Played it almost everyday on my break at work. Level 31 was my favorite and I could go thru all 99 levels over and over. I will never forget the first time I won a free credit getting a diamond on level 8.
I was stationed at Mountain Home AFB back in 1995-96. This arcade game was in the third floor break room of our dorm and was free play. Spent countless hours playing this and never knew you could use the "fruit/desert" to phase through a dropping apple (3:51).
I never saw that game in an arcade, because I'd lived in a small town. We did have a Mr. Do! cabinet though. The 1st and only time I've played Mr Do's Castle was on my C64. It appears to be a pretty good conversion.
Ah, thank goodness for M.A.M.E. Mr. Do's Castle was fun. I had the version without the cherry blocks in my neighborhood, so you had to kill the unicorns in order to get to the next stage. That Blue Unicorn became a problem MANY a times, especially when it started multiplying.
@@shawbros And VERY FAST too! If you were playing the version without the cherry blocks, you would be dead in about a minute due to the blue unicorns multiplying. If you were playing the cherry block version, you would need to be very smart AND lucky to knock out all the cherry blocks!
One thing I remember about playing the arcade version of Mr. Do's Wild Ride is that you could get two free games if you turned the machine off and on and then rotated the joystick three times counter clockwise.
Well made trip down memory lane my friend. Mr Do was my very first arcade game i ever played in1982 aged 9, still one of the most frustrating difficult games lol , still playing it today.
I was absolutely addicted to this game in the past. Spent literally HOURS on it. One of my all time favourites. I have played all the Mr Do games. Mr Do, Mr Do Wild Ride and Mr Do's Castle.
The dirt path in each level was carved out to form the number of the level as well. Level 2's starting dirt path was shaped like a "2", level 3's level was shaped like a "3", etc.
Mr. Do is one of the few games I kick butt on. And that's because it's my favorite and couldn't keep from playing it repeatedly. It's still my favorite video game. It's fast and furious fun. Provided the freakin' joystick works! Also one of the few games you can not only win free lives throughout, but free games with the diamond!
Mr. Do is a classic, and was well known at the time, but despite having multiple games, and unlike so many of the similar early classics, the game and character haven't had much of a legacy. He feels very stuck in the early 1980s. I can only assume that's because the property was dormant after Universal stopped producing arcade games.
I'm surprised His legacy has a carried on as well considering how populaR the game was. There were numerous conversions as well as three full-blown sequels.
This was one of my all time favorite games. I started playing it on the amazing ColecoAdam version when I was a kid. I held the record for highest level at my day care center while growing up.
When the engineer came to our local arcade and fixed th broken universal Mr Do! machine, he changed the colours. Instead of the off red Mr Do and apples, they were proper red. Looked MUCH better. Nobody else I ever spoke to has seen this and most think I dreamed it. I didn't. Mr Do! with those washed out colours is *wrong*
Oh and PS: I love your videos, thank you! Reminded me how much I love the classic games and that I have a nice MAME system set up and that playing it makes me smile every time :-) Thank you
Played it a few times on arcade back in the days when I was a small kid...later on was a great fan of the C64 version and of course many years later began playing it on mame. Great game still highly playable
I love how the "Neo Mr. Do!" had cute little cutscenes besides the gameplay! ^^ I think the cutscenes gave Mr. Do alot more character and personality than the other games of just collecting cherries and defeating the enemies getting to the next level. :) I wish they continued it after that one though. :(
A great classic game, I used to play a pretty decent port on the C64, these days I fire it up on an emu on occasion. Really appreciate your coverage of classic arcade games and retro gaming.
Great video! A small tidbit I can share... Universal still exists, and makes other types of machines, like Pachinko slots, and seems to operate some of their own parlors. I've found some of the tokens from these, and they have Mr. Do on them!
At one point, the official high score was about 250,000. My highest score was around 950,000, but I had no way to record it in order to submit it. Can't get above 400,000 anymore, and the official high score last I checked was about 2,000,000, I think. So much for my Glory days!
anybody else notice how the original tunnel layout at the beginning of each level is in the shape of the far right number of the level number (2 or 2, 12, 22 etc)
I was a huge fan of the first three games back in the day, I didn't even hear about Do Run Run until many years later. On the off chance anyone from Long Island sees this, I remember heading to the arcade in the huge Nathan's restaurant especially, playing both Mr. Do's Castle and Mr. Do's Wild Ride there among so many others. I had the official ports of the first two games on my C64 and loved them, and the unofficial port of Mr. Do's Wild Ride (it was a clone game, called something else, but was identical) was pretty good, too. Also used to head over to my friend's place to play it on his ColecoVision back in the day!
So was I, but I always preferred the original. I will have to check for the clone of Mr. dO's wild ride because I'm curious what that looks like. Thanks
I first played Mr Do! at the Nathan's that used to be in Levittown. I almost passed out when I got the diamond. Earning a free game credit back then (and now) was almost unheard of.
@@DMETS519 The one I'm talking about is/was in Westbury. That place was so awesome when it first opened and used to have the b&w movies and shows playing in the main restaurant, served like a million different types of foods, and of course had the best arcade around for miles in the back! It was always such a treat to go there. I don't live in NY anymore (ironically I'm back just for this week) but the last time I tried going there it was a shell of its former self. What can ya do, time marches on I guess.
Is it just me or is this similar to Pengo? Some sound snippets are the same, the parade of sprites between levels and a classical music interlude (Ode to Joy).
Amazing video, Pat! Mr. Do was never on my radar while I was a kid but nowadays these simple, single-screen arcade games appeal to me more and more as the years go by. I'll have to keep my eyes open for a SNES or X68000 copy. Too bad the MSX came out looking so poor. My MSX2+ sure could use another game to play on it.
It wasn't nearly as prolific as the MSX but did receive good coverage from both Konami and Compile. If you have a copy of Metal Gear Solid 3: Subsistence on PS2 or the Metal Gear Solid HD Collection on PS3 you can play the original MSX2 Metal Gear 2 as a bonus to get a sense of it's graphics and sound capabilities. I personally use a flash cart on my machine since game prices are so unfair these days. There's a FM synth chip in the MSX2 that gives a lot of its games a nice, warm tone. Incidentally that same FM chip was used in the Japanese Sega Master System.
I only discovered Mr Do a week ago. I have a local arcade that has moved to a free play option, £6.00 and hour or £9.00 for 2-hours. I used to play Bolder Dash on the Nes as a kid so figured it would be fun for a few minutes. I was completely unprepared for the level of depth this game had and the various strategies you can employ. The fact that the gave gives you a choice to advance to the next screen by defeating all the monsters or grabbing all the cherries adds a level of flexibility in play as you can shift from one strategy to the next partway though a level. For friendly competition each arcade game has a white board screen attached listing the top 3-players and their scores. I was able to grab 3rd place today with a respectable score of 53,750 although by the end of the day it had already been bumped off and next week I play to take it back.
The C64 port was pretty good, except the programmer forgot to implement the crucial aspect that when Mr. Do! is digging, he slows down. Made getting scores of over a million very easy. I've never scored more than 350K on the original arcade version!
I NEVER have seen the games that came after Mr. Do's Castle, much less ever even heard of them. Fascinating! Mr. Do is one of my Top 3 arcade games of all time.
worked with my sisters ex on a summer camp and found one of the old cocktail cabinet variants of Mr. Do! Due to lack of care in the whole place it was one of the only machines in any working condition. we got it running after a bit and used to play it on our lunch breaks. Almost had a chance to buy it, but the guy who owned the camp wanted to keep it for the kids, used it as an arts n crafts table unshielded (table was missing the glass tabletop) and one of the kids ruined it by dumping a quart of paint all over it. then the guy insisted we pay him twice our original agreed price. Been itching to play it again ever since.
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries I was more in the 90's arcade scene, but started arcade machine collecting and found a lot of gems I never knew about and started to love them. Right now I am restoring a Lock n chase taito cabinet.
I played this game today at an arcade near Manchester, England. Pure nostalgia. My brother and i spent many an hour playing this game back in the day. Still great. The arcade is 4 floors of gaming machines. I also played star wars. The old sit in booth type. great
You forgot to mention that Universal was also working on a prototype laserdisc game starring Mr. Do, tentatively named "Adventure Mr. Do". it was planned for release on March 1985 for the Universal System-1 cabinet as a replacement kit for "Super Don Quixote". For further references: www.dragons-lair-project.com/games/pages/sdq.asp www.dragons-lair-project.com/games/materials/flyers/large/sdq_p.jpg
I remember on some of the later levels you could go above an apple and wait for it to fall because the monsters were so aggressive with their digging. Although you'd probably need to combine this with another strategy to complete the level without losing a life.
I remember getting this on my birthday and was surprised this was too see it again. Haha. I miss the game. I got it an grew up with the SNES. I was surprised to see other Mr. Do games. That's awesome. And I figured me and my family were the only ones who knew about the game. Love the video.
As a trivia note, this arcade game cabinet is as always on display in SAVED BY THE BELL, it could be constantly seen in The Max diner they hung out in. I think it was also on The College Years too
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries off the top of my head I think that in saved by the bell universe that the arcade games RAD ACTION, TWO TIGERS, TIME PILOT, ZAXXON, and MR DO were shown in the Max or student Union.
With Mr.Do! (I had it on Atari XL) I particularly like the many interactions and chain reactions of many small objects on a single screen. Things move here less jerky than in Boulder Dash and no scrolling spoils overview. The IMO only other game with such a tight single screen interaction density was "Millipede" (which I had on VCS2600).
Also there is an incentive to go after the cherries and octaves. You get more points and every 10,000 points if you turn 10,000 points at the exact time the letter man is one of the lettermen you do need, the letter man comes out for you to shoot him and spell extra. So the more you rack up the cherries the more chances you have to let out the letter man.
@@kekeke8988 You did. Look, just try the two I mentioned in Mame and make up your own mind. "Do's Castle" takes practice to get used to its mechanics (make you read the gameplay description in the Mame history dat), but it's worth it.
There's a pattern you can follow in Do! Run Run that will get you a diamond on screen one every time if you time it properly (and only right after first booting). I've done it hundreds of times. It's not easy to do, but the diamond will appear every time if done correctly.
Never played this game though i have seen the Neo geo version. This looks like a fun game. The power ball is a cool weapon if you ask me hahah. Great video Patman! Keep it up friend.
I Love this game! Played it a ton on ColecoVision, but the SNES version ruled! The SNES version has predictable enemy movements, though...They are more random in MAME and Even More Random in the actual arcade cabinet.
I still love Do! Run Run to this day! Do! Run Run was more of an conversion for Mr. Do!'s Castle. There was only ONE dedicated arcade cabinet, but no one knows where it is or who has it.
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries There were 2 versions with different music; the earlier(?) resembled that of Colecovision. Did you know why there were cherries and fruit bonuses? AFAIK the company previously made slotmachines, those by law originally had to be disguised as chewing gum vending machines with "additional" game, and the flavour symbols of available chewing gums became the fruit symbols on the reels, those finally ended in Mr.Do!
Do you have any information on Mr do Castle mobile version for Sprint Cells? It was similar to the arcade version, but had at least 3 power ups . A freezing power up turning to ice the unicorns and you can break them with the hammer, another tunring the enemies to strone one and a third one of the Mjorlnir power up knocking out all unicorns in the floor you are standing. I'm still looking up for that version of the game.
I grew up in the pool hall my dad owned for 25 years. He always had 2 or 3 arcade games going. In 1985 he got a Mr. Do machine. My brother and I figured out that if you unplug it and then plug it back in, you got a free credit. Needless to say we spent hours playing Mr. Do for free. Too bad Galaga didn’t do the same trick!
That is very cool, your dad didn't give you free credits? I found a similar exploit in Mario brothers where if you lifted up on the coin release mechanism you could insert a nickel and it would give you a credit. So for a dollar I got to play 20 games LOL this is why I'm so good at the game nowadays
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries My brother and I went there to work, but after our chores were done, the old man would give us a handful of quarters to play. We would pocket the cash and take advantage of the hack and play for free. My dad didn’t know about it! The cash was used for comic books and candy later. It was quite an operation we had going!
Out of the Mr. Do sequels, Do! Run Run is my personal favorite. Plays somewhat like an improved version of the original Mr. Do, but with some inspiration taken from Pac-Man and Qix. The graphics are nice and colorful, the gameplay is engaging, and the music is surprisingly good for a 1984 arcade game - it sounds like something from an early 90s Game Boy title
I remember this game, played it a lot when it debuted in an arcade in the city near where I lived, and then showed up at the grocery store shortly after that, it was fun stuff, and, I'd certainly be continuing to play it off and on if I had access to it. =^.^=
Best arcade game, ever. Absolutely legendary. NEVER gets enough credit. So much retro lurve for this game!
I agree 100% :-)
Played it almost everyday on my break at work. Level 31 was my favorite and I could go thru all 99 levels over and over. I will never forget the first time I won a free credit getting a diamond on level 8.
How do you get through that many? The guys are so fast after 18 it's ridiculous
I was stationed at Mountain Home AFB back in 1995-96. This arcade game was in the third floor break room of our dorm and was free play. Spent countless hours playing this and never knew you could use the "fruit/desert" to phase through a dropping apple (3:51).
Excellent
just the sounds of the game send me back to the arcade in the 80's... such grand times :)
Absolutely, it's such a lively little arcade game :-)
I remember playing Mr Do's Castle. It was in the "amusement room" at a hotel on the south side of town that sadly no longer exists.
Back when arcade games were pretty much everywhere :-)
I never saw that game in an arcade, because I'd lived in a small town. We did have a Mr. Do! cabinet though.
The 1st and only time I've played Mr Do's Castle was on my C64. It appears to be a pretty good conversion.
Ah, thank goodness for M.A.M.E.
Mr. Do's Castle was fun. I had the version without the cherry blocks in my neighborhood, so you had to kill the unicorns in order to get to the next stage.
That Blue Unicorn became a problem MANY a times, especially when it started multiplying.
@@GRIMLOCK07
That thing was scary.
@@shawbros And VERY FAST too! If you were playing the version without the cherry blocks, you would be dead in about a minute due to the blue unicorns multiplying. If you were playing the cherry block version, you would need to be very smart AND lucky to knock out all the cherry blocks!
This was always one of my favorite games. Arcade and Colecovision. I have an arcade version in my basement to keep the memories going
Excellent, I would love to have an original cab
One thing I remember about playing the arcade version of Mr. Do's Wild Ride is that you could get two free games if you turned the machine off and on and then rotated the joystick three times counter clockwise.
That's awesome, I had never heard that
Well made trip down memory lane my friend. Mr Do was my very first arcade game i ever played in1982 aged 9, still one of the most frustrating difficult games lol , still playing it today.
Thank you very much :-)
Brilliant. Who would've thought 1982 factored into so many diverse and iconic games. Played Mr. Do on Colecovision and was by far the most popular.
It was a great conversion on that system I had it as a kid as well
I love those sounds when you pick up the cherries when the pitch goes up and up and up.
It's very satisfying listening to it.
It is, if you don't get all eight then the musical chain is broken
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries And AFAIK you only get a bonus when you pick all 8 cherries without a pause.
The ‘Do Re Me’ notes❤
I was absolutely addicted to this game in the past. Spent literally HOURS on it. One of my all time favourites. I have played all the Mr Do games. Mr Do, Mr Do Wild Ride and Mr Do's Castle.
While I like the follow-up games the original is still the best in my opinion
Do! Run Run?
The dirt path in each level was carved out to form the number of the level as well. Level 2's starting dirt path was shaped like a "2", level 3's level was shaped like a "3", etc.
Mr. Do is one of the few games I kick butt on. And that's because it's my favorite and couldn't keep from playing it repeatedly. It's still my favorite video game. It's fast and furious fun. Provided the freakin' joystick works! Also one of the few games you can not only win free lives throughout, but free games with the diamond!
A lot of people say it's just a Shameless dig Dug clone but it's a lot more than that.
For all the hours I've spent playing this game, have never pulled off the death-defying trick at 3:50. That was bloody good!
LOL, thanks
suicides were the best, when playing 2 player, it always got their attention thinking you'd died
Yeah, I was impressed by that lol
Same here! Gotta be accidental.
A GREAT mini-doc of one of my absolute favourite games. I thought I knew this game, Pat, but I certainly learned a couple of new things... :-)
That's great, glad you enjoyed the documentary
Mr. Do is a classic, and was well known at the time, but despite having multiple games, and unlike so many of the similar early classics, the game and character haven't had much of a legacy. He feels very stuck in the early 1980s. I can only assume that's because the property was dormant after Universal stopped producing arcade games.
I'm surprised His legacy has a carried on as well considering how populaR the game was. There were numerous conversions as well as three full-blown sequels.
Best arcade gamer ever, i put all of my childhood quarters into this game at our local arcade. I love this channel btw x
Thank you very much, glad you enjoy the content
This was one of my all time favorite games. I started playing it on the amazing ColecoAdam version when I was a kid. I held the record for highest level at my day care center while growing up.
LOL, that's great
Love Mr. Do! It's way more than a Dig Dug knock off. Going to play this on my Atari XEGS and Super Nintendo for sure :-)
Those are both excellent versions
Exactly! Mr. Do! has a lot more gameplay depth, and that’s what keeps me going back to it.
Another well researched and entertaining documentary.
Thank you very much :-)
When the engineer came to our local arcade and fixed th broken universal Mr Do! machine, he changed the colours. Instead of the off red Mr Do and apples, they were proper red. Looked MUCH better. Nobody else I ever spoke to has seen this and most think I dreamed it. I didn't. Mr Do! with those washed out colours is *wrong*
This was a well put together informational video!!!
Thank you very much
Oh and PS: I love your videos, thank you! Reminded me how much I love the classic games and that I have a nice MAME system set up and that playing it makes me smile every time :-) Thank you
Glad you like them! Absolutely, thank you
Played it a few times on arcade back in the days when I was a small kid...later on was a great fan of the C64 version and of course many years later began playing it on mame. Great game still highly playable
A lot of people just knock it as a Dig Dug Clone but it has a lot more depth than that
I love how the "Neo Mr. Do!" had cute little cutscenes besides the gameplay! ^^ I think the cutscenes gave Mr. Do alot more character and personality than the other games of just collecting cherries and defeating the enemies getting to the next level. :) I wish they continued it after that one though. :(
Excellent documentary Sir. Subbed!
Thanks and welcome
A great classic game, I used to play a pretty decent port on the C64, these days I fire it up on an emu on occasion. Really appreciate your coverage of classic arcade games and retro gaming.
Thanks for watching my channel. The Commodore version is really well done.
Another great video. Love playing this one.
Thank you glad you enjoyed it
Great video! A small tidbit I can share... Universal still exists, and makes other types of machines, like Pachinko slots, and seems to operate some of their own parlors. I've found some of the tokens from these, and they have Mr. Do on them!
Thanks for the info! Sounds like a very cool find indeed
Mr. Do’s Castles song is my favorite!
Another one of my old faves! All the sequels were really different from the last... I loved Do Run Run the most.
At one point, the official high score was about 250,000. My highest score was around 950,000, but I had no way to record it in order to submit it. Can't get above 400,000 anymore, and the official high score last I checked was about 2,000,000, I think. So much for my Glory days!
Excellent video - I did not know about this series. Mr. Do is quickly becoming one of my favorite arcade games.
Thank you very much, I have always enjoyed it
I used to play this game in the arcade and on Coleco as well
So did I it was one of my favorite
Definitely a big fan of this game, I loved the gameplay. Thank you for posting this.
Glad you enjoyed it!
anybody else notice how the original tunnel layout at the beginning of each level is in the shape of the far right number of the level number (2 or 2, 12, 22 etc)
True.
Yes in the first level spells out do backwards instead of having a one. I should have mentioned this
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries - interesting...i just thought it was a 1 with extra tunnel since a 1 is pretty basic
I was a huge fan of the first three games back in the day, I didn't even hear about Do Run Run until many years later. On the off chance anyone from Long Island sees this, I remember heading to the arcade in the huge Nathan's restaurant especially, playing both Mr. Do's Castle and Mr. Do's Wild Ride there among so many others.
I had the official ports of the first two games on my C64 and loved them, and the unofficial port of Mr. Do's Wild Ride (it was a clone game, called something else, but was identical) was pretty good, too. Also used to head over to my friend's place to play it on his ColecoVision back in the day!
So was I, but I always preferred the original. I will have to check for the clone of Mr. dO's wild ride because I'm curious what that looks like. Thanks
I first played Mr Do! at the Nathan's that used to be in Levittown. I almost passed out when I got the diamond. Earning a free game credit back then (and now) was almost unheard of.
@@DMETS519 The one I'm talking about is/was in Westbury. That place was so awesome when it first opened and used to have the b&w movies and shows playing in the main restaurant, served like a million different types of foods, and of course had the best arcade around for miles in the back! It was always such a treat to go there. I don't live in NY anymore (ironically I'm back just for this week) but the last time I tried going there it was a shell of its former self. What can ya do, time marches on I guess.
Is it just me or is this similar to Pengo? Some sound snippets are the same, the parade of sprites between levels and a classical music interlude (Ode to Joy).
I never thought about it but it is a bit similar
Amazing video, Pat! Mr. Do was never on my radar while I was a kid but nowadays these simple, single-screen arcade games appeal to me more and more as the years go by. I'll have to keep my eyes open for a SNES or X68000 copy. Too bad the MSX came out looking so poor. My MSX2+ sure could use another game to play on it.
Thanks, never had a chance to play with the MSX2 . How was the Lineup of software?
It wasn't nearly as prolific as the MSX but did receive good coverage from both Konami and Compile. If you have a copy of Metal Gear Solid 3: Subsistence on PS2 or the Metal Gear Solid HD Collection on PS3 you can play the original MSX2 Metal Gear 2 as a bonus to get a sense of it's graphics and sound capabilities. I personally use a flash cart on my machine since game prices are so unfair these days.
There's a FM synth chip in the MSX2 that gives a lot of its games a nice, warm tone. Incidentally that same FM chip was used in the Japanese Sega Master System.
I only discovered Mr Do a week ago. I have a local arcade that has moved to a free play option, £6.00 and hour or £9.00 for 2-hours. I used to play Bolder Dash on the Nes as a kid so figured it would be fun for a few minutes. I was completely unprepared for the level of depth this game had and the various strategies you can employ. The fact that the gave gives you a choice to advance to the next screen by defeating all the monsters or grabbing all the cherries adds a level of flexibility in play as you can shift from one strategy to the next partway though a level.
For friendly competition each arcade game has a white board screen attached listing the top 3-players and their scores. I was able to grab 3rd place today with a respectable score of 53,750 although by the end of the day it had already been bumped off and next week I play to take it back.
The C64 port was pretty good, except the programmer forgot to implement the crucial aspect that when Mr. Do! is digging, he slows down. Made getting scores of over a million very easy. I've never scored more than 350K on the original arcade version!
I always thought Mr. Do! was one of the cutest games ever. Like Bubble Bobble, it was popular with female players as well.
Absolutely, same goes for Ms. Pac-Man
I grew up playing this game...wow. Thanx for the history trip down memory lane.
Glad you enjoyed it
This is an excellent documentary. Very enjoyable.
Many thanks!
I NEVER have seen the games that came after Mr. Do's Castle, much less ever even heard of them. Fascinating!
Mr. Do is one of my Top 3 arcade games of all time.
It's definitely in my top 10 Of all time. I never cared for any of the sequels as much as I did the original
My all time favorite arcade game. Even got to play one over the summer
Nice,I would love to own an original cab
9:47 Make sure that you DO sounds as like a real Pun here. lol
worked with my sisters ex on a summer camp and found one of the old cocktail cabinet variants of Mr. Do! Due to lack of care in the whole place it was one of the only machines in any working condition. we got it running after a bit and used to play it on our lunch breaks. Almost had a chance to buy it, but the guy who owned the camp wanted to keep it for the kids, used it as an arts n crafts table unshielded (table was missing the glass tabletop) and one of the kids ruined it by dumping a quart of paint all over it. then the guy insisted we pay him twice our original agreed price. Been itching to play it again ever since.
Man you seem to review most of my favorites. I love mr do, I have been looking for a universal cabinet to put my board in.
If you grew up in the Golden age of arcades you have the same love for these games as I do
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries I was more in the 90's arcade scene, but started arcade machine collecting and found a lot of gems I never knew about and started to love them. Right now I am restoring a Lock n chase taito cabinet.
Do Run Run is an under rated classic......so is Wild Ride
I played this game today at an arcade near Manchester, England. Pure nostalgia. My brother and i spent many an hour playing this game back in the day. Still great. The arcade is 4 floors of gaming machines. I also played star wars. The old sit in booth type. great
This game has it all from the gameplay to the graphics to the music
Mr. Do. was one of my all time video games. Along with Donkey Kong ,popeye and Galaga.
Great taste
Very cool. Did not know about the glitch that gives you 255 lives!
You forgot to mention that Universal was also working on a prototype laserdisc game starring Mr. Do, tentatively named "Adventure Mr. Do". it was planned for release on March 1985 for the Universal System-1 cabinet as a replacement kit for "Super Don Quixote". For further references: www.dragons-lair-project.com/games/pages/sdq.asp www.dragons-lair-project.com/games/materials/flyers/large/sdq_p.jpg
Perhaps Apple executives at the time were worried at the sight of broken apples and changed them to tomatoes.
LOL
Really well done sir!!!!!!!
Thank you very much, glad you enjoyed my video please subscribe if you haven't already
I remember on some of the later levels you could go above an apple and wait for it to fall because the monsters were so aggressive with their digging. Although you'd probably need to combine this with another strategy to complete the level without losing a life.
I remember getting this on my birthday and was surprised this was too see it again. Haha. I miss the game. I got it an grew up with the SNES. I was surprised to see other Mr. Do games. That's awesome. And I figured me and my family were the only ones who knew about the game. Love the video.
Thank you very much. Also, thanks for sharing your memories
Superb. Thank you very much. I love your channel
As a trivia note, this arcade game cabinet is as always on display in SAVED BY THE BELL, it could be constantly seen in The Max diner they hung out in. I think it was also on The College Years too
Very cool thanks for the info
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries off the top of my head I think that in saved by the bell universe that the arcade games RAD ACTION, TWO TIGERS, TIME PILOT, ZAXXON, and MR DO were shown in the Max or student Union.
With Mr.Do! (I had it on Atari XL) I particularly like the many interactions and chain reactions of many small objects on a single screen. Things move here less jerky than in Boulder Dash and no scrolling spoils overview. The IMO only other game with such a tight single screen interaction density was "Millipede" (which I had on VCS2600).
I had and loved the Colecovision version. Good game, but so hard to make precise turns with the stubby controller
Also there is an incentive to go after the cherries and octaves. You get more points and every 10,000 points if you turn 10,000 points at the exact time the letter man is one of the lettermen you do need, the letter man comes out for you to shoot him and spell extra. So the more you rack up the cherries the more chances you have to let out the letter man.
We also had a near perfect 8 bit version in the UK on the BBC Microcomputer that was called "Mr. E" to avoid copyright issues.
Excellent, thanks
TAITO! I have a full size BUGGY CHALLENGE from 1984! Super rare! That was the first off road game!!
The original Mr. Do was one of my favorite arcade games of that era. Never was a fan of any of the sequels.
I always preferred the original too
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries I would argue that "Castle" and "Run Run" are both great games, but "Wild Ride" did nothing for me.
I had no idea the sequels even existed. I don't think I missed out on too much.
Kekeke89 you didn’t.
@@kekeke8988 You did. Look, just try the two I mentioned in Mame and make up your own mind. "Do's Castle" takes practice to get used to its mechanics (make you read the gameplay description in the Mame history dat), but it's worth it.
trying to pop a diamond and getting it was so satisfying
Absolutely
There's a pattern you can follow in Do! Run Run that will get you a diamond on screen one every time if you time it properly (and only right after first booting). I've done it hundreds of times. It's not easy to do, but the diamond will appear every time if done correctly.
greatest game ever i purchased the arcade machine many years ago it gets more play time than my xbox 1 ps5 and switch combined . great video
It is truly a classic
Never played this game though i have seen the Neo geo version. This looks like a fun game. The power ball is a cool weapon if you ask me hahah. Great video Patman! Keep it up friend.
Thanks FredD, I always enjoyed this game even as a youngster
Hard but fun and addicting game
I Love this game! Played it a ton on ColecoVision, but the SNES version ruled! The SNES version has predictable enemy movements, though...They are more random in MAME and Even More Random in the actual arcade cabinet.
The Coleco was my favorite growing up when I didn't have actual quarters to spend :-)
I like how you use the word “board” to describe the various levels. That’s such an 80’s word!
Absolutely, I was there in the golden age of arcades and that's what we called them :-)
I used to love playing this game. It's hard to find anywhere.
I still love Do! Run Run to this day! Do! Run Run was more of an conversion for Mr. Do!'s Castle. There was only ONE dedicated arcade cabinet, but no one knows where it is or who has it.
I LOVED MR. DO!!! AND THE MUSIC WAS CLASSIC!!! (my coleco vision youth)
So did I, the music was very catchy
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries There were 2 versions with different music; the earlier(?) resembled that of Colecovision. Did you know why there were cherries and fruit bonuses? AFAIK the company previously made slotmachines, those by law originally had to be disguised as chewing gum vending machines with "additional" game, and the flavour symbols of available chewing gums became the fruit symbols on the reels, those finally ended in Mr.Do!
Do you have any information on Mr do Castle mobile version for Sprint Cells? It was similar to the arcade version, but had at least 3 power ups . A freezing power up turning to ice the unicorns and you can break them with the hammer, another tunring the enemies to strone one and a third one of the Mjorlnir power up knocking out all unicorns in the floor you are standing.
I'm still looking up for that version of the game.
There's an old school arcade not too far from where I live. They have Ladybug, Dig-Dug, Mr. Doo, Mr. Doo's Castle, and a few other classics.
Awesome, sounds like my kind of place
Good job! Enjoyed that.
Thank you very much
No, no, no! You got it wrong. When the apple drops on Mr. Do!, he becomes Mr. Don't. :)
Love Mr. Do! I ended up getting a copy for the SNES.
LOL, good call
I love your video and this game.
Thank you my friend
I grew up in the pool hall my dad owned for 25 years. He always had 2 or 3 arcade games going. In 1985 he got a Mr. Do machine. My brother and I figured out that if you unplug it and then plug it back in, you got a free credit.
Needless to say we spent hours playing Mr. Do for free. Too bad Galaga didn’t do the same trick!
That is very cool, your dad didn't give you free credits? I found a similar exploit in Mario brothers where if you lifted up on the coin release mechanism you could insert a nickel and it would give you a credit. So for a dollar I got to play 20 games LOL this is why I'm so good at the game nowadays
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries My brother and I went there to work, but after our chores were done, the old man would give us a handful of quarters to play. We would pocket the cash and take advantage of the hack and play for free. My dad didn’t know about it!
The cash was used for comic books and candy later. It was quite an operation we had going!
I watch these vids for your take on the c64 port exclusively
Thank you very much
Loved playing this on the game boy back in the day!
It was really good on theirDespite the color loss
My brother and I are big Do fans. However, I always thought there should have been a game about his evil twin "Mr. Don't"
LOL, I agree
Still my all time favorite game. When the retro bug bites, this is the only game that soothes it.
Absolutely :-)
Loved Mr. Do! Wish that I could find a retro pack for the original PlayStation with the first two games along with Pengo.
That's another my favorite arcade games, I agree
I always thought MrDo was digging in cake. And I loved how each level was a giant number, except level 1, not sure what it’s supposed to be. ._D
I think it was dO spelled backwards
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries that's od(d). 🤣 I'll see myself out.
Loved this game at the Arcades!!!
So did I it was one of my favorites
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries I am 39 now how old are you? Sorry for asking lol
"Mr Do's Castle" looks a lot like "Space Panic" and "Lode Runner".
rw:i bet you already know that everytime that Mr.Do collects the cherries it make the music "Doe ,Ray,Me,Fa,So,LaTea,Doe" in it.
Yes but didn't know how to included in the video, thanks so
The Nintendo version is spot on, the closest to the original
This was me, and my dads', favorite Colecovision game that we had. In between playing Donkey Kong, and Mouse Trap, I was probably playing this one.
Out of the Mr. Do sequels, Do! Run Run is my personal favorite. Plays somewhat like an improved version of the original Mr. Do, but with some inspiration taken from Pac-Man and Qix. The graphics are nice and colorful, the gameplay is engaging, and the music is surprisingly good for a 1984 arcade game - it sounds like something from an early 90s Game Boy title
I always preferred the original but haven't spent anywhere near as much time with the follow-up.
Great video! Either the game. I love Mr. Do! Also Mr. Do's Castle.
Thank you, it's one of my favorites
There was a game called "Adventure Mr Do" that was develouped but never released
i like the Mr Do Castle Music
There is even a VCS2600 version of Mr.Do's Castle featuring the full music and pretty good (although visually blocky) gameplay.
I remember this game, played it a lot when it debuted in an arcade in the city near where I lived, and then showed up at the grocery store shortly after that, it was fun stuff, and, I'd certainly be continuing to play it off and on if I had access to it. =^.^=
Great documentary!
Glad you enjoyed it!Thank you
The Blue Chomper from Mr. Do! makes a yellow Chomper main enemy cameo in the arcade game "Eggs"!
I didn't know that, thanks for the info
@@PatmanQC-Arcade-Documentaries
Here's a gameplay video of mine of Eggs arcade:
ua-cam.com/video/ZpE8MYWuu68/v-deo.html
Great coverage of Mr. Do and its sequels too. It's true, Mr. Do was the best of the series, though part 2 Castle was fun too IMO.
Thank you, the second one is good but the first one just can't be beat
Fun fact... The level # is "written" in a path in the grass...