The first compilation was released in 1993 on a single 1.44MB floppy for both Microsoft Windows 3.1 and the Apple Macintosh. It contained versions of the following arcade games by Atari:
Tempest
Battlezone
Asteroids
Centipede
Missile Command
Although the games were very similar to the original games in both appearance and gameplay, they were newly written versions, not ports of the original arcade game code. Each game allowed certain customizations not available in the original arcade game, i.e. the number of lives and bonus levels. The Microsoft Help files included with the games contained history of the development of the original arcade versions of the games.
Microsoft Return of Arcade
Two follow up versions were released, including the arcade games from Bandai Namco. The first was Microsoft Return of Arcade, released in April 1996. The compilation sold 335,176 copies in 1996 making it the 8th best-selling PC game that year. This compilation contains:
Pac-Man
Dig Dug
Galaxian
Pole Position
In 2000, to celebrate Pac-Mans 20th anniversary, Microsoft re-released Return of Arcade and added Ms. Pac-Man to the roster of games. None of the other games from Revenge of Arcade were included. This updated package was called Microsoft Return of Arcade: Anniversary Edition.
Microsoft Revenge of Arcade
The second follow-up, released in 1998, was called Microsoft Revenge of Arcade and contained:
Ms. Pac-Man
Mappy
Rally-X
Xevious
Motos
Officially, both of these follow-ups required Windows 95 or later, though the demo for Return of Arcade is a 16-bit program that requires only WinG to run inWindows 3.1. This game will not work on 64-bit versions of Windows.
Reception
Computer Gaming World in 1993 stated that Microsoft Arcades adaptation of the five games was "nearly flawless". It favorably cited the many hints and strategies included in WinHelp files for the games, and the boss key. The magazine liked Battlezone the most out of the five games in Microsoft Arcade, but stated that "it's been done better since" by games like Spectre. Despite finding that the games were "made obsolete by technology", it predicted that Arcade would be very successful because of nostalgia, and wished that Microsoft would have updated the games with modern graphics and gameplay. Microsoft Arcade was named the best computer arcade game of 1993 by Computer GamesStrategy Plus. In the United States, Return of Arcade debuted in position 16 on PC Data's computer game sales rankings for April 1996. It rose to 10th place the following month, and continued to chart in the top 10 through August, peaking at #5. The game's streak in the top 20 held through November, but ended with a fall from the charts in December. According to PC Data, Return of Arcade was the eighth-best-selling computer game in the United States for 1996 overall, after claiming 16th in the rankings for the first half of the year. PC Data reported the game's sales at 335,176 units that year, which earned revenues of $9.5 million.