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Sundance

Game Information
manufacturer Cinematronics
year 1979
genre N/A
downloads 0
Screenshots
sundance title
sundance title
Download Details
split set sundance.zip 8.04k
merged set sundance.7z 6.68k
standalone set sundance.7z 6.68k
artwork sundance.zip 473.18k
Game Details
Arcade Video game published 46 years ago:

Sundance (c) 1979 Cinematronics.

The object in Sundance was to catch little suns that bounced back and forth between a pair of grids, which move closer and closer together as the game goes on.

- TECHNICAL -

Main CPU : CCPU (@ 5 Mhz)
Sound Chips : Samples

Screen orientation : Vertical
Video resolution : 224 x 256 pixels
Screen refresh : 38.00 Hz
Palette Colors : 32768

Players : 2
Buttons : 10

- TRIVIA -

Released during October 1979.

Licensed to Sega for Japan market.

The vector game PCB that Sundance ran on was the original Rosenthal design that "Space Wars" used, except there was a lot of cut-and-jumpering done to allow for the varying degrees of intensity that the vectors could show. Hence, the game was quite fragile and none of the machines lasted very long. Sundance had grids in space years before "Tempest". Skelly felt the game lacked the anxiety element needed in a good game and begged Cinematronics not to release it.

Cinematronics tried to make about 1000 of them, but the production fallout rate was around 50%. The problem was the 23'' CRT which was manufactured by an outside vendor. The carbon coating sprayed onto the inside of the tube was defective, and would shake loose and settle around the neck if the game was left in certain positions. When the game was powered up after shipping to the operators, the CRT would instantly burn up from arcing inside the tube. As a result, most Sundance machines suffered a quick death, and were likely destroyed or sent out to pasture in an operators back room.

Sundance came in the same basic cabinet as the more common "Rip Off" and "Tailgunner". It featured flame themed sideart, and also had flames on the monitor bezel and around the coin door. The monitor bezel was orange, in order to give the game a bit of color. Most of these cabinets were instantly scrapped, as game conversions weren't really big in 1979, and a cabinet with a bad monitor isn't very good for a conversion anyhow.

- STAFF -

Designed & programmed by : Tim Skelly

- CONTRIBUTE -

Edit this entry: https://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=2693&o=2
Driver Details
source cinematronics/cinemat.cpp
status good
emulation good
savestate supported
Screen Details
display screen
type vector
orientation horizontal
refresh 38mhz
Input Details
player 1
type only_buttons
buttons 1
directions N/A
player 2
type only_buttons
buttons 1
directions N/A
Chipset Details
name Cinematronics CPU
clock 4.75mhz
name Speaker
clock N/A
name Sundance Sound Board
clock N/A
name Netlist Sound Device
clock N/A
ROM Details
name size crc
sundance.t7 2.00k d5b9cb19
sundance.p7 2.00k 445c4f20
sundance.u7 2.00k 67887d48
sundance.r7 2.00k 10b77ebd
prom.f14 256.00b 9edbf536
prom.e14 32.00b 29dbfb87
prom.d14 32.00b 9a05afbf
prom.c14 32.00b 07492cda
prom.j14 32.00b a481ca71
prom.e8 32.00b 791ec9e1