Solaris is a space combat game for the Atari 2600 published in 1986 by Atari Corporation.[2] It was developed by Doug Neubauer,[1] who owns the copyright and the Solaris trademark. The game is a sequel to Neubauer's Atari 8-bit family game Star Raiders from 1979.[3] Both games feature an enemy race known as Zylons, but Star Raiders uses a first-person perspective while Solaris is in third-person.
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Solaris | |
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Publisher(s) | Atari Corporation |
Designer(s) | Doug Neubauer[1] |
Platform(s) | Atari 2600 |
Release | 1986 |
Genre(s) | Space combat simulator |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Solaris was at one point going to be based on The Last Starfighter, while the Atari 8-bit version of The Last Starfighter was renamed Star Raiders 2.[citation needed]
The galaxy of Solaris is made up of 16 quadrants, each containing 48 sectors.[4] The player uses a tactical map to choose a sector to warp to, during which they must attempt to keep their ship "in focus" to lower their fuel consumption rate. Fuel must be carefully managed, as an empty tank results in loss of one of the player lives. Space battle ensues whenever the player navigates into a hostile battlegroup via the tactical map. Space enemies include pirate ships, mechanoid ships, and aggressive "cobra" ships. Each battlegroup has at least one enemy flagship, which shoots out fuel-sapping drones.[5]
The player may also descend to one of 3 types of planets:
There are 4 kinds of ground enemies found on planets: stationary guardians, gliders, targeters and raiders. The ultimate goal of Solaris is to reach the planet Solaris and rescue its colonists, at which point the game ends in victory.
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