Elevator Action Famicom Price Guide & Value
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Details Elevator Action (Famicom)
- Console
- Famicom
- Genre
- Action
- Release
- 1985
Technical Specs +
- 🌐 Box Code
- DMG-117-CHN
- 🌐 Box Code
- NES-EA
- 🌐 EAN
- 020588010444
- 🌐 Box Code
- n/a
- 🌐 Box Code
- CX26126
- 🌐 Box Code
- DMG-EA-USA
- 🇪🇺 Box Code
- n/a
- 🇪🇺 Box Code
- n/a
- 🇪🇺 EAN
- 020588010444
- 🇪🇺 Box Code
- DMG-EA-NOE
- 🇪🇺 EAN
- 5450270005154
- 🇪🇺 Box Code
- CGB-BEXP-EUR
- 🇯🇵 Box Code
- DMG-EAA
- 🇯🇵 Box Code
- n/a
- 🇯🇵 EAN
- 4974365160180
Market Value Elevator Action
Price History Elevator Action
Market Value & Price Range: Elevator Action
How much is Elevator Action worth on Famicom?
The current price guide for this title is around $5.68 for a Loose copy.
Where to buy Elevator Action cheaper?
If you are looking where to buy Elevator Action cheaper, the best live offer currently starts at €2.33 for a Nicht bewertet copy.
Buying Guide & Authenticity
Is Elevator Action a rare game?
The rarity of Elevator Action on Famicom is currently difficult to assess with precision. The game exists in both PAL (Europe) and NTSC (US/Japan) formats, giving collectors options based on their budget and hardware.
Description Elevator Action
Elevator Action is a 1983 arcade game by Taito. It debuted during the "Golden Age of Arcade Games". Innovative in gameplay, the game was very popular for many years. In the game, the player assumes the role of a spy who infiltrates a building filled with elevators. He must collect secret documents from the building and traverse the 30 floors of the building using an increasingly complex series of elevators. The player is pursued by enemy agents who appear from behind closed doors. These agents must be dealt with via force or evasion. Successful completion of a level involves collecting all the secret documents and traversing the building from top to bottom. In the lower floors of the building, the elevator systems are so complex that some puzzle-solving skills are needed. The game was available as a standard upright cabinet The controls consist of a 4-way joystick and two buttons, one for "shoot" and the other for jumping and kicking. The maximum number of players is two, alternating turns. The graphics are extremely simple, 2D color graphics and in-game music was composed by musician Yoshio Imamura. The game was followed by a sequel, Elevator Action II (also known as Elevator Action Returns).