Release History:
1976 - Stunt Cycle
Manufacturer:
Atari
In the game, your danger-seeking stunt driver started at the top of three levels, racing across the screen as you cranked up the throttle on your handlebar controls. With a little bit of juice, the cyclist would even do a wheelie, but fancy bike showmanship wasn't going to clear those buses at the bottom of the screen.
As you moved the stuntman off the screen on one level, he appeared on the next lower platform, winding his way down to the ramp at the bottom of the screen. On this lowest level, a line of parked buses stood between you and stuntman immortality. If your speed was right (a brake was provided if you thought you were going too fast), the cyclist would launch from one ramp and land safely on the other, soaking in the cheers of the crowd. If your instincts were off, however, the poor little stuntman would either overshoot his mark or crash land on the roof of a bus.
After one jump was cleared, your cyclist moved on to the next, adding a bus each time. Only the most skilled players managed to equal Knievel's famous 1975 King's Island jump, clearing 14 Greyhound buses-but then, if everyone could jump like Evel Knievel, it wouldn't seem dangerous any more. Unfortunately for Atari, Knievel decided to retire after a 1976 crash, and Stunt Cycle failed to soar as high as its inspiration.

