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Fast Food (1989 video game)

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This article is about the Codemasters video game. For the Atari 2600 game, see Fast Food (1982 video game).

1989 video game
Fast Food
Developer(s)Oliver Twins
Publisher(s)Codemasters
Composer(s)David Whittaker (ZX, CPC)
Allister Brimble (Amiga)
SeriesDizzy
Platform(s)Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, Enterprise 64/128, Switch, ZX Spectrum
ReleaseApril 1989
Genre(s)Maze
Mode(s)Single-player

Fast Food (sometimes referred to as Fast Food Dizzy) is the title of two slightly different maze video games in the vein of Pac-Man. Both feature Dizzy an anthropomorphic egg designed by the British-born Oliver Twins. The game was originally released in April 1989 and published by Codemasters. It was the third title to feature Dizzy.

The 8-bit versions of the game were released for the ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64 and Amstrad CPC with mazes of abstract design. The 16-bit versions released for the Amiga, Atari ST and DOS have environments that are identifiable as real-world locations such as gardens, harbours, and graveyards.

Gameplay

Dizzy's aim in each maze is to gather all of the food (burgers, pizzas, etc.): some of the food also moves around the maze, either evading Dizzy or trying to meet him. Dizzy is pursued by four mushroom-like monsters: Bonzo, Wizza, Pippa, and Fido. Power-ups and breakable walls add to the complexity of the game.

Development

Commodore 64 version

The game was playable within three days of work; the developers only took two more weeks to finalize the graphics, interface and music.

The game was originally to be a marketing tool for the Happy Eater chain of restaurants, but this idea was dropped during development and Dizzy was added to the game.

Legacy

A shortened, altered version of the game, entitled Easter Eggstravaganza Dizzy, was made available on Amiga Action and ST Action coverdiscs in May 1993. Completion of this game would give players a code which would allow them to enter a competition in the magazine.

In November 2020, a completely new version of Fast Food (now titled Fast Food Dizzy) was released for the Nintendo Switch. It was developed and published by the Oliver Twins on the FUZE program for the console.

References

  1. "Sinclair User".
  2. "Fast Food". The Oliver Twins. Archived from the original on 2 August 2018. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  3. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Let's Play Fast Food starring Dizzy by The Oliver Twins March 1989. YouTube.
  4. "Amiga Action 44 (May 1993) Page scans - Amiga Magazine Rack".

External links

Dizzy video games
Adventure games
Arcade games
Compilations
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