Head On's relation to
Pac-Man (1980) as a game about collecting dots inside of a maze-like structure has been noted by commentators and historians. Though there has not been direct confirmation on its influence, the importance of
Head On in Japan around the time of
Pac-Man's development suggests a correlation between the two. Several evolutions on the
Head On formula released in 1979 including
Space Chaser (1979) and
Car Hunt (1979) bear further resemblance to
Pac-Man. Ports of
Head On for the
Commodore 64 and
VIC-20 were released in 1982. In Japan, the game was released for the
PC-8801 and
Sharp MZ computers.
Head On later appeared in the
Sega Saturn collection
Sega Memorial Selection Vol.1 and in the
PlayStation 2 collection
Sega Ages Vol. 23.
Sequels A sequel was released the same year as the original:
Head On 2 (1979), also known as
Head On Part II. A mobile phone version of
Head On was released exclusively in Japan through the Sonic Cafe, Puyo Puyo Sega, and Sega Ages portal during the 2000s.
Clones Crash (1979) by
Exidy was announced a month after
Head On was released in the United States. This led to Sega/Gremlin contacting Exidy and having the game discontinued. Despite this,
Crash was the seventh highest-grossing arcade game of 1979 in the United States and Exidy followed it up with similar games such as
Targ (1980). Licensed clones were developed based on
Head-On in Japan. Licensees included
Irem and
Nintendo who modified and released their version as .
Namco's
Rally-X was heavily inspired by
Head On.
Konami's
Fast Lane arcade game, released in 1987, highly resembles
Head On with improved graphics and some additional features.
Head On proved a popular concept to clone for home systems. Clones include
Tunnels of Fahad for the
TRS-80,
Car Wars for the
TI-99/4A,
Killer Car for
Spectravideo,
Car Chase for the
ZX Spectrum, ''
Dodge 'Em for the Atari 2600, and Dodge Racer'' for
Atari 8-bit computers. The number of lanes in these games varies from 3 to 6. ==References==