| Chiller | |
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| Developer(s) | Exidy |
| Publisher(s) | Exidy, American Game Cartridges (NES), |
| Platform(s) | Arcade, Nintendo Entertainment System, |
| Release date(s) | 1986, 1990 (NES port), |
| Genre(s) | Light-gun games |
| Mode(s) | Up to 2 players, alternating turns |
| Input methods | Light gun, 1 button |
| Cabinet | Upright |
| Arcade system | Exidy 440 CPU: |
Not to be confused with the 1985 Mastertronic computer game Chiller, published for Commodore 64, Spectrum, Amstrad CPC and MSX
Chiller is an Exidy light gun arcade game released in 1986. An unlicensed port was released for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1990 by American Game Cartridges, with the option of using either the standard controller or the NES Zapper.
Some consider Chiller to be the most gratuitously violent video game released to that point—it is the only game to have been permanently banned in the UK. The gameplay includes shooting (among other targets) the appendages of living people who are bound and chained in a dungeon setting. The graphics depict flesh being ripped off in chunks.
A player's goal is to shoot everything that there is on the screen, both animated characters (ghosts, zombies, humans) and inanimate elements of the background. There are four unique screens detailing various horror scenarios and settings, a torture chamber, a rack room, a hallway, and a cemetery. For each screen, shooting all available targets gives the player a bonus shooting round. The game features a Ghost counter on-screen scoring system named the "Ectoplasmic Tabulator". It has very similar gameplay to "Crossbow" and other related Exidy 440 board system games.
Artwork was drawn using 4-position joysticks.
Chiller's name was a not-so-veiled reference to Michael Jackson's "Thriller" video which was very popular at the time the game was made. The MSX version featured a music theme inspired by Michael Jackson's "Thriller" music track.
These events were removed or changed from the NES version.
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