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I'm gonna be a PAC-MASTER!


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#1 StanJr OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 4:29 PM

Thanks to Ken Uston!

My in-laws found this little baby at a yard sale! I've read it and its pretty cool. Kind of kooky to read a book written when Pac-man was new.

Uston has some really interesting things to say about the game and his patterns and knowledge of the game are mind-boggling.

A neat little book and a happy addition to my collection!

Maybe someday I'll get to try his patterns out and be a real PAC-MASTER!


:D :D :D :D

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  • pac_master.jpg


#2 bjk7382 OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 5:31 PM

So your going to be the next Billy Mitchell, huh :D

#3 birdie3 OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 5:59 PM

Is that the guy that had his own Colecovision Poker video game? That's cool if it is!!

#4 bjk7382 OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 6:09 PM

Here is a page I found on Billy Mitchell. (The world champion of Pac-Man)

http://jongy.tripod....tory.html#billy

I bet he owned that book at one time also. :D

#5 Rocko OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 7:21 PM

You should pm me scans of all the pages so I can be a Pacmaster too! :roll: :P ;)

#6 bjk7382 OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 9:19 PM

reptone said:

You should pm me scans of all the pages so I can be a Pacmaster too!  :roll:  :P  ;)

Go buy your Own

;)

#7 NE146 OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 11:26 PM

Billy doesn't use any patterns when he plays, although I'm sure he knows quite a few.

I have that book.. and it's funny because the local library has a copy too which I checked out because I hadn't read it for a while and my copy is back at home.

Anyway I'd scan it for you if I had it.. I notice that people who have classic mags and books rarely scan them.. but I aint one of those people. I love to share :D I recently posted my scans of Joystik "how to win at Home Videogames" on a.b.emulators.misc if you caught it.

So stanno.. let me know when you finally pass that 9th key :)

#8 Nukey Shay OFFLINE  

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Posted Sat May 22, 2004 11:31 PM

Pac-Man
http://www.classicga...an_patterns.htm

Pac-Man+, Super Pac
http://www.atarimaga...v1n2/pacman.php


But I use my own pattern for original PacMan that leaves all 4 energizers open for improv. and captures the first target right before it's due to disappear (the 2nd will appear once any other dots are eaten following "Finish").

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  • pattern.jpg


#9 Big Player OFFLINE  

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Posted Mon May 24, 2004 3:29 PM

Ken Uston is the man. Mastering Pac-Man is a fun little book to read.

Interesting triva. Here's Uston telling how he got into Pac-Man.

Ken Uston said:

 It's nice living in Atlantic City--about four months of the year.  It was 1981 and for the third summer in a row I found myself in the oceanside town, walking the "boards," playing jazz piano in local clubs and just basically hanging out.  I had some legal work to do as well--to force the casinos to allow me to play.

  The Playboy casino had just opened.  Hefner and company had flown in a bevy of bunnies from Chicago and New York to help train local girls to be bunnies.

 The Playboy Club was at the corner of Florida Avenue and the Boardwalk.  Right down the street is a bar called Easy Street, where the bunnies hung out after work.  I had never before seen such a collection of puchritude in my life.  For obvious reasons, I, too, hung out there.

  By chance, Easy Street had two Pac-Man machines.  I played the game for hours on end.

 Pac-Man's a lot like blackjack (mathematicians would say, "Both are deterministic"):

 --In blackjack,the dealer must play the hand exactly in accordance with the rules, hitting until the house total is 17 or greater.

 --In Pac-Man, the little monsters are programmed to react in a pre-determined way, in response the the way the player moves his smiling yellow disk around the board.

 After about 50 hours playing the game, I started to become familar with how the machine was programmed.  I drew charts and schematics of the various "boards" until, after another 200 hours or so, I had developed patterns which, when followed, would allow the player to win so steadily that he could play one game indefinitely.

 An Easy Street waitress suggested I write a book about Pac-Man. I followed her suggestion and then contacted a New York literary agent.

 Three days later the called to tell me that New American Library (NAL) wanted to publish the Pac-Man book, and had offered an advance of $25,000.

 I went to New York to sign the contract.  A snag developed.  Bally, who manufactured Pac-Man, heard about the forthcomming book and called NAL, asking for a copy of the manuscript.  Hoping they'd endorse the book, we sent them a copy of the manuscript immediately.

 Two days later, my agent called.

 "Ken, the president of Bally read your book.  He said 'The book is too good--we can't allow it to be published--people'll be playing forever on one quarter.' Bally's going to sue if the book is published."

 Now consider the irony of this.  I'd been thrown out of New Jersey casinos for playing blackjack too well.  One of the casinos was Bally's Park Place.

 This same company was now telling me I couldn't publish a book about a video game because it would help the customers play too well.  I saw red (a few months later, I got to vent my spleen about this absurdity on national TV--while playing Pac-Man with Jane Pauley on the Today show.  That show got NAL worrying about a libel suit, to boot.)

 NAL, God bless 'em, went ahead.





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