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Illustration of Monaco GP

Monaco GP

Overview

Monaco GP was produced by Sega/Gremlin in 1979.

An overhead driving game where you try to beat the clock. During the game a player is given an unlimited number of cars lives. Extended play is awarded once a player's score reaches a certain amount.

A player receives points based upon how fast the car is traveling. About eight points per second are awarded for being in low gear with the accelerator fully depressed while 25 points per second are received for being in high gear with the pedal in the same position.

The goal is to beat the clock. The player basically has an unlimited number of cars, but it is nearly impossible to reach extended play except using high gear and not crashing.

There are 5 areas you drive through: normal road, ice (you will slide around), tunnel (you can only see what's ahead of you in your headlights), gravel (you will slow down if you drive on the gravel), and the bridge (very tricky). The five levels always show up in the same order. Until you get extended play you will only drive on the normal road, ice, and the tunnel.

You can crash as much as you want during the first 90 seconds of game play. There is no penalty except losing out on points. Extended Play (one extra car) is awarded at 2,000, 4,000, 6,000, and 8,000 points. The game stops counting score at 9,999 (and the scene locks on the normal road, it never changes after that).

The cars all move in a fairly predictable sine wave. As you go further, your car gets faster and traffic gets thicker making the game more challenging. The trickiest part of the game is getting on the bridge. It's always in the middle and you'll be warned with a bottleneck sign just before you get to it. Drop to first gear, let off the gas, and merge within the other cars. The safest way to beat the bridge is to match speed with the other cars until you're off. Puddles will also cause you to lose control briefly. Puddles only appear on the normal road and only once per scene and usually towards the beginning. You can typically avoid them by sticking to the extreme left or right of the screen.

Platform
Arcade
Genre
Racing
Alternate Names
No information available

Media

Advertisement Flyer - Back

Monaco GP - Advertisement Flyer - Back (North America) - 1280x1652
North America -  1280 x 1652
Monaco GP - Advertisement Flyer - Back (Japan) - 1280x1665
Japan -  1280 x 1665

Advertisement Flyer - Front

Monaco GP - Advertisement Flyer - Front (Japan) - 1280x1665
Japan -  1280 x 1665
Monaco GP - Advertisement Flyer - Front (North America) - 1280x1652
North America -  1280 x 1652

Arcade - Cabinet

Monaco GP - Arcade - Cabinet (null) - 1100x900
1100 x 900

Arcade - Control Panel

Monaco GP - Arcade - Control Panel (null) - 2698x1379
2698 x 1379

Arcade - Marquee

Monaco GP - Arcade - Marquee (null) - 3840x1844
3840 x 1844

Box - 3D

Monaco GP - Box - 3D (Japan) - 582x889
Japan -  582 x 889

Clear Logo

Monaco GP - Clear Logo (null) - 400x69
400 x 69