•
A-maz-ing (1981) •
CatChum (1981) developed by
Yahoo Software for
Kaypro's
luggable computers. It is a
text-based game, using characters for the graphics. •
Ghost Hunter (1981) from Arcade Plus for the
Atari 8-bit computers •
Gobble Man (1981) for the TRS-80. •
Gobbler (1981) by Sierra On-Line for the
Apple II family. •
Jawbreaker (1981) by Sierra On-Line for the
Atari 8-bit computers. Atari, Inc. threatened to sue the publishers,
Sierra On-Line, but they released the game anyway. Atari won the ensuing lawsuit. •
Jelly Monsters (1981) for the
VIC-20 is a port of Namco's
Pac-Man by
HAL Laboratory who had the home computer rights to Namco's games in Japan at the time. When the games were released in
North America, the names were changed to avoid legal issues with Atari, Inc. who had the home computer rights in North America.
Jelly Monsters for the VIC-20 was published by
Commodore International. Atari ended up suing HAL and Commodore anyway and won the lawsuit, after which Atari pulled off HAL's VIC-20 port and released their own version. •
K.C. Munchkin! (1981) for the
Odyssey². In the 1982 case
Atari, Inc. v. North American Philips Consumer Electronics Corp., an Appellate court found that Phillips had copied
Pac-Man and made alterations that "only tend to emphasize the extent to which it deliberately copied the Plaintiff's work." The ruling was one of the first to establish how
copyright law would apply to the
look and feel of computer software. •
Pac-Tac (1981) for the TRS-80 CoCo. •
Puckman (1981) for the Apple II. •
Scarfman (1981) for the TRS-80 •
Snakman (1981) for the VIC-20 and Commodore 64. •
Snoggle (1981) •
Super Puckman (1981) for
Apple II by ADO Software. •
Super Taxman 2 (1981) for the Apple II. •
Taxman (1981) for the
Apple II was programmed by Brian Fitzgerald. •
Snak Pac (1982) for
TRS-80 CoCo by Tom Mix Software. •
Snapper (1982). The initial release for the
BBC Micro and
Acorn Electron, by
Acornsoft, was so close to
Pac-Man (including the design of the game's characters) that this version had to be withdrawn and re-released with the characters changed. The player's character became a round yellow face with very short legs wearing a green
cowboy hat and the ghosts became skinny humanoid monsters. •
Spookyman (1982) for ZX Spectrum by Abbex Electronics. •
The Gobbling Box (1982) for the TRS-80. •
The Queen of Hearts Maze Game (1982) •
Trashman (1982) •
Zac-Man (1982) •
3-Demon (1983) is a wireframe-3D Pac-Man clone. •
Arcade Action (1983) •
Byter (1983) •
Chomps (1983) for IBM-PC by Howard Eugene Arrington of Ensign Software, published by Softsmith of The Software Guild was entirely in text mode using the IBM-PC's
code page 437. The player character, the enemy ghosts, the pellets and bonus items were represented by one single characters each, respectively ☻, Ω, • and ♫.
Box-drawing characters were used to construct four mazes. •
Damper/Glooper (1983) •
Doctor Who: The First Adventure (1983) •
Dot Gobbler (1983) for the Commodore 64. •
Dot Man (1983) for the VIC-20. •
Galaxians & Gloops (1983) •
1983 Gobbledegook (1983) •
Jaws (1983) •
Monster Muncher (1983) •
Nibbler (1983) for the Apple II. •
Pac Rabbit (1983) •
Pac-Panic (1983) for the TRS-80 CoCo. •
Packman (1983) for MS-DOS •
Pacmania (1983) •
Pactron (1983) for
Commodore 64 by Aardvark Technical Services. •
Racer Ball (1983) •
Zappy Zooks (1983) •
Clam Bake (1984) for the Apple II. •
Devil World (1984) for the
Famicom was designed by
Shigeru Miyamoto. •
Ghostman (1984) for
Oric by
Infogrames. •
Miss Gobbler (1984) for the TRS-80 CoCo. •
Oh Shit! (1984) for the MSX. •
Spriteman 64 (1984) •
Vacuumania (1984) for the MSX platform •
Mrs Pac (1986) for the TRS-80 CoCo. • '''''Tommy's Packrat''''' (1986) for DOS. •
Classic Muncher (1987) •
Pac-Maine (1988) •
CD-MAN (1989) for DOS by Creative Dimensions. •
MaxMan (1989) for DOS by Christopher G. Gunn. •
Pacman (1989) for the Amiga. •
Chomp (1990) for Windows. •
Pac-Dude (1990) for the TRS-80 CoCo. •
TITANman (1990) for the PC. •
Pacman ST (1991) for Atari ST by Robert Leong, published by Budgie UK. •
Ms. Chomp (1992) for Windows. •
Crapman - A Game for Real Heroes (1993) •
H Mec 2 (1993) • '''''Pacman on E's''''' (1993) for 6800. •
Multi Pakman (1994) for Atari ST by Stosser Software. •
Pako (1994) for DOS by Uranium Software. •
Pac 2000 (1996) •
Curious George Learns Phonics (1997) •
Pac-Man: A Tribute to the Great Game (1997) for
TRS-80 CoCo by Nickolas Marentes. •
Twinkle (1997) •
Suzy Sushi (2000) •
Aztec Maze (2001) •
Cool Cruncher (2002) is a 3D Pac-Man clone. •
Cruncher in Mazeland (2002) •
Mr. Donutman (2003) •
Froggies (2006) •
Lady Cruncher (2006) •
Eicheljagd (2007) • '''''Pack's Land''''' (2008) •
Cacman (2017) •
Koin o atsumete! Yuniti-chan (2019) ==Mini and mainframe clones==