. Howard Scott Warshaw went on to program other high-profile games based on films for the Atari 2600:
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1982) and
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). Warshaw has included Yars aliens as a secret in both games. Warshaw was developing a sequel to the game in 1983 titled
Saboteur which was converted into a video game based on
The A-Team to fulfill a licensing obligation. Warshaw left Atari in 1984. He did not return to the video game industry until 1999, working at
The 3DO Company as the director on games like
BattleTanx: Global Assault (1999) and
WarJetz (2001) and has worked various other jobs, including as a photographer, a real estate banker, a film director since. Following the release of the comic in ''Yars' Revenge
other Atari works had comics included with their respective games such as the Swordquest series and the Atari 2600 version of Defender (1982). Defender
and several other comics that followed in Atari console games like Star Raiders (1982) and Phoenix (1983) which would be developed by Warner Bros subsidiary DC Comics. These comics featured original characters called The Atari Force who were later included within the arcade game Liberator'' (1982). Warshaw said that the most exciting part of the game for him later was making a significant debut, making a game that was good enough that he enjoyed playing it, and that if he had to pick favorite thing about the game, was that the game had "scored highest among adult women, the single hardest market segment to reach". He suggested in 2006 that the appeal towards women was due to what he described as "the
oral component [...] like
Pac-Man, you nibble and you run away. The more you eat, the closer you get to danger..."
Follow-ups and remakes Warshaw said that Atari programmer
Dave Theurer was interested in making an arcade conversion of the game, which never went into development. Warshaw also created his own sequel to the game which remains unreleased. The game was described as being set on Yars' training grounds and saw the players acquiring the skills to defeat the Qotile. Atari initially had an agreement with Warshaw to the game, with the company putting the project on hold as they were not at a position do development at the time. Warshaw has since tried to get the game developed through another developer and said in 2024 that "a design exists" and he was "ready to begin implementation when they are". Several remakes and sequels of the game have been released years after the release of the original game. A
Game Boy Color remake of ''Yars' Revenge'' was released in September 1999. This version of the game features differences from the original game, such as a scrolling screen, a secret bonus level with a where the player maneuvers Yar left and right to avoid asteroids and to touch the Ghost of Yar for extra points, intermission screens with graphics and a password-based continue system. This version was developed in the mid-1990s by Mike Mika. Warshaw met with Mika during the game's development and described him as a "committed and talented game maker. We became friends, and our paths have run parallel ever since." Mika would later make ''Yars' Revenge Reimagined
on the Atari 50'' (2022) game, which reuses the code of Warshaw's ''Yars' Revenge''. Other sequels and remakes include ''Yars' Return'' developed by Curt Vendel, which was included on the
Atari Flashback 2 console in 2005. After the initial release, Dennis Debro worked at Vendel's direction to make some improvements and enhancements, and that revised version was included in later releases of the Flashback. Atari announced a new game developed by Killspace Entertainment titled ''
Yar's Revenge'' in 2010. The game was in the
rail shooter genre and borrows elements from the original such as the neutral zone and a drone that automatically locks onto and fires at enemies. It was the company's only game and released in 2011 for the
Xbox Live Arcade following the studio formally closing in 2012. Warshaw commented on the game in 2016, saying that its genre gave the game a predetermined course which made it lack the freedom of movement of the original, stating that he was "very disappointed in [''Yar's Revenge'']" In 2022,
Yars: Recharged was released as part of Atari's partnership between developers Adamvision and Sneakybox, which created new versions of popular Atari games under the
Atari Recharged banner.
Yars Rising was announced at an Indie World
Nintendo Direct for release on September 10, 2024. The game was developed by
WayForward and is a
side-scrolling action-adventure game, with mini-games that resemble the original game. Warshaw had no involvement in the 2024 game. ==See also==