Action Max: Difference between revisions

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===Background===
'''Action Max''' was a video game console made in 1987 by Worlds of Wonder. It used VHS tapes as the game medium and consisted with nothing but light gun games, currently, only 5 tapes for Action Max were ever released in the NTSC Format, The system is also known for being a big flop in sales and the units are now considered rare.
The '''Action Max''' was a video game console made in 1987 by Worlds of Wonder. It used VHS tapes as the game medium (one of a few consoles during the era to do so, others including the [[View-Master Interactive Vision]] and [[Takara]]'s [[Video Challenger]], the latter of which was introduced in the same year as the Action Max) and featured only light-gun games. Only 5 titles for the Action Max were released in the NTSC format. The system was a sales flop and the units are now considered rare.


===Logo (1987-1988)===
[[File:Action Max (1987).jpeg|center|350px]]
{{YouTube|id=ul8KdqpuqEo}}


'''Visuals:''' A filmstrip containing clips of various Action Max titles comes down from the top of the screen as a blue ray of light fades in at the bottom of the screen. The Action Max logo, which is "'''''{{Big|A}}CTION {{Big|M}}AX'''''" in a metallic, futuristic font with the "'''''O'''''" designed after a crosshairs and the lines extending throughout "'''''{{Big|A}}CTION'''''", swoops in from bottom of the screen facing upwards and extra depth that shrinks back into the logo, and then rotates towards the camera to face it. A white laser sweeps through the gap and into the "'''''O'''''", creating a burst of light from it. After a second, the Action Max logo zooms towards the screen as the camera fits through the crosshairs, while the filmstrip slides out of view and the light fades out.
===(1987-1988)===
[[File:EmwfiQhd5z7YbXOZhGrG7Q18637.jpeg|center|350px]]
{{youtube|id=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpV5XYa39I4}}
'''Nickname:''' "Action Max Filmstrip"


'''Technique:''' CGI with live-action clips.
'''Logo:''' On a blue background with a sunburst below, we see a filmstrip with clips from Action Max games playing inside each part of the strip. "Action Max", in a futuristic font, zooms out, then flips up. A white laser shoots the "O" in the logo, making it flash, and then the logo zooms in through the "O".


'''Audio:''' A 1980s synth-guitar pop tune, with a soft "DING!" when the laser hits the "O".
'''FX/SFX:''' 80s computer animation.


'''Availability:''' Seen on all the VHS game titles released for the Action Max, like ''Sonic Fury'' and ''The Rescue of Pops Ghostly''.
'''Music/Sounds:''' An 80s synth-guitar pop tune, with a soft "DING!" when the laser hits the "O".


=== External Links ===
'''Availability''': Seen when the Action Max (the only video game system that uses VHS tapes, though Hasbro did plan on a similar system years later) is turned on.
* {{Wikipedia link}}


[[Category:American video game logos]]
'''Editor's Note:''' None.
[[Category:American Video Game Logos]]
[[Category:United States]]
[[Category:American Logos]]
[[Category:Video game logos]]
[[Category:Video Game Logos]]
[[Category:Console start-up logos]]
[[Category:English-language logos]]

Latest revision as of 18:06, 24 October 2024

Background

The Action Max was a video game console made in 1987 by Worlds of Wonder. It used VHS tapes as the game medium (one of a few consoles during the era to do so, others including the View-Master Interactive Vision and Takara's Video Challenger, the latter of which was introduced in the same year as the Action Max) and featured only light-gun games. Only 5 titles for the Action Max were released in the NTSC format. The system was a sales flop and the units are now considered rare.

Logo (1987-1988)


Visuals: A filmstrip containing clips of various Action Max titles comes down from the top of the screen as a blue ray of light fades in at the bottom of the screen. The Action Max logo, which is "ACTION MAX" in a metallic, futuristic font with the "O" designed after a crosshairs and the lines extending throughout "ACTION", swoops in from bottom of the screen facing upwards and extra depth that shrinks back into the logo, and then rotates towards the camera to face it. A white laser sweeps through the gap and into the "O", creating a burst of light from it. After a second, the Action Max logo zooms towards the screen as the camera fits through the crosshairs, while the filmstrip slides out of view and the light fades out.

Technique: CGI with live-action clips.

Audio: A 1980s synth-guitar pop tune, with a soft "DING!" when the laser hits the "O".

Availability: Seen on all the VHS game titles released for the Action Max, like Sonic Fury and The Rescue of Pops Ghostly.

External Links

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