Remakes and sequels In 1997,
Hasbro Interactive released
Frogger, a vastly expanded remake of the original for
Windows and the
PlayStation developed by
Sony Computer Entertainment Europe's
Cambridge division. Unlike the original, it consists of multiple different levels. It was a commercial success, with Windows sales alone at nearly one million units in less than four months. In 1998, Hasbro released a series of versions of the game for the
Sega Genesis,
Super NES,
Game.com,
Game Boy, and
Game Boy Color. Each version has different graphics, with the Genesis version having the same as the original arcade game. The Genesis and SNES versions are the last games released for those consoles in North America. Though using the same box art, they are otherwise unrelated to the 1997 remake. In 2005,
InfoSpace worked with Konami Digital Entertainment to create the mobile game
Frogger for Prizes, in which players across the U.S. competed in multiplayer tournaments to win daily and weekly prizes. In 2006, the
mobile game version of
Frogger grossed over $10 million in the United States. A
Java version was released for compatible
mobile phones.
Frogger was released on the
Xbox Live Arcade for the
Xbox 360 on July 12, 2006. It was developed by
Digital Eclipse and published by
Konami. It has two new gameplay modes: versus speed mode and co-op play. Some of the music was replaced, including the familiar
Frogger theme. This version is in the compilation
Konami Classics Vol. 1.
Hamster Corporation released the game as part of their
Arcade Archives series for the
Nintendo Switch and
PlayStation 4 in 2019.
Clones Video game clones include
Ribbit for the
Apple II (1981),
Acornsoft's
Hopper (1983) for the
BBC Micro and
Acorn Electron, A&F Software's
Frogger (1983) for BBC Micro and
ZX Spectrum, Personal Software Services's
Hopper for the
Oric-1 in the UK (1983) and a later release for the ORIC Atmos,
Froggy for the ZX Spectrum released by DJL Software (1984), Solo Software's
Frogger for the Sharp MZ-700 (1984) in the UK, and
Leap Frog for the
NewBrain. Several clones retain the basic gameplay of
Frogger and change the style or plot.
Pacific Coast Highway (1982), for the
Atari 8-bit computers, splits the gameplay into two alternating screens: one for the highway, one for the water.
Preppie! (1982), also for the Atari 8-bit, changes the frog to a
preppy retrieving golf balls at a country club.
Frostbite (1983), for the Atari 2600, uses the
Frogger river gameplay with an arctic theme.
Crossy Road (2014), for iOS, Android and Windows Phone, has a randomly generated series of road and river sections in one endless level, with only one life and a single point given for each forward hop.
In popular culture • In 1983,
Frogger made its animated television debut as a segment on
CBS's
Saturday Supercade cartoon lineup. Frogger, voiced by
Bob Sarlatte, worked as an investigative reporter. • The
hardcore punk band
Bad Religion recorded a song titled
Frogger, included on their 1985 EP
Back to the Known, which uses the game as a metaphor to describe the traffic in the band's hometown of
Los Angeles. The song even opens with a sample of the game's theme music. • In the 1998
Seinfeld episode "
The Frogger",
Jerry and
George visit a soon-to-be-closed
pizzeria they frequented as teenagers and discover the
Frogger machine still in place, with George's decade-old
high score still recorded. •
Frogger appears in the films
Wreck-It Ralph,
Pixels and
Ralph Breaks the Internet. • A scene in the
Teen Titans episode "Cyborg the Barbarian" parodies the game. • In 2006, a group in
Austin, Texas, used a modified
Roomba dressed as
Frogger to play a real-life version of the game. • In science, Frogger is the name given to a
transposon ("jumping gene") family in the fruit fly
Drosophila melanogaster. • In 2008, the City of Melbourne created a spin-off called
Grogger as part of a public service campaign to encourage people to take safe transportation home after a night of drinking.
Game show Konami announced that a
Frogger game show was in production for
Peacock, produced by
Konami Cross Media NY and
Eureka Productions. It debuted on September 9, 2021. ==Competition==