Scram by Chris Crawford

evo_92 pts0 comments

SCRAM : Chris Crawford : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

Skip to main content

Ask the publishers to restore access to 500,000+ books.

Donate icon<br>An illustration of a heart shape

"Donate to the archive"

User icon<br>An illustration of a person's head and chest.

Sign up<br>Log in

Upload icon<br>An illustration of a horizontal line over an up<br>pointing arrow.

Upload

Search icon<br>An illustration of a magnifying glass.

Internet Archive Audio

Live Music<br>Archive

Librivox<br>Free Audio

Featured

All Audio

Grateful Dead

Netlabels

Old Time Radio

78 RPMs<br>and Cylinder Recordings

Top

Audio Books<br>& Poetry

Computers,<br>Technology and Science

Music, Arts<br>& Culture

News &<br>Public Affairs

Spirituality<br>& Religion

Podcasts

Radio News<br>Archive

Images

Metropolitan Museum

Cleveland<br>Museum of Art

Featured

All Images

Flickr Commons

Occupy Wall<br>Street Flickr

Cover Art

USGS Maps

Top

NASA Images

Solar System<br>Collection

Ames Research<br>Center

Software

Internet<br>Arcade

Console Living Room

Featured

All Software

Old School<br>Emulation

MS-DOS Games

Historical<br>Software

Classic PC<br>Games

Software<br>Library

Top

Kodi<br>Archive and Support File

Vintage<br>Software

APK

MS-DOS

CD-ROM<br>Software

CD-ROM<br>Software Library

Software Sites

Tucows<br>Software Library

Shareware<br>CD-ROMs

Software<br>Capsules Compilation

CD-ROM Images

ZX Spectrum

DOOM Level CD

Texts

Open Library

American<br>Libraries

Featured

All Texts

Smithsonian<br>Libraries

FEDLINK (US)

Genealogy

Lincoln<br>Collection

Top

American<br>Libraries

Canadian<br>Libraries

Universal<br>Library

Project<br>Gutenberg

Children's<br>Library

Biodiversity<br>Heritage Library

Books by<br>Language

Folkscanomy

Government Documents

Video

TV News

Understanding<br>9/11

Featured

All Video

Prelinger<br>Archives

Democracy Now!

Occupy Wall<br>Street

TV NSA Clip<br>Library

Top

Animation<br>& Cartoons

Arts & Music

Computers<br>& Technology

Cultural<br>& Academic Films

Ephemeral Films

Movies

News &<br>Public Affairs

Spirituality<br>& Religion

Sports Videos

Television

Videogame<br>Videos

Vlogs

Youth Media

Search the history of more than 1 trillion<br>web pages.

Search the Wayback Machine

Search icon<br>An illustration of a magnifying<br>glass.

Mobile Apps

Wayback Machine (iOS)

Wayback Machine (Android)

Browser Extensions

Chrome

Firefox

Safari

Edge

Archive-It Subscription

Explore the Collections

Learn More

Build Collections

Save Page Now

Capture a web page as it appears now for use as a trusted<br>citation in the future.

Enter a URL to save

Please enter a valid web address

About

Blog

Events

Projects

Help

Donate

Contact

Jobs

Volunteer

About

Blog

Events

Projects

Help

Donate

Donate icon<br>An illustration of a heart shape

Contact

Jobs

Volunteer

SCRAM

Emulation Item Preview

remove-circle<br>Share or Embed This Item

Share to Twitter

Share to Facebook

Share to Reddit

Share to Tumblr

Share to Pinterest

Share via email

Copy Link

EMBED

EMBED (for Archive.org item Description fields)<br>[archiveorg a8b_SCRAM_1980_Atari_US_req_OSb_BASIC width=560 height=384 frameborder=0 webkitallowfullscreen=true mozallowfullscreen=true]

Want more?<br>Advanced embedding details, examples, and help!

Favorite

Share

Flag

Flag this item for

Graphic Violence

Explicit Sexual Content

Hate Speech

Misinformation/Disinformation

Marketing/Phishing/Advertising

Misleading/Inaccurate/Missing Metadata

software

SCRAM

by

Chris Crawford

Publication date

1980

Language

English

Item Size

7.0M

Scram is a game designed by Chris Crawford for the Atari 800 and released by Atari. Written in Atari BASIC, Scram utilized differential equations to simulate reactor behavior. In the game, the player controlled the valves and switches of a nuclear reactor directly with the joystick. Occasionally, earthquakes would occur and the player would analyze the heat readings and dispatch repair crews to the affected area of the plant.

The game display showed a schematic-like representation of a light water reactor, typical of nuclear reactors in use in the United States at that time. The reactor core was on the left of the screen, with the primary coolant loop to its immediate right. Further right was the secondary cooling loop, and finally the tertiary cooling loop and its associated cooling tower.

The user interacted with the game by moving the joystick, which made a cursor jump from one "hot spot" to another on the screen, each one controlling one part of the reactor systems. There were hot spots for the control rods, cooling pumps and valves. The user could experiment with the reactor systems by moving the joystick up and down, operating the equipment. It was possible to simulate a meltdown by shutting off the primary cooling pumps and withdrawing the control rods all the way.

The game had several skill levels, which controlled the frequency of earthquakes and the "obviousness" of the damage. In the event of an earthquake the screen would shake and a breaking sound would be heard if there was damage....

software archive library share scram icon

Related Articles