
The game uses wireframe vector graphics displayed on a black and white vector monitor.

Instructions on their use are printed on the cabinet. Gameplay Two joysticks control the player's tank. The 3D hardware that drove the program saw use in following games, including Red Baron, released in 1981. The system was based on vector hardware designed by Howard Delman which was introduced in Lunar Lander and saw success with Asteroids. Battlezone was distributed in Japan by Sega and Taito in 1981. The game was primarily designed by Ed Rotberg, who was mainly inspired by Atari's top-down shooter game Tank (1974). With its use of three-dimensional vector graphics, the game is considered to be the first true 3D arcade game with a first-person perspective, the "first big 3D success" in the video game industry, and the first successful first-person shooter video game in particular, making it a milestone for first-person shooter games. Its innovative use of 3D graphics made it a huge hit, with approximately 15,000 cabinets sold. The player controls a tank which is attacked by other tanks and missiles, using a small radar scanner to locate enemies around them in the barren landscape.

Battlezone is a first-person shooter tank combat game released for arcades in November 1980 by Atari, Inc.
