Re-releases Missile Command has seen many re-releases in many Atari compilation titles: • The game is included in
Arcade Classics for the Sega Genesis and Game Gear and a similar
Master System compilation titled
Arcade Smash Hits. • The game was released for
Microsoft Windows as part of the
Microsoft Arcade package in 1993. • The game is included in the
Midway Games-published ''
Arcade's Greatest Hits: The Atari Collection 1'' for the
Sega Saturn,
Super Nintendo Entertainment System, and the
PlayStation. • It is also included in
Atari Arcade Hits 1,
Atari Greatest Hits,
Atari Anniversary Edition and
Atari: 80 Classic Games in One!. • The game appears as a bonus unlockable minigame in the
PlayStation 2 and
Xbox versions of
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, that can be unlocked once it has been played on a hidden computer in one of the levels. • The game was made available for the Xbox and PlayStation 2 (in both arcade and Atari 2600 versions) as part of
Atari Anthology in 2004. • The game is included in
Retro Atari Classics and
Atari Greatest Hits Volume 1 for the Nintendo DS. The former title also includes a remixed art version. • Both the arcade and 2600 versions are part of
Atari Vault (2016). • Both the Atari 2600 and 7800 versions were released on the
Evercade as part of
Arcade Collection 1 and
2 in 2020. • The arcade, 2600 and 5200 versions were included in
Atari 50 (2022) for the
Atari VCS,
Nintendo Switch,
PlayStation 4,
PlayStation 5,
Windows,
Xbox One, and
Xbox Series X/S.
Sequels In late 1980, a two-player sequel
Missile Command 2 was field tested but never released, although at least one prototype appeared in an arcade in
Santa Clara, California. This game was similar to the original except that each player had their own set of cities and missile batteries and the players could cooperate to save each other's cities from the onslaught. In 1992, Atari developed a prototype of an arcade game called
Arcade Classics for their 20th anniversary, which included
Missile Command 2 and
Super Centipede. Despite its name, however, this version was not the unreleased sequel, but an enhanced remake of the first game. In 1981, an enhancement kit was made by
General Computer Corp. to convert
Missile Command into
Super Missile Attack. This made the game even harder, and added a
UFO to the player's enemies. In 1982, Atari released a game called
Liberator, which was seen by some as being a sequel to
Missile Command with the situation essentially reversed; in
Liberator, the player is the one attacking planetary bases from orbit.
Updated versions An updated version called
Missile Command 3D was released for the
Atari Jaguar in 1995. It contains three versions of the game: Classic (a straight port of the arcade game), 3D (graphically upgraded and with a rotating viewpoint), and Virtual. It is the only game that works with the virtual reality helmet from
Virtuality.
Hasbro Interactive released a 3D remake of
Missile Command for
Microsoft Windows and
PlayStation in 1999. A port of
Missile Command with high-definition graphics was released via
Xbox Live Arcade for the
Xbox 360 on July 4, 2007.
Missile Command was released for the
iPhone and
iPod Touch for US$5 on September 23, 2008. It includes two gameplay modes ("Ultra" and "Classic"). In March 2020, Atari released a new remake,
Missile Command: Recharged, on mobile platforms, the first in the
Atari Recharged series. On May 27, the remake also made it to
Nintendo Switch as well as home computers via
Steam, later on released as a launch title on the
Atari VCS. An updated version of the game was announced in 2018 for the
Intellivision Amico. While neither the Intellivision Amico version of
Missile Command nor the Amico console itself have yet released, a mobile version was announced in late 2023, as part of Intellivision's
Amico Home initiative. This version was released for Android the same year, with an iOS version being announced for a later release.
Clones Contemporary
Missile Command clones include
Missile Defense (1981) for the
Apple II,
Stratos (1982) for the
TRS-80,
Missile Control (1983) for the BBC Micro,
Repulsar (1983) for the
ZX Spectrum, and
Barrage (1983) for the
TI-99/4A. Silas Warner programmed the 1980 clone
ABM for the Apple II several years before writing
Castle Wolfenstein. • In the 1991 film
Terminator 2: Judgment Day, John Connor plays the game in an arcade, echoing the film's theme of a future global nuclear war. • The documentary
High Score (2006) follows William Carlton, a
Portland, Oregon gamer, on his quest to beat the
Missile Command high score record for Marathon settings. • In the 2010 open world
survival horror video game,
Deadly Premonition, the game is mentioned by the protagonist Francis York Morgan, while driving. • In the 2008 episode "
Chuck Versus Tom Sawyer" of the
NBC show
Chuck, a weapons satellite access code is hidden in the (fictitious)
kill screen of
Missile Command by its programmer, Mr. Morimoto (
Clyde Kusatsu). • In the 1982 film
Fast Times at Ridgemont High,
Missile Commands "The End" screen is used to help illustrate the film's ending. • The game is shown in the opening title sequence of the 2013
FX television series
The Americans. • The 2015 game
Fallout 4 features a holotape called
Atomic Command, a clone of
Missile Command playable on the Pip-Boy interface in which the player must defend landmarks across the United States from atomic bombs.
Film connection and adaptation The gameplay of
Missile Command, specifically, the
contrails left by incoming
ICBMs, and the visuals of cities being destroyed by nuclear warheads on a video display screen, strongly resembles the opening nuclear war scenes from the 1977 film,
Damnation Alley. In February 2010,
Atari was talking with several studios to turn
Missile Command into a film.
20th Century Fox acquired the rights to bring
Missile Command to film the following year. In May 2016,
Emmett/Furla Oasis Films closed a deal to partner with Atari to produce and finance films based on
Centipede and
Missile Command. ==Competitive play==