iLoungeiLounge
  • News
    • Apple
      • AirPods Pro
      • AirPlay
      • Apps
        • Apple Music
      • iCloud
      • iTunes
      • HealthKit
      • HomeKit
      • HomePod
      • iOS 13
      • Apple Pay
      • Apple TV
      • Siri
    • Rumors
    • Humor
    • Technology
      • CES
    • Daily Deals
    • Articles
    • Web Stories
  • iPhone
    • iPhone Accessories
  • iPad
  • iPod
    • iPod Accessories
  • Apple Watch
    • Apple Watch Accessories
  • Mac
    • MacBook Air
    • MacBook Pro
  • Reviews
    • App Reviews
  • How-to
    • Ask iLounge
Font ResizerAa
iLoungeiLounge
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
    • Apple
    • Rumors
    • Humor
    • Technology
    • Daily Deals
    • Articles
    • Web Stories
  • iPhone
    • iPhone Accessories
  • iPad
  • iPod
    • iPod Accessories
  • Apple Watch
    • Apple Watch Accessories
  • Mac
    • MacBook Air
    • MacBook Pro
  • Reviews
    • App Reviews
  • How-to
    • Ask iLounge
Follow US

Reviews

Reviews

Review: Namco Pac-Man

Last updated: May 15, 2021 2:14 pm UTC
By Jeremy Horwitz
Review: Namco Pac-Man

Updated! Nearly 25 years after Atari released its infamously ugly Atari VCS/2600 translation of Namco’s 1979 arcade game Pac-Man, the iPod version ($5) has proved that it’s still possible to screw up the classic maze game in new ways. To be fair, Pac-Man has demonstrated great staying power over the past quarter-century despite numerous translation challenges – most of them visual – and its least impressive iterations have still satisfied hundreds of thousands of younger players. Aesthetically, the iPod version is ahead of most of the pack: Apple’s 2.5″ 320×240-pixel screen lets you see apparently pixel-perfect renditions of the game’s mazes, ghosts, dots, and main character, and its sound effects and small bits of music similarly sound arcade-perfect. There are even enough pixels left over on the right side of the screen to fill with old-fashioned Pac-Man cabinet artwork and a picture of a joystick.


Review: Namco Pac-Man

Unfortunately, there’s a reason for that joystick: it’s there to let you know the direction Pac-Man’s just been pointed in. Rather than allow the iPod’s four cardinal face buttons to control Pac-Man definitively, Namco’s control scheme here forces you to tap or sweep your finger across the Click Wheel’s surface to signal direction changes, a decision that will remind fans of the simple, efficient, classic Pac-Man controls of how the arcade machines used to play when the joystick was broken. Even when you’ve tapped in the right direction, Pac-Man will sometimes veer unexpectedly in a different direction, such as off into a tunnel or a ghost.


The precision motions needed for fakes and turns become harder with the iPod’s control scheme, and the lack of other control options doesn’t help matters, either. Pac-Man on the fifth-generation iPod feels worse than it has on cell phones and other devices, which is a real shame.

Review: Namco Pac-Man

Review: Namco Pac-Man

Given the dozens of possible ways you can play a decent game of Pac-Man these days – as part of a compilation cartridge or disc for a real handheld, or as a download for a cell phone or other device – we’d advise you to pass on the iPod version of Pac-Man unless your standards are pretty low (think 1989 or so), or something is done to improve its control schemes. Other iPod games will be a better use of your $5.


Update: Our original review of Pac-Man for the iPod was published on September 25, 2006. On July 30, 2008, iLounge published iPhone Gems: Cards, Gambling + Arcade-Style Games, a feature article looking at seven assorted games developed for the iPhone OS, including an iPhone version of this title. Our new review appears below.

 

Review: Namco Pac-Man

We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: Namco’s one of our all-time favorite game developers, but the games it’s releasing for iPods and iPhones are seriously unimpressive. In 2006, Namco released the early dot-gobbling maze game Pac-Man for Click Wheel iPods, following it up with the early 2007 release of Ms.


Pac-Man, and the 2008 release of Pole Position—all roughly 25-year-old arcade games that hardly seemed worth their $5 asking prices. This month, Namco re-released Pac-Man and Ms. Pac-Man for the iPhone and iPod touch, doubling their prices to $10, and doing little to justify the price increases.

Pac-Man for the iPhone and iPod touch is the same game as previously released for other iPods, except for one difference in visuals, one in audio, and three in controls. Though the original version was virtually identical aesthetically to the dated arcade game, the iPhone’s larger, higher-resolution display let Namco add a few more pixels of detail to the mazes, dots, and characters, none of which you’re likely to actually notice or care about given the simplicity of the graphics. On the audio side, Namco has preserved the same audio from the arcade and iPod versions, but has left out a volume control option, apparently presuming that most users would have iPhones with integrated volume controls. As such, iPod touch users will either have to live with the fixed volume level, or turn off audio entirely.

 

Review: Namco Pac-Man

The bigger differences are in control.


Latest News
The 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Chip 16GB RAM/512GB is $250 Off
The 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Chip 16GB RAM/512GB is $250 Off
1 Min Read
Noise and Static on AirPods Pro 3 Still Unfixed
Noise and Static on AirPods Pro 3 Still Unfixed
1 Min Read
New iMac with 24-inch OLED Display May be Brighter With 600 Nits
New iMac with 24-inch OLED Display May be Brighter With 600 Nits
1 Min Read
The 15-inch M4 MacBook Air 256GB Is $250 Off
The 15-inch M4 MacBook Air 256GB Is $250 Off
1 Min Read
Internal Kernel Debug Kit from Apple Reveals Tests for a MacBook with A15 Chip
Internal Kernel Debug Kit from Apple Reveals Tests for a MacBook with A15 Chip
1 Min Read
Apple Currently In Talks With Suppliers for Chip Assembly & Packaging of iPhones in India
Apple Currently In Talks With Suppliers for Chip Assembly & Packaging of iPhones in India
1 Min Read
Apple Allows Easier Battery Replacement For M5 MacBook Pro with 14-inch Display
Apple Allows Easier Battery Replacement For M5 MacBook Pro with 14-inch Display
1 Min Read
The Apple Watch SE 3 44mm GPS is $50 Off
The Apple Watch SE 3 44mm GPS is $50 Off
1 Min Read
20th Anniversary iPhone May Launch in Two Years
20th Anniversary iPhone May Launch in Two Years
1 Min Read
Better Image Generation Capabilities and Apple Music Integration Coming to ChatGPT
Better Image Generation Capabilities and Apple Music Integration Coming to ChatGPT
1 Min Read
A20 Pro Chip Coming to Next Gen iPad Mini OLED
A20 Pro Chip Coming to Next Gen iPad Mini OLED
1 Min Read
Amazon has the AirTag 4 Pack Marked $29 off
Amazon has the AirTag 4 Pack Marked $29 off
1 Min Read

iLounge logo

iLounge is an independent resource for all things iPod, iPhone, iPad, and beyond. iPod, iPhone, iPad, iTunes, Apple TV, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc.

This website is not affiliated with Apple Inc.
iLounge © 2001 - 2025. All Rights Reserved.
  • Contact Us
  • Submit News
  • About Us
  • Forums
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms Of Use
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?