps it off the solar base.
* Nabicon (First appears in Round 3) - Most of these unleash Blue Pupa at regular intervals.
* Shooting Stars - They fall periodically onto the solar base if you take too much time in a round. They are aimed at Motos and when they miss, they crack square or break a hole in the solar base.

Goodies for Motos
Click to enlarge
(members only)
TECHNICAL

Game ID: MO

Main CPU : Motorola M6809 (@ 1.536 Mhz)
Sound CPU : Motorola M6809 (@ 1.536 Mhz)
Sound Chips : Namco 8-channel WSG

Players : 2
Control : 8-way joystick
Buttons : 1 (JUMP) - Used only when Motos is outfitted with Jump parts

TRIVIA

Motos was released in September 1985 in Japan.

The arcade version of Motos was released after the video game crash of 1983-84 and didn't get much attention, most likely appearing only in Japan. The only known appearances of the game outside Japan are for home platforms (see Ports below).

The music that plays during game action in the attract mode also doubles up as the game's ending music (after clearing Round 62).

SCORING
You score points by bumping enemies off the solar base
Red Pupa 300 points
Blue Pupa 300 points
Black Pupa 300 points
Polar 800 points
Spirus 1,000 points
Fire Bug 1,300 points
Fire Bee 1,500 points
Taitorian 2,000 points
Lady Bug 2,500 points
Beetle 3,000 points
Mega 3,500 points
Giga 5,000 points
Nabicon 50,000 points (See Tips and Tricks below for how to destroy a Nabicon. Many Nabicon, however, are indestructible)
Beecon 1,000 points - Scored whether Motos or an Enemy Bug bumps the Beecon off the solar base.
TIPS AND TRICKS

* Make a hole in the middle of a Nabicon and Blue Pupa won't be able to come out of it.

* Some Nabicon can be destroyed when Motos is outfitted with at least five Power parts. You can tell this when the Nabicon shakes as Motos bumps it. Bump a Nabicon more than ten times and it is destroyed, scoring you an enormous number of points (see Scoring above).

* Easter Egg :
1) Enter service mode.
2) Set coinage to 3 Coins / 1 Credit, set Lives to 3, set Difficulty to Rank A, set Bonus Life to 10k 30k and every 50k, set Demo Sounds to Off.
3) Press the service switch to display the grid and press (all together) Right+Button1+Start2. '(c) NAMCO LTD. 1985' will appear on the screen.

SERIES

1. Motos (1985, ARC)
2. Motos Arrangement (2006, PSP): part of "Namco Museum Vol.2 [Model ULJS-00047]"
3. Pac-Motos (2007, Wii): part of "Minna de Asobou! Namco Carnival [Model RVL-RNWJ-JPN]"

STAFF

Game designer: T. Okadaman
Programmer: Kosei Matz
Music composer: Norio Nakagata
Graphic designer: Satoru Chan
Engineer: Sig-El
Debugger: M. Taguchin
Supervisor: Sing Kozima

PORTS

CONSOLES:
japan Sony PlayStation (oct.30, 1997) "Namco Museum Encore [Model SLPS-00765]"
usa Microsoft XBOX 360 (nov.4, 2008) "Namco Museum - Virtual Arcade [Model 21022]"
europe Microsoft XBOX 360 (may.15, 2009) "Namco Museum - Virtual Arcade"
australia Microsoft XBOX 360 (june.3, 2009) "Namco Museum - Virtual Arcade"
japan Microsoft XBOX 360 (nov.5, 2009) "Namco Museum - Virtual Arcade [Model 2RD-00001]"
usa Nintendo Wii (nov.16, 2010) "Namco Museum Megamix"

HANDHELDS:
usa Sony PSP (aug.23, 2005) "Namco Museum Battle Collection [Model ULUS-10035]"
europe Sony PSP (dec.9, 2005) "Namco Museum Battle Collection [Model UCES-00116]"
japan Sony PSP (feb.23, 2006) "Namco Museum Vol.2 [Model ULJS-00047]"
korea Sony PSP (nov.8, 2007) "Namco Museum Vol.2"

COMPUTERS:
europe Amstrad CPC (1987)
europe Sinclair ZX Spectrum (1987)
europe usa Commodore C64 (1987)
japan Sharp X68000 (1989)
japan PC [MS Windows, CD-ROM] (apr.25, 1997) "Namco History Vol.1"
usa PC [MS Windows, CD-ROM] (jul.31, 1998) "Microsoft Revenge of Arcade"

OTHERS:
usa Apple iPhone/iPod (jan.26, 2012) "Namco Arcade [Model 465606050]"
usa Arcade (2018) "Pac-Man's Pixel Bash"

SOURCES

Game's ROM.
Motos Help file from Microsoft Revenge of Arcade
Phosphor Dot Fossils Classics - Motos entry