

Beyond that though there isn’t much else to the game. Complete a week and the course is extended, requiring you to deliver to more houses and face more dangers. That said, this was also the case with Paperboy when you got further in the game so that’s fine but it may not suit players looking for a more twitchy, reactive experience.Įach run counts as a day and with each new day more obstacles are added. The bike is neither fast enough or responsive enough to let you avoid everything, and death can come from directions you can’t look in, so memorising the course becomes a requirement. Cars come along to run you over, people step out in the road, dogs attack you and even the weather can cause problems.
#Fixing a paperboy arcade game full#
Move controllers can be used as handlebars, giving you an alternative way to control the game which is welcome but using them is a little tiring and aiming your papers is barely possible so I ended up sticking with the DualShock 4 which, at best, felt like the lesser of two evils.Īs with Paperboy, the road (and pavement) ahead is full of obstacles. In fact it’s not precise at all but the game is pretty forgiving when it comes to counting deliveries as successful. To deliver a paper you just look at the house and press the trigger button on your joypad. I recommend maxing the sensitivity out even if the game does warn you that this may come at the cost of some motion sickness.Īs you pedal along the street, you’ll pass houses on both sides of the road. The default steering sensitivity is awful (and would have led to some seriously bad reviews if anyone had taken the time to review the game) but you can fix this thanks to the options menu, even if the menu itself isn’t particularly well designed.

You can slow the bike down, using the bike’s very unresponsive brakes, and you steer by leaning your head. You traverse the street on a bike and you don’t get off of it, which means that the newspapers have to be thrown at the houses rather than posted into mailboxes. While the viewpoint on Special Delivery is entirely different, the gameplay is quite similar to the old coin op classic in that you start at one end of a street and have a list of houses that you have to deliver a newspaper to. It turns out I wasn’t the only fan as Meerkat games have taken the previously isometric viewed action and put you in the eyes of the paperboy himself thanks to PSVR. After more hours than it should have taken, I completed a full week on the game and I found the whole challenge pretty rewarding in the end. While I never had much time in the Eighties, I ended up rather liking Paperboy decades later when it was ported to Xbox Live Arcade. Augin PSVR tagged arcade / getting run over a lot / newspapers / paperboy / PSVR / special delivery / vr by Richie
