Lunar Lander proved moderately commercially successful, selling 4,830 cabinets.
Cash Box noted in September 1979 that the machines were very popular with customers. It was Atari's first vector graphics game and the first multiple-perspective video game with the inclusion of the up-close view of the lander. Atari developed a two-player version of the game, but only two prototypes were ever made and it did not enter production. The two-player version was cancelled as
Lunar Landers popularity was soon overtaken by Atari's
Asteroids (November 1979), which used the same vector graphics engine and which had initially been based on
Lunar Landers code. Atari ceased production early on
Lunar Lander in favor of shipping
Asteroids games in
Lunar Lander cabinets; the first 300
Asteroids games were released with
Lunar Lander artwork on the side. In 1980,
Asteroids and
Lunar Lander became the first two games to be registered in the
United States Copyright Office, though Jack Burness has claimed that Atari also attempted to patent the game design, which was rejected due to his prior
Moonlander. The Atari
Lunar Lander was the most popular version to date of the "Lunar Lander" concept, surpassing the prior
Moonlander and text-based games, and most later versions of the concept are implicitly or explicitly based on the Atari version. While Atari did not produce any true sequels or contemporary
ports of the 1979 game, in 1980
Adventure International produced a version of the concept under the title
Lunar Lander as part of a series of arcade game
clones for the
TRS-80 and
Atari 8-bit computers, which, though featuring differences from the Atari version, was advertised as "an arcade game simulation". At least one other arcade game based on the
Lunar Lander concept was developed around the same time, the non-vector graphics game
Lunar Rescue (1979) by
Taito. in 2012,
Lumen Prize-winner Seb Lee-Delisle presented his "Lunar Trails" art installation at the
Science Gallery in
Dublin, in which a machine draws out the cumulative paths taken by players of a
Lunar Lander arcade game. In 2024, Atari announced
Lunar Lander Beyond, a multi-platform game release.
Re-releases and ports Lunar Lander has been included in several Atari compilation releases for various platforms by the original Atari's
successor company: •
Atari: 80 Classic Games in One (2003, personal computer) •
Atari Flashback 2 console (2005) •
Millipede / Super Breakout / Lunar Lander (2005,
Game Boy Advance) •
Retro Atari Classics (2005,
Nintendo DS) •
Atari Masterpieces (2005,
N-Gage) •
Atari Classics Evolved (2007,
PlayStation Portable) •
Atari Greatest Hits (2010, Nintendo DS,
Android,
iOS) •
Atari Arcade (2012, web browsers) •
Atari Vault (2016, Windows, Linux, Mac) •
Atari Flashback Classics Volume 1 (2017,
PlayStation 4,
Xbox One) •
Atari Flashback Classics (2018,
Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4) •
Atari 50 (2022,
Atari VCS,
Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4,
PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One,
Xbox Series X/S); includes both
Lunar Lander and
Vctr Sctr, a game that combines several Atari games that utilize vector graphics, including
Lunar Lander, into one game.
Remakes/Reimaginings •
Lunar Lander Beyond (2024, Windows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch) ==See also==