Track & Field (video game)

Track & Field
European arcade flyer
DeveloperKonami
Publishers
Konami
  • Arcade
    Ports
    NES
    ZX Spectrum
    Ocean Software
Platform
Release
September 1983
  • Arcade
    • JP: September 1983
    • NA: October 17, 1983
    • EU: Late 1983
    Apple II, C64
    • July 1984
    2600
    • Late 1984
    Atari 8-bit
    • 1984
    MSX
    Famicom/NES
    • JP: June 21, 1985
    • NA: April 1987
    • EU: 1992
    CPC, ZX Spectrum
    Game Boy
    • JP: July 17, 1992
    • NA: September 1992
    • EU: 1992
    Xbox 360
    • WW: August 8, 2007
GenreSports
ModesSingle-player, multiplayer

Track & Field (also known as Hyper Olympic in Japan and Europe) is a 1983 sports video game developed and published by Konami for arcades. The Japanese release featured an official license for the 1984 Summer Olympics. In Europe, the game was initially released under the Japanese title Hyper Olympic in 1983, before being re-released under the US title Track & Field in early 1984. Centuri released the game in North America.

Players compete in a series of events, most involving alternately pressing two buttons as quickly as possible to make the onscreen character run faster. The game uses a horizontal side-scrolling format, displaying one or two tracks at a time, a large scoreboard that shows world records and current attempts, and a packed audience in the background.

The game was a worldwide commercial success in arcades, becoming one of the most successful arcade games of 1984. Konami and Centuri also organized a 1984 Track & Field video game competition that attracted more than a million players internationally, holding the record for the largest organized video game competition of all time as of 2016. It was followed by several sequels including Hyper Sports, as well as similar Olympic video games from other companies. The game's popularity led to a resurgence in arcade sports games, and also inspired Namco's side-scrolling platform game Pac-Land (1984).