BurgerTime is a static-screen platform arcade game developed by Data East and manufactured by Bally/Midway in North America and by Data East elsewhere in the world. It made a name for itself in the glut of arcade game releases in its release year of 1982 by having a fun and unique premise.
The game follows a chef named Peter Pepper as he jumps on platforms to complete giant hamburgers. Each time he steps on a part of a burger, from the bread, to the tomatoes, to the lettuce, to the beef, it drops a little. Once the entire part of the burger is completely stepped on, it drops down a level. If there is another part of a burger underneath it, that piece will also drop down. The goal is to get the entire burger or burgers completed at the plates at the bottom of the screen, which will switch to the next level.
There are hot dog, egg, and pickle enemies that aim to stop the running chef. He can climb up or down platforms to get away from them while also working to complete burgers. That's not the only tool he has, as luckily, Peter Pepper can eliminate an enemy if a dropped burger part drops on top of it. He also has a small supply of pepper which will temporarily stop enemies once he shoots it at them.
Since it is an arcade game released in the early years of the arcade market, it has a limited range of sound. There is the usual beeps and boops that are used as sound effects, which are used in this game when a piece of a burger is stepped on or when it falls, when Peter is caught, and when pepper is thrown. Like many games from around this time, there is a little jingle that is played when a stage has begun a peppy tune that plays throughout an entire level.
BurgerTime has a fun concept that is easy to pick up and play, and, like all arcade games of the time, increases in difficulty as the game goes on. The sprite work is fantastic, especially the fun little animations of Peter Pepper and the food-based enemies. The sound
isn't a big name these days compared to other games of the time such as Donkey Kong, Mario Bros., or Pac-Man, but it is a bonafide classic that still remains fun to play over forty years later. The sound effects are used to good effect, and the short tune at the beginning of levels is fun. The short length of the main song loop and the lack of song variety can be a bit annoying to modern gamers, but it surely was a great draw get players to the cabinet in the halcyon days of arcades. The rest of the game was, and remains, strong enough to keep players interested once they are pulled in.
Final Verdict:
4 out of 5

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