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Ballistic   1994
User rating: No rating Win16 Shareware (full version) Paddle
Developed by Glenn Nissen
Published by Glenn Nissen
Screenshot

Ballistic is a ball and paddle game with the usual array of features. Some bricks take one hit, some take three hits, and some are indestructible. Colorful bricks are arranged to make patterns in 50 screens of play, and there are a number of power-ups, such as a larger paddle, extra life, the ability to catch the ball, shoot lasers, divide the ball into 3 or 8 balls, or you can shrink the paddle, which triples the value of brick destroyed. Power-ups that are less common include Mega Ball, which makes the ball really big, Blue Ball, which makes the ball temporarily blast through bricks without bouncing back, and Two Ball, which is a sort of permanent multi-ball. With Two Ball, whenever one of the balls is dropped, the other one splits in two again. One of the better ball and paddle games of its day.

Ballistic v1.0b Shareware (104k)

I have found no ordering information for this game.

Cybersphere   1996
User rating: 6 DOS Freeware (former shareware) Paddle
Developed by Psycon Software
Published by Psycon Software

Cybersphere is simply the best "ball and paddle" game I've ever played. It's like Arkanoid, but with better graphics, music, and sound. There are some new power-ups, as well as gems to collect for bonus points, and the gameplay is unusually fun. One of the power-ups temporarily places a guard rail at the bottom of the level. Each level has a different background and walls. Even the guard rail has many different appearances. Naturally, multi-ball is also available. There's very little empty space in the game, which seems to make it easier to keep the ball in play, eliminating the frustration factor common to most games of this genre. Angled corners and edges help to virtually eliminate the problem of hitting that one last block, which is the scourge of the genre. To keep it challenging, some levels have invisible blocks that only become visible after being hit. There are 5 sectors with various numbers of levels and 10 bonus stages in this game, with only one sector containing three levels and two bonus stages in the demo version.

Cybersphere Registered Version (70k) 15 April 1996   Play online
Cybersphere Shareware Version (47k) 15 April 1996

Author Clay Hellman has generously released this game as freeware.

Cybersphere Plus   1997
User rating: No rating DOS Freeware (former shareware) Paddle
Developed by Psycon Software
Published by Psycon Software

Cybersphere Plus is the sequel to Cybersphere, with all new levels and identical gameplay. The graphics, music, and level design remain excellent. There are 5 sectors with various numbers of levels and 10 bonus stages in this game, with only one sector containing three levels and two bonus stages in the demo version.

Cybersphere Plus Registered Version (75k) November 1997   Play online
Cybersphere Plus Shareware Version (47k) 3 February 1998

Author Clay Hellman has generously released this game as freeware.

Electranoid   1994
User rating: No rating DOS Shareware (partial game) Paddle
Developed by Pixel Painters
Published by Pixel Painters
Graphics: VGA 320×200×256c 

Electranoid is like an enhanced version of Arkanoid. There are one-hit, multi-hit and unbreakable bricks, and the usual assortment of power-ups, such as being able to catch the ball, split the ball in three, or fire lasers, as well as missiles which can destroy an entire column of bricks. What makes Electranoid unique is that there are two kinds of enemies that dramatically alter the gameplay. Menacers come in six varieties, and release balls of their own. Those balls each have a different effect, such as making the paddle hard to see, turning regular bricks into multi-hit bricks, or turning them into bricks that can only be destroyed with the ball from a red Menacer. You can keep Menacer balls in play, but if you drop your regular ball, you lose a life. There are also four kinds of Destroyers, who release balls that will destroy your paddle. There are 100 levels in the registered version.

Electranoid v1.11s Shareware Episode (189k) 1 July 1995   Play online
Electranoid v1.10s Shareware Episode (187k) 15 January 1995
Electranoid v1.03s Shareware Episode (181k) 1 November 1994
Electranoid v1.02s Shareware Episode (138k) 1994
Electranoid v1.01s Shareware Episode (138k) 14 May 1994
Electranoid v1.0s Shareware Episode (150k) 2 May 1994

I have found no ordering information for this game.

Moraff's Blast I   1991
User rating: No rating DOS Shareware (partial game) Paddle
Developed by MoraffWare
Published by MoraffWare

A ball and paddle game with three gameplay modes: Brick Walls, Falling Walls, and The Blast Adventure. All three modes can be played by one player, two players, one human and the computer, or just the computer. In two player mode, each player's paddle can move within just over half of the screen. The player with the lower score goes on top of the other paddle in the overlap at the center. The paddles can be controlled by keyboard, mouse, or joystick. Brick Walls is basically the classic Breakout game, where every block must be destroyed to clear the screen. Single colored blocks take one hit, while striped blocks take two. Blocks at the top of the screen increase the ball's speed, while lower blocks slow the ball down. When the screen is cleared, a new set of blocks appear, and the game cycles forever. Falling walls is essentially the same, except that blocks descend every few hits, adding new rows that are one or two blocks thick, with gaps of one or two blocks between them. If they get too low they disappear, but the lower the blocks are to the ground, the less reaction time you have. The real story is The Blast Adventure. Instead of scoring points, your goal is to complete each level by hitting the tunnel to the next level. There are blocks that allow you to catch the ball or lose that ability, make the paddle larger or smaller, speed the ball up or slow it down, split the ball into four balls, 1-Ups, vertically striped blocks that take two hits, and horizontally striped balls that take many hits. There are 21 screens in the adventure. Registered users received Moraff's Blast II, which has 140 new screens.

Moraff's Blast I v1.5 Shareware (100k)
Moraff's Blast I v1.1 Shareware (90k)

I have found no ordering information for this game, and it is not listed on Moraff's website.

Moraff's Super Blast I   1990
User rating: No rating DOS Shareware (partial game) Paddle
Developed by MoraffWare
Published by MoraffWare

A ball and paddle game with three gameplay modes: Brick Walls, Falling Walls, and Super Blast. All three modes can be played by one player, two players, one human and the computer, or just the computer. The paddles can be controlled by keyboard, mouse, or joystick. Brick Walls and Falling Walls are the same as in Moraff's Blast. The real story is Super Blast. Instead of scoring points, your goal is to complete each level by hitting the tunnel to the next level. In addition to the blocks from Blast (catch, stop catch, bigger paddle, shrink paddle, speed ball, slow ball, split into four balls, one up, vertically striped blocks that take two hits, horizontally striped balls that take many hits), there are now one way blocks that the ball can only pass through while going up or down, blocks that create new blocks, blocks that move when hit, blocks that split the ball into eight balls, and 2-Ups. The game is broken into difficulty levels. The shareware version has Easy Super Blast and Medium Super Blast, which have 17 screens each. Registered users originally received Moraff's Super Blast II, which has 200 new screens, and later received Moraff's Super Blast III, which has 384 new screens.
Moraff's Super Blast I "5/8/93" Shareware (71k) 13 May 1993
Moraff's Super Blast I "9/25/92" Shareware (66k) 25 September 1992
Moraff's Super Blast v1.7 Shareware (64k) 29 April 1992
Moraff's Super Blast v1.6 Shareware (60k) 24 March 1992
Moraff's Super Blast v1.1 Shareware (86k) 19 October 1991
Moraff's Super Blast v1.0 Shareware (90k) 4 December 1990

I have found no ordering information for this game, and it is not listed on Moraff's website.

Moraff's Ultra Blast   1995
User rating: No rating Win16 Shareware (partial game) Paddle
Developed by MoraffWare
Published by MoraffWare
Screenshot

A ball and paddle game with three gameplay modes: Traditional, Falling Walls, and Special Effects. All three modes can be played by one player or two players. The paddles can be controlled by keyboard or mouse. Traditional and Falling Walls are the same as in Moraff's Blast and Super Blast. The real story is Special Effects. Instead of scoring points, your goal is to complete each level by destroying all of the non-permanent bricks. There are bricks that split the ball into four balls, destroy balls, bricks that the ball can only pass through while going up or down, bricks that create new bricks, bricks that move when hit, among others. The graphics are significantly different from the other Blast games, some of which seem ugly. The major new addition to the game is that the paddle can now move anywhere on the screen, making it much easier to keep the ball inside hard to reach areas. There are five versions of Special Effects which seem to have some relationship to their difficulty. Registered users receive Moraff's Ultra Blast II, which has at least 100 new screens.

Moraff's Ultra Blast v3.0 Shareware (538k)

I have found no ordering information for this game, and it is not listed on Moraff's website.


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