E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial in video games
Starting with the release of the film in 1982 and its subsequent 20th anniversary re-release, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial has been the subject of many video games across several platforms and genres.
E.T. | |
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Genre(s) | various |
Developer(s) | Atari and various |
Publisher(s) | Atari and various |
Platform(s) | Atari 2600 Texas Instruments TI-99/4A Atari 8-bit family Game Boy Advance Game Boy Color PC PlayStation IOS |
First release | E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial 1982 |
Latest release | E.T.: Pinball 2017 |
1982
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (Atari, 1982)
Atari Inc. made an Atari 2600 game that was based on the film. Despite the popularity of the film, the game was widely considered to be one of the worst games of all time. Along with the Atari 2600 port of Pac-Man, the movie game is often blamed for the video game crash of 1983.[1][2] It was also one of the main games found in the Atari video game burial.
1983
E.T. Go Home (UFI und sein gefährlicher Einsatz) (Atari, 1983)
E.T. Go Home is a 1983 video game for the Atari 2600. It was originally a European game that was known as UFI und sein gefährlicher Einsatz there. The game looks like a mix of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Pac-Man.
E.T. Phone Home! (Atari, 1983)
Released by Childware for the Atari 8-bit family of computers in 1983,[3] the game features graphics by British game designer and artist, John O'Neill.[4] In this game players control Elliot, who must search the neighborhood for pieces that E.T. wants to build his transmitter. Depending on the level, players may or may not need all the pieces to complete the game. It's also possible to communicate "telepathically" with E.T. to get a reminder of which pieces he is looking for.[5]
As Elliot looks for the pieces, he is pursued by a number of men who are trying to stop him from completing his task. Once Elliot gets enough of the pieces, E.T. says his famous line "E.T. Phone Home". From there, players control E.T. trying to find his way back to the landing site in the forest. The game ends with E.T. returning to his spaceship before ascending into outer space.
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1983)
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial is a 1983 video game for the Texas Instruments TI-99/4A.[6]
2001
E.T.: Digital Companion
Released for the Game Boy Color on October 18, 2001. This cartridge is designed to turn the Game Boy Color handheld into a child-friendly personal digital assistant. The E.T.: Digital Planner features an address book, a calendar, a clock, and a "To-Do" list, all presented in a theme inspired by the hugely popular 1982 film. The software also contains five mini games, including the opportunity to care for a "Flopgopple" virtual pet. Kids can protect their personal information with a password or print it out on the Nintendo Game Boy Printer.
E.T.: Escape from Planet Earth
Released for the Game Boy Color on November 28, 2001. Players must construct a communicator so that E.T. can 'phone home', searching 60 environments for all the components needed to build it. In the process, players will have to evade capture by government agents and avoid the clever traps set for them.
Players alternate playing as the strategic-minded Elliott or as E.T., whose extraordinary powers, including levitation, are useful in many tricky situations. The single-player game features three levels of difficulty and three modes of gameplay: exploration, quest, and encounter. The game also features miniquests that unlock tradable hidden items.
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
Released for the Game Boy Advance on December 14, 2001. Players must save E.T. from the government agents, scientists and law enforcement officers that are trying to catch him, while attempting to assemble a transmitter that will allow E.T. to "phone home".
2002
E.T.: Interplanetary Mission
Released on March 27, 2002 in North America and on March 29, 2002 in Europe for the PC and Sony PlayStation on December 30, 2002 in North America and in 2002 in Europe. E.T. is on a mission to save the universe, that will take you to alien planets with rare and exotic plant species. Journey to the Green Planet, Ice Planet, Desert Planet, Planet Metropolis and Earth. Play and puzzle through 15 levels and battle alien enemies. Uncover these special plants and use E.T.'s glowing finger, telepathy, heart stun, and more to heal them. Listen as they sing back to you in thanks. Travel across 25 new exciting game levels where you will explore & accomplish missions.
E.T. and the Cosmic Garden
Released for the Game Boy Color in March 2002, E.T. Cosmic Garden is a real-time adventure where you travel to six planets populated by exotic, weird, and wild plants. You gather these rare and wonderful plants for the spaceship's greenhouse and fulfill E.T.'s original mission by replanting and restoring the Cosmic Garden. Growing a healthy garden requires E.T. and his assistants, Space Bee and Space Slug, to maintain proper amounts of food, water, and light, and to protect these special species from a host of intergalactic pests, including space beetles, fungus, and harmful celestial events, such as a prolonged eclipse. E.T. can use his special telekinesis powers to control the pests.
Features 12 levels and seven environments. Players can create more than 60 plants, each with unique personalities and abilities—they sing, jump, generate electricity, and more. Beat the game to unlock the never-ending Prize Garden.
E.T.: Away from Home
Released for PC on March 27, 2002, for the 20th Anniversary of E.T.
E.T.: Phone Home Adventure
Released for PC on March 27, 2002, for the 20th Anniversary of E.T.
2012
E.T.: The Green Planet
Released for IOS on October 9, 2012, for the 30th Anniversary of E.T.
2015
Lego Dimensions (2015)
Released for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One and Wii U on September 27, 2015 in North America, September 28, 2015 in Australia, and September 29, 2015 in Europe. A toys-to-life video game that brings together many different franchises, Lego Dimensions is set to include E.T. as a playable character. He's been released in a pack alongside a "Phone Home" gadget on November 18, 2015; using his figure will also unlock an E.T.-themed adventure world for players to explore and complete objectives. The E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (video game) is also referenced by ET himself as when he is near Gamer Kid, he says “ET game good?”, a reference to both the games legacy in being poorly developed and how Gamer Kid loves playing 80s arcade games.
2017
E.T. Pinball (2017)
35 years after the film's release, Zen Studios developed and released a virtual pinball adaptation of it as one of three tables based on iconic Universal Pictures classic films created after Universal agreed to a partnership with Zen. The table is available as a purchased, downloadable add-on for the game Pinball FX 3 and features 3-D animated figures of Elliot, E.T. and his spaceship.[7]
Cancelled games
- E.T.: Return to the Green Planet - PlayStation 2
- E.T.: Search for Dragora - Nintendo GameCube, Xbox
- E.T.: Salerian Project - Game Boy Advance
References
- GamePro Staff (2007-04-25). "The 52 Most Important Video Games of All Time". GamePro. Archived from the original on 2008-09-12. Retrieved 2009-09-27.
- Parish, Jeremy. "The Most Important Games Ever Made: #13: E.T." 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 2012-05-24. Retrieved 2006-07-01.
- E.T. Phone Home! for Atari 8-bit - MobyGames
- Yaktal, Kathy. "Designers With A Difference: New Approaches to Computer Games." COMPUTE!'s Gazette. Issue 30 (Vol.3, No.12). Pp.24-32. December 1985. ISSN 0737-3716.
- Personal Computer Games Magazine Issue 4
- Vidiot - Vol 1 No 5 (1983-09)
- Good, Owen (26 August 2017). "Pinball FX3 has big names lining up for a table". Polygon. Retrieved 21 November 2019.