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Space Ace (US Rev. A2)

  1. Game infos
  2. Parent and Clones
  3. Sound
  4. Driver
  5. Inputs
  6. Controls
  7. Display
  8. Dipswitchs
  9. Roms list
  10. Chips list
  11. Disks list
  12. Categories
  13. History
Download spaceacea2.zip (0 B)
Snapshot

Game infos

Description Space Ace (US Rev. A2)
Name spaceacea2
Manufacturer Cinematronics
Year 1983
Runnable yes
System arcade /
Number of players 2P alt
Added to MAME .111u4
Romset size 0 B
Romset file files
Romset zip 0 B
Language English
Genre Platform

Parent and clones

Parent spaceace : Space Ace (US Rev. A3) (1983)

Sound infos

Sound_channels 2

Driver infos

Driver status preliminary
Driver emulation preliminary
Driver color good
Driver sound good
Driver graphic good
Driver cocktail
Driver protection
Driver savestate yes

Inputs infos

Input service no
Input tilt no
Input players 1
Input buttons
Input coins 2

Controls infos

type ways minimum maximum sensitivity keydelta reverse
joy 8 no

Display infos

type rotate flipx width height refresh pixclock htotal hbend hbstart vtotal vbend vbstart
raster 0 no 704 480 59.940057 28636362 910 0 704 525 44 524

Dipswitchs

Roms list

console name bios size crc md5 merge sha1 region offset status optional
arcade sa_a2_u1.bin 8192 71b39e27 15a34eee9d541b186761a78b5c97449c7b496e4f maincpu 0 good no
arcade sa_a2_u2.bin 8192 18d0262d sa_a3_u2.bin c3920e3cabfe2b2add51881e262f090c5018e508 maincpu 2000 good no
arcade sa_a2_u3.bin 8192 4646832d sa_a3_u3.bin 9f1370b13cca9857b0ed13f58641ef4ba3c7326d maincpu 4000 good no
arcade sa_a2_u4.bin 8192 57db2a79 sa_a3_u4.bin 5286905d9bde697845a98bd77f31f2a96a8874fc maincpu 6000 good no
arcade sa_a2_u5.bin 8192 85cbcdc4 sa_a3_u5.bin 97e01e96c885ab7af4c3a3b586eb40374d54f12f maincpu 8000 good no

Chips list

name tag type clock
AY-3-8910A aysnd audio 2000000
Pioneer LD-V1000 ld_ldv1000 audio
Speaker rspeaker audio
Z80 ld_ldv1000:ldv1000 cpu 2500000

Disks list

name md5 sha1 merge region index status optional
space_ace_ver2 ld_ldv1000 0 nodump no

Categories

History


Arcade Video game published 36 years ago:

Space Ace (c) 1983 Leland.

One gallant earthling stands between the inter-planetary invasion forces of the blue-skinned alien Commander Borf and their intended target, Earth : an earthling named Dexter. On Dexter's narrow shoulders ride the fate of Earth and the well-being of his lovely sidekick, Kimberly, who Borf has carried off into the cosmos.

Dexter sets off in hot pursuit of Lord Borf, battling monsters, machines and mechanisms as he fights his way across the galaxy. During his daring quest, Dexter relies on his wits, agility and quick reflexes to overcome the deadly predicaments and bizarre opponents Borf throws in his path; but when the peril grows too great for even cunning and courage to prevail, Dexter has a secret strength in reserve.

Exposure to mysterious cosmic rays has given Dexter a remarkable ability. Just when our hero seems doomed and all appears lost, he undergoes a startling transformation into his super-mighty, super-bold, super-self : SPACE ACE! a broad-shouldered, good-natured alter ego who evens out the odds as Dexter struggles to rescue Kimberly.

Pursued to his home planet by this resourceful and relentless adversary, Borf turns and faces Dexter in a final and climactic confrontation. Determined to prevail at all costs, Borf resorts to the ultimate weapon, a weapon capable of reducing even the mighty Space Ace into a helpless infant : the dreaded INFANTO-RAY! Only Space Ace can survive such a crisis, and Space Ace alone can save the Earth, save the girl, and save the day!

- TECHNICAL -

Space Ace was made available to distributors in two different formats; a dedicated cabinet, and a conversion kit that could be used to turn an existing copy of "Dragon's Lair" into a Space Ace game. The conversion kit included the Space Ace laserdisc, new EPROMs containing the game program, an additional circuit board to add the skill level buttons, and replacement artwork for the cabinet. The game originally used the Pioneer LD-V1000 or PR-7820 laserdisc players, but an adaptor kit now exists to allow Sony LDP series players to be used as replacements if the original player is no longer functional.

Main CPU : Zilog Z80
Sound Chips : General Instrument AY8910, Custom

ACTION BUTTON : The action button functions in a variety of ways in a variety of situations. Most frequently the Action button fires weapons and energizes Dexter into Space Ace.
JOYSTICK : The joystick controls the direction of movement of the Dexter and Space Ace characters.

- TRIVIA -

Released in October 1983.

The animation staff provided their own voices for their own characters, in order to keep the costs down. Animator, Jeff Etter was the voice of Ace. Storyman / animator Will Finn was the voice of Dexter. Animator, Lorna Pomeroy (wife of Co-Producer, John Pomeroy) was the voice of Kimmy. Don Bluth was the voice of Commander Borf. The narrator was Michael Rye and the musical score was created by Christopher Stone.

The scantily-clad heroine Kimberly was named after one of the people of the animation staff whose name was Kimberly Coy.

Space Ace were released 1984 by Cinematronics/magicom and licensed to Atari and Sidam (only Italy) for the European market. The European version of Space ace don't have the skill select that the Cinematronics version have. The Atari's and Sidam's version were made for the PAL system and Cinematronics version were made for the NTSC system.

The Cinematronics hardware and software were also totally different from Atari's/Sidam's.

Space Ace was re-released in 1991, this time without the different skill levels, were released as a conversion kit for "Dragon's Lair II - Time Warp". But this time it was Leland that produced the game.
Cinematronics went out of business late in 1984, the same year Space Ace were first released. None of the hardware or software from Cinematronics 1984 version were used in Lelands 1993 version.
Space Ace were again licensed to Atari and Sidam (only Italy) for the European market. But this time Leland, Atari and Sidam used some of the same hardware for the 1991 version of Space Ace. Leland used a Sony 1450 LD-player. Atari and Sidam Again used a Philips player, allowing them to skip the NTSC pcb.

A Space Ace machine was showed up at the 2003 classic arcade games show 'California Extreme', San Jose, California.

Space Ace was also featured as an animated series : Ruby-Spears Productions. Produced By Joe Ruby, Ken Spears. Aired as part the second season of 'Saturday Supercade' on CBS.

- UPDATES -

Some scenes are left out in Cinematronics version, depending on the skill level the player plays. In skill level 'Space Ace' all scenes are included.

In 1991, Leland released a slightly updated version of Space Ace in the form of a conversion kit for the then recently-released "Dragon's Lair II - Time Warp". The updated version added more complicated moves (including diagonal moves), and dropped the easier skill levels, meaning only the 'Ace' (difficult) level could be played.

- STAFF -

Designer: Rick Dyer

- PORTS -

* CONSOLES:
Philips CD-I (1993)
Nintendo Super Famicom (1994)
Sega Mega-CD (1994)
Panasonic 3DO (1995)
Atari Jaguar CD (1996)
Nintendo Wii (2010; as part of Dragon's Lair Trilogy)

* COMPUTERS:
Commodore Amiga (1990)
Commodore Amiga (1993, "The Animation Classics Pack")
PC [MS-DOS, CD-ROM] (1994)
PC [MS Windows 9x, CD-ROM] (2003)

- CONTRIBUTE -

Edit this entry: https://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=2512&o=2