Ballblazer
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Ballblazer
Summary
Ballblazer is a video game[1]. Ballblazer has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Ballblazer's instance of is recorded as video game[3].
- Ballblazer was published by Atari[4].
- Ballblazer's genre is action game[5].
- Ballblazer's genre is association football video game[6].
- Ballblazer's developer is recorded as Lucasfilm Games[7].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Atari 5200[8].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Atari 7800[9].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as ZX Spectrum[10].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Nintendo Entertainment System[11].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Commodore 64[12].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Atari ST[13].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as MSX[14].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Amstrad CPC[15].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Apple II[16].
- Ballblazer's platform is recorded as Apple IIGS[17].
- Ballblazer's game mode is recorded as single-player video game[18].
- Ballblazer's game mode is recorded as multiplayer video game[19].
- Ballblazer was distributed by ROM cartridge[20].
- Ballblazer's input device is recorded as gamepad[21].
- Ballblazer's country of origin is recorded as United States[22].
- Ballblazer was released on March 1984[23].
- Ballblazer's sport is recorded as association football[24].
- Ballblazer's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Ballblazer'}[25].
- Ballblazer's superfamicom.org URL is recorded as https://superfamicom.org/famicom/info/ballblazer[26].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Ballblazer was published by Atari[4].
Publication
Ballblazer was released on March 1984[23]. Genres include action game[5] and association football video game[6]. Ballblazer was distributed by ROM cartridge[20].
Why It Matters
Ballblazer has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]