Frogger
- Frogger (1982 on BBC Micro)
- Frogger (1983 on ZX Spectrum, VIC-20)
- Frogger (1984 on Jupiter Ace)
- Frogger (1997 on Windows, PlayStation)
- Frogger (1999 on Dedicated handheld)
- Frogger (1999 on Game.Com)
- Frogger (2006 on Xbox 360)
- Frogger (2016 on Atari ST)
Description official descriptions
Your task in this arcade game is to guide a frog across a treacherous road and river, and to safety at the top of the screen. Both these sections are fraught with a variety of hazards, each of which will kill the frog and cost you a life if contact is made.
The road is full of cars and trucks, at variable speeds. The river water itself is fatal, as are the snakes which hover within on later levels. Frogger must use the arrangement of logs, turtles (which are only there for a short time) and alligators (but stay away from their faces), and then jump into one of the open home-cells, ideally one containing a fly for extra points. Once all holes have been filled, you move onto the next, harder, level.
Spellings
- フロッガー - Japanese spelling
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Credits (Atari 8-bit version)
5 People
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 76% (based on 34 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.7 out of 5 (based on 241 ratings with 9 reviews)
The Good
The frog-jumping gameplay is all there. Frogger is a pretty basic game, and this version captures the familiar action well.
Sound effects are good, and unlike most O2 games, this one has a title screen with a theme song.
The Bad
The graphics are very basic. I know the O2 is not as capable as other machines, but the graphics do look very clunky.
I also found the joystick controls a bit touchy, and it is very easy to accidentally leap up instead of left. My controllers work fine in all other games, so I think this is entirely a coding issue.
The Bottom Line
The game so good it inspired an episode of Seinfeld!
Odyssey 2 · by Bruce Clarke (60) · 2014
The Good
Just about everything! It's a fun (not to mention perfect) arcade-conversion, with terrific graphics (all things considered), great music, reasonble sound and WAY WAY COOL gameplay. Frogger is a classic. Damn right.
The Bad
Hmm. Maybe the fact that it won't run on newer computers... but that's nothing new.
The Bottom Line
A classic arcade conversion. Get it, play it, like it, or die.
PC Booter · by Tomer Gabel (4534) · 2000
An arcade game conversion with no redeeming qualities.
The Good
The gameplay was at least similar to the arcade version of Frogger.
The Bad
The graphics and sound in the Apple II version of Frogger were ugly and annoying. Your frog looked like a pawn in a chess set (it was white not green), and the other sprites and backgrounds were not nearly as colorful as the arcade game. The music consisted of crude beeping.
The Bottom Line
The Apple version of Frogger was a mistake. Ugly graphics and grating sound effects ruined an arcade classic.
Apple II · by Droog (460) · 2003
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
The reason why Frogger dies when it falls into the water | Robin Gravel (1) | Aug 14, 2023 |
Trivia
1001 Video Games
The Arcade version of Frogger appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.
Cartoon
In 1983, Frogger made its animated television debut as a segment on CBS' Saturday Supercade cartoon lineup. On the series, Frogger was voiced by Bob Sarlatte. After only one season, Frogger and the Pitfall Harry segment were replaced by Kangaroo and Space Ace. As of 2008, Saturday Supercade has never been officially released on VHS or DVD.
Graphics
Frogger supports a tweaked CGA graphics mode which is able to create more than 4 colors on the screen by switching color palettes each time the display reaches a particular scan line. This trick only seems to work on true CGA cards, including the Tandy 1000. The game uses this technique to produce blue water and a black road. (Several alternate options are also included, such as a bright green road and black water, though I'm not sure why you'd want to use some of these available combinations.)
This technique has appeared in a few other games, including Jungle Hunt, California Games, and The Games: Summer Edition.
Inaccuracies
In Frogger, if you fall into the water, you die. This makes no sense at all in the real world: Frogs are amphibious creatures, at home in the water as much as on land.
Music
The first stage's background music on most platforms is the opening song to Nippon Animation's 1977 anime series Araiguma Rascal.
References to the game
- In episode #174 of Seinfeld (The Frogger), George discovers that his high score still remains on the Frogger machine in a pizza place he and Jerry used to go to in high school. In an attempt to rescue the machine and his high score, the camera shows George trying to cross a car-infested street from the same perspective as the game, complete with music.
- Frogger was popular enough to have a song inspired by it on the full-length Pac-Man Fever album - Froggy's Lament.
- In the MTV Movie Awards 2003 sketch, "The MTV Movie Awards Reloaded" has the Architect (Will Ferrell) saying that, while having created Q*bert and Dig Dug, he did not create Frogger but he came up with the name for it because it was going to be called Highway Crossing Frog. The last half of the joke is actually a true fact - Highway Crossing Frog was the working title for Frogger.
- Robot Chicken parodied Frogger once: an enhanced version of Frogger crosses the road and a truck crashes into a car and explodes while people are yelling at each other. He then tells the other frogs that "it's time to cross the street".
- In season 12's last episode of Fifth Gear, Johnny Smith's Frogger self contained unit is put into an armored vehicle, to test its construction.
Release
The Super Nintendo version was the last game released for the system in America. Excluding 2006's Beggar Prince, it was also the last American game released on the Genesis.
Starpath Supercharger
In 1983, Starpath Corporation released the 3rd game designed for them by Stephen H. Landrum entitled THE OFFICIAL FROGGER for the Atari 2600 Video Computer System (VCS) and licensed to them by Sega Enterprises, Inc. The reason Starpath was able to create their version of the Atari 2600 port was that although Parker Brothers owned the cartridge rights, they did not own the magnetic media rights, opening the door for Starpath.
The game is one of a few cassette based games (living up to the term “tape”) ever released for the Starpath Supercharger. Unlike the first two games Landrum designed for Starpath, this one does not contain a secret way to see the designer’s initials.
Title
The game was originally going to be titled Highway Crossing Frog, but the executives at Sega felt it did not capture the true nature of the game and was changed simply to Frogger.
Version differences
The Xbox 360 version closely resembles the original game, but it has new artwork, modernized sound and music, new bonuses, and new play modes (split screen head-to-head and co-op).
Awards
- Retro Gamer
- Issue #46 - #6 in the “Top 25 Atari 2600” Games poll
Information also contributed by Dracula Marth, Guy Chapman, Jeanne, LepricahnsGold, Nélio, NewRisingSun, PCGamer77, Sciere, Servo and FatherJack
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X360A achievement guide
X360A's achievement guide for Frogger.
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Trixter.
ZX81 added by Rola. SNES added by Corn Popper. iPhone, iPad added by GTramp. ColecoVision, Commodore 64 added by PCGamer77. Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4 added by Rik Hideto. Windows Phone added by Sciere. TI-99/4A, Android, Timex Sinclair 2068, J2ME, BREW, VIC-20 added by Kabushi. Genesis added by Alexander Michel. TRS-80 CoCo added by Martin Smith. Arcade added by Pseudo_Intellectual. Game Boy added by Terok Nor. Apple II, Atari 5200, Atari 8-bit, Intellivision added by Servo. TRS-80, Tomy Tutor, PC-6001, Macintosh, Dragon 32/64, Game Boy Color added by Игги Друге. Atari 2600 added by wanax. MSX added by koffiepad. Odyssey 2 added by Psionic.
Additional contributors: Jeanne, Martin Smith, Nélio, Patrick Bregger, Starbuck the Third, Grandy02, FatherJack, OmegaPC777.
Game added June 2, 2000. Last modified November 10, 2024.