Apple Cider Spider

Apple Cider Spider

Cover art
Developer(s) Sierra On-Line
Publisher(s) Sierra On-Line
Designer(s) Ivan Strand[1]
Platform(s) Apple II, Commodore 64
Release date(s)

Apple II
1983

Commodore 64
1983
Genre(s) Platform
Mode(s) Single Player

Apple Cider Spider is a platform game written for the Apple II by Ivan Strand and published by Sierra On-Line in 1983. A Commodore 64 port followed. In the game, the player takes the role of a spider in an apple cider factory. The goal is to progress through three screens to reach the top of the factory, to join the company of other spiders.

Gameplay

The structure of the three screens follows the production cycle of apple cider in a reverse order, starting from the bottling and sealing of cider and ending at the delivery of fresh whole apples. The first screen mainly concerns extracting the apple juice to be made into cider, the second screen concerns splitting the apples in two and crushing the halves, and the third screen concerns the actual import of the apples. Each screen is situated on top of the previous one, so the spider progresses upward while the apples are carried downward.

The challenge in the game comes almost completely in the form of natural obstacles in the cider factory. Contact with cider, apples, or cider-making instruments kills the spider instantly. All three screens feature a complex system of conveyor belts that the spider must travel along, in the opposite direction to the cider and the apples. Various cider-making instruments operate periodically to make the apples into cider. The entire factory is completely oblivious to the presence of the spider.

When the three screens have been completed, the game starts again, but with added dangers. These include various animals that hop along the platform as well as blocker bars on the ladders that the spider uses to move upwards.

Screenshot from Apple Cider Spider

See also

Sammy Lightfoot - another Apple II platform game released by Sierra On-Line in 1983.

External links

References


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