According to the Nintendo Game Boy Advance
Gradius Advance intro and the
Gradius Breakdown DVD included with
Gradius V,
Scramble is considered the first in the
Gradius series, but the
Gradius Collection guidebook issued a few years after by
Konami, lists
Scramble as part of their shooting history, and the
Gradius games are now listed separately. An updated version of
Scramble is available in ''
Konami Collector's Series: Arcade Advanced'' by inputting the
Konami Code in the game's title screen. This version allows three different ships to be chosen: the Renegade, the Shori, and the Gunslinger. The only difference between the ships besides their appearance are the shots they fire. The Renegade's shots are the same as in the original
Scramble, the Shori has rapid-fire capabilities triggered by holding down the fire button, and the Gunslinger's shots can pierce through enemies, meaning they can be used for multiple hits with a single shot.
Impact In an interview with
RePlay magazine in January 1990, Konami founder
Kagemasa Kōzuki (Kaz Kozuki) stated that he considers
Scramble to be Konami's most important game. He said that
Scramble was the company's first major hit that launched Konami into world prominence. The game also served as a foundation for the horizontally
scrolling shooter sub-genre. While not the first horizontally scrolling shooter (it was predated by
Defender two months earlier), Wayne Santos of
GameAxis Unwired notes that
Scramble and its sequel
Super Cobra "created the side-scrolling shooter that progressed to the end of a
level, rather than having a self-enclosed level that warped on itself in an infinite loop, like
Defender". Game designer Scott Rogers named
Scramble as well as
Irem's
Moon Patrol (1982) as forerunners of the
endless runner platform genre.
In other media Scramble gameplay is featured during the opening credits of the 1982 Spanish film
Colegas by
Eloy de la Iglesia, along with some other arcade games of the era like
Defender,
Monaco GP and
Missile Command.
Re-releases •
Xbox Live Arcade library for the
Xbox 360 on September 13, 2006. •
Microsoft's
Game Room service for the
Xbox 360 and
Windows on March 24, 2010. • 1999 for the
PlayStation as part of
Konami Arcade Classics. • 2002 for the
Game Boy Advance on the compilation ''
Konami Collector's Series: Arcade Advanced''. • 2005 for the
PlayStation 2 in
Japan as part of the
Oretachi Geasen Zoku Sono series. • 2007 for the
Nintendo DS as part of
Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits. •
PlayStation 4 as part of the
Arcade Archives series in Japan in 2014, North America and Asia in 2015, and for the
Nintendo Switch in 2019. •
PlayStation 4,
Nintendo Switch,
Xbox One, and
Windows on
Steam on April 18, 2019 as part of the
Arcade Classics Anniversary Collection.
Clones Atari 8-bit games
Airstrike (1982),
Bellum (1983), and
Mars Mission II are
Scramble clones.
Skramble (1983) is a clone for the
Commodore 64.
Whirlybird Run (1983) is a
TRS-80 Color Computer clone.
Legal history In
Stern Electronics, Inc. v. Kaufman, 669 F.2d 852, the Second Circuit held that Stern could copyright the images and sounds in the game, not just the source code that produced them, in response to a nearly identical "
knock-off" arcade game marketed by Omni Video Games. ==See also==