Tapper - Dad Ass - MCIHAD
At what point does social drinking cross the line into full-blown alcoholism? Is it when your watering hole of choice requires four bars lined up like bowling lanes just to meet your unslakable thirst? Is it when they determine the only way to get you to leave is to pitch a pint with such force that it knocks you out the door without giving a second thought to losing the glass? Or is it, perhaps, when the harried bartender feels such immense pressure to keep you satiated while catching your carelessly discarded vessels that, even after a "good" day, he feels the need to drink to the point of causing property damage to his own establishment? Keith was kindly asked to leave the room while the team's two recidivist booze hounds called in Johan in as one of their own to do proper research for the answers.
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Tapper, also known as Root Beer Tapper, is a 1983 arcade game released by Bally Midway. Tapper puts the player in the shoes of a bartender. The player must serve eager, thirsty patrons before their patience expires[1] while collecting empty mugs and tips. The game was produced in association with Budweiser.[2]
Several variants of the game were released, with similar gameplay but different graphics and music. The first was with Budweiser branding, followed in 1984 by Root Beer Tapper, which was developed specifically for arcades because the original version was construed as advertising alcohol to minors (since many of the games appeared in video game arcades). Developer Marvin Glass and Associates filed a patent in 1984 covering the game and variants, granted in 1987.[3][4]
Tapper was ported to the Apple 2, Atari 8-bit family, Atari 5200, Atari 2600, BBC Micro, ColecoVision, Commodore 64, MSX, ZX Spectrum, IBM PC, and Amstrad CPC. Most of the home versions of Tapper featured the Mountain Dew logo, while the ZX Spectrum and Amstrad CPC Versions with the Pepsi logo, But they retained the bartender character of the original arcade game instead of the soda jerk in Root Beer Tapper.
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