The present invention relates generally to a remotely controlled battery powered toy vehicle which includes one or more vehicle mounted simulated weapons which may be employed for playing a single player or multi-user game.
Remotely controlled battery powered toy vehicles are generally well known. Such toy vehicles may take the form of a race car, truck, motorcycle, sport utility vehicle or the like or may include a fighting vehicle, such as a jeep, tank, hummer, etc. Additionally, incorporating simulated weapons into such remotely controlled toy vehicles, particularly such as a fighting vehicle is also generally well known. The present invention includes an improvement upon such known remotely controlled toy vehicles with such remotely fireable simulated weapons by incorporating from one to four such toy vehicles into an interactive game, where each of the vehicles may be separately controlled by different users for playing the game.
A first aspect of the present invention is a first encoded tag comprising: an exposed outer surface with a predetermined pattern of reflectance, the pattern containing coded information and being monochromatic.
Another aspect of the present invention is, in a wireless controlled toy vehicle system having a plurality of at least two independently remotely controllable toy vehicles, each of the toy vehicles being independently remotely controlled by a separate, respective, associated hand-held manual wireless controller of a plurality of hand-held manual wireless controllers of the system, each of the plurality of toy vehicles having actuators for controlling the operation of the plurality of vehicles in accordance with control signals received from the associated, respective manual wireless controller of the plurality of manual wireless controllers, an improvement comprising: a first manually actuable wireless controller of the plurality being respectively associated with a first of the plurality of toy vehicles and generating a stream of first control signal packets in response to user manual inputs to the first controller, the stream of first control signal packets being transmitted to the plurality of toy vehicles during a first transmission window and coded to control only the first of the plurality of toy vehicles; and a second manually actuable wireless controller being respectively associated with a second of the plurality of toy vehicles and generating a stream of second control signal packets in response to user manual inputs to the second controller, the stream of second control signal packets being transmitted to the plurality of toy vehicles during a second transmission window and coded to control only the second of the plurality of toy vehicles, wherein the first and second transmission windows are time synchronized such that the streams of first and second control signal packets avoid time overlap of each other when transmitted to the plurality of toy vehicles while user inputs are being simultaneously manually entered into at least the first and second manually actuable wireless controllers.
Another aspect of the present invention is a method for controlling a plurality of at least two toy vehicles in a wireless controlled toy vehicle system (50), each of the toy vehicles of the plurality being remotely controlled by separate respective associated manually actuable wireless controllers, the at least two toy vehicles having actuators for controlling the operation of the at least two toy vehicles in accordance with control signals received from the respective associated manually actuable hand-held, wireless controllers, the method comprising: defining a series of sequential, repeated first and second transmission windows, each transmission window having a single, common transmission window length (TL); time synchronizing the first and second transmission windows such that the first and second windows do not overlap each other; generating a stream of first control signal packets; generating a stream of second control signal packets; of transmitting the stream of first control signal packets to the plurality of toy vehicles during the first transmission window to control only a first of the plurality of toy vehicles; and transmitting the stream of second control signal packets to the plurality of toy vehicles during the second transmission window to control only a second of the plurality of toy vehicles.
Another aspect of the present invention is an interactive toy vehicle game system comprising: at least one wireless controlled toy vehicle having a mobile platform configured to move over a playing surface, an on-board vehicle controller configured to control the at least one toy vehicle based on manual input from a player, at least one vehicle weapon mounted to the mobile platform and configured to fire on an enemy vehicle and at least one damage sensor mounted to the at least one toy vehicle and configured to detect hits on the at least one toy vehicle; and at least one mobile droid vehicle having a mobile droid platform configured to move over the playing surface, the at least one mobile droid vehicle having an enemy weapon mounted to the mobile droid platform and an on-board mobile droid controller configured to seek the at least one toy vehicle and fire the enemy weapon at the at least one toy vehicle; wherein the vehicle controller is further configured to disable the at least one toy vehicle when the vehicle controller detects collectively from each damage sensor of the vehicle a predetermined number of hits from the enemy weapon.
Another aspect of the present invention is, in a vehicle toy combination including a wireless controlled toy vehicle with a mobile platform configured to move over a surface and a central controller on the platform configured to control at least one aspect of the toy vehicle, and a hand-held, manually actuable wireless controller configured to remotely control user selected movement of the toy vehicle, the improvement comprising: an optical receiver supported from the platform to look downward on the surface and coupled to the central controller, the receiver being configured to read a predetermined reflective pattern located on the surface over which the toy vehicle moves; wherein the central controller decodes information coded in reflections received from the reflective pattern, the information being associated with at least one operational mode of the toy vehicle; and wherein the central controller automatically re-programs itself with the decoded information to re-configure control of the at least one operational mode of the toy vehicle in response to the at least partial re-programming.
The following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention will be better understood when read in conjunction with the appended diagrammatic drawings. For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings embodiments which are presently preferred. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown.
In the drawings:
a,
2
b and 2c are front, side and rear elevational views of a preferred embodiment of a radio controller in accordance with the present invention;
a is a table showing drive and fire data packets generated by a radio controller;
b is a diagram illustrating a stream of control signal packets;
c is a diagram illustrating the transmission windows and dead space between transmission windows of the time division multiplex communication scheme;
a,
14
b and 14c are flow diagrams illustrating the operation of a portion of the firmware of the transmitter circuitry of
a,
18
b and 18c are side elevational, top plan and exploded view of a border droid;
d is a functional schematic block diagram of the control system of a border droid used in the present invention;
a,
19
b and 19c are top plan, front elevational and side elevational views of a stationary droid;
d is a functional schematic block diagram of the control system of a stationary droid used in the present invention; and
The present invention, in one embodiment, comprises a remotely controlled toy vehicle 10. In the presently preferred embodiment, the remotely controlled toy vehicle 10 is in the form of a fighting vehicle such as a tank or other such armored vehicle, Humvee or the like, which moves over a surface 16. The present invention is not limited to a remotely controlled toy vehicle having a particular shape, size, configuration or appearance. The remotely controlled toy vehicle 10 includes a mobile platform 14, one or more battery powered electric motors 302, 304 (
The toy vehicle 10 further includes an on-board control system, or central vehicle hand-held, controller 300 (
Control Scheme
In the presently preferred embodiment, firmware control of the toy vehicle 10 of
Running the MCU 316 at 6 MHz allows the firmware to perform all of the required service routines with each service routine being performed no more frequently than is necessary. Sufficient additional time is available for making changes in the routines without changing the speed of the microprocessor.
The central controller 300 further includes a separate microprocessor, preferably a DPLL MCU 328, for receiving and decoding control signals received from the radio controller 12 in a manner which will hereinafter become apparent. An oscillator 330 which may be a crystal oscillator, RC oscillator, external oscillator or the like, is included for establishing the timing of the service function MCU 316 and the DPLL MCU 328 in a manner well known to those of ordinary skill in the art. Each central controller 300 further includes a vehicle identification switch 332, which may be set to any one of several different positions to discriminate between different toy vehicles 10 used in playing a game. As shown in
The exemplary toy vehicle 10 includes a suitable antenna 338 for receiving radio frequency signals from the remote radio controller 12. The antenna may be hidden under or within the body of vehicle 10. Output signals from the antenna 338 are sent to a receiver/demodulator 340 for demodulation of the received radio frequency signals. Output signals from the receiver/demodulator 340 are fed to the DPLL MCU 328 through a high gain differential amplifier 342. The DPLL MCU 328 receives and decodes the instruction signals in a manner as illustrated by the flow diagram of
Communication Scheme
In the present embodiment, bi-phase encoded bits are used with each bi-phase encoded bit being of the same predetermined width and employing a fifty percent duty cycle including two transmit elements per encoded bit. Another form of encoding and/or a different duty cycle could be employed, if desired. In the present embodiment, one binary state, binary “0”, is defined as both of the transmit elements of a bit being the same and the other binary state, binary “I”, is defined as both of the transmit elements of a bit being opposite. The use of such a bi-phase encoding scheme is beneficial in that it permits reading of the state of a bit by reading the center portion of each transmit element. The state (high or low) always changes between bits.
Referring to
In addition, with the presently preferred embodiments, if the user has not selected vehicle movement or the firing of a weapon, no corresponding data packets are transmitted. For example, if the user is moving the toy vehicle 10 without firing a weapon, only the drive data packet 132 will be continuously transmitted whereas if the toy vehicle 10 is not moving, only the selected fire data packet 136 will be continuously transmitted. If the toy vehicle 10 is firing a weapon while moving both the drive data packet 132 and the fire data packet 136 will be transmitted in an alternating pattern, as shown in
In addition to the microprocessor encoder 410, the circuitry 400 of the manually actuable controller(s) 12 includes a plurality of control switches or user manual inputs 418, 420, which are manually activated by a user for controlling the operation of the toy vehicle 12. In the present embodiment a “D-pad” 420 is used for controlling the movement of the toy vehicle 10 (forward, backward, left, right) and additional control switches/buttons 418 are employed for controlling the firing of the simulated weapons on the toy vehicle 10. The user controlled switches 418, 420 may alternately be in the form of lever switches, push button switches, a joy stick or the like. The position of each of the D-pad 420 and fire control switches 418 generates signals which are employed as inputs to the microprocessor encoder 410 which in turn uses the inputs to “encode” the signals by generating the signal packets. As long as the D-pad 420 and fire control switches 418 remain in the same positions, the microprocessor 410 continuously generates the same control signal packet as a stream of packets 140. If the position of any of the control switches changes, the microprocessor 410 senses the change and generates a series of new control signal packets. If neither the D-pad 420 nor any of the fire control switches 418 are active, no control signals are transmitted.
Each remote radio controller 12 includes a vehicle identification switch 436 having an output which is encoded and transmitted within each control signal packet 132, 136 and which when received is decoded and compared to the position of the output of the vehicle identification switch 332 in the central controller 300 for identity comparison purposes. The codes from the vehicle identification switch 436 are transmitted in each control data packet 134, 138, such that each control signal packet includes a vehicle identification tag (ID1, ID0) which associates each control signal packet with the toy vehicle 10 associated with that remote radio controller 12. Further details concerning the manner in which signal packets are set up for controlling a remotely controlled toy vehicle may be obtained from co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/046,374, filed Jan.14, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,848,968 the complete disclosure which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The radio controller 12 also includes a transmitter, in the presently preferred embodiment a radio frequency transmitter including an oscillator 422, a crystal 424 for the oscillator 422, a radio frequency amplifier 426, a matching circuit 428 and an antenna 430, for transmitting the generated control signal packets 132, 136 to the toy vehicle 10. It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that some other type of transmitter, such as an infrared transmitter, could alternatively be employed.
Time Division Multiplexing Scheme
As stated above, the present invention comprises a game in which as many as four toy vehicles 12, each under the control of a different user, are simultaneously employed to play against each other. Accordingly, each toy vehicle 12 must be separately and independently controlled from each of the other toy vehicles without incurring interference between control signals. In the present embodiment, the streams of control signal packets are transmitted on the same carrier radio frequency for all four of the vehicles. Therefore, time-division multiplexing (TDM) is employed, with each controller being assigned a separate transmission “window” 141, 142, 143, 144, respectively, during a prescribed time cycle TC. The time cycle includes sufficient “dead” time 146 between the transmission windows so that there is no overlap between the transmission windows, even over the course of the game as windows slowly drift relative to one another. The use of time-division multiplexing requires synchronization and calibration of the several radio controllers 12 to calibrate/adjust for different crystal speeds at the beginning of play so that the transmission windows for each radio controller 12 are scheduled to happen at different times in order to avoid transmission collisions.
From experience it is known that a toy vehicle 10 must receive an updated control signal packet from its corresponding radio controller 12 approximately every 100 milliseconds. At a slower update rate, the toy vehicle 10 behaves sluggishly. This means that for four vehicles to be controlled using the same frequency and to avoid collisions, each toy vehicle 10 can be allotted a transmission window which is no larger than twenty-five milliseconds. Since, during play, some drift in the transmissions may occur due to the normal timing drift, the actual control signal packet length must be less than twenty-five milliseconds.
In the present embodiment, eighty-eight milliseconds has been chosen as the time of a complete transmit cycle TC. Within the eighty-eight milliseconds, each transmitter (e.g., radio controller 12) has fourteen milliseconds of transmission, such that transmission windows have a single, common transmission window length TL, followed by seventy-four milliseconds of non-transmission as shown in
In the prior art are remote control toy vehicles using bi-phase encoding with each transmit element comprising one-half of a bit, a typical bit rate of 1.5 kilobits per second (transmit element of 333 microseconds). In order to accommodate the required control signal packet as well as the time division multiplexing scheme, the bit rate for the presently preferred embodiment has been increased to six and one half kilobits per second—each transmit element having a width of seventy six and one half microseconds. By increasing the bit rate in this manner, three and one-half control signal packets 132, 136 can be sent in each fourteen millisecond transmission window 141, 142, 143, 144. Since one-third of a control signal packet is required for synchronization of the hardware and firmware (referred to as warm up), essentially six complete control signal packets 132, 136 may be sent during a given transmission window. If at least two sequential control signal packets are identical when received and decoded by the central controller 300, the received control signal packets are considered to be valid and the operation of the toy vehicle 10 is actuated accordingly. When transmitting both drive data packets 132 and fire data packets in alternating fashion in the same stream 140 (
In order to avoid transmission collisions, the radio controllers 12 must be synchronized at the beginning of play so that their transmissions are all scheduled to happen at the appropriate, spaced times. The transmission windows must also not drift during play to the extent that transmissions from two or more of the remote radio controllers 12 could overlap. Synchronization is accomplished by physically plugging together the up to four remote control units prior to transmission of streams of control signal packets (i.e., prior to the beginning of play) using a pair of synchronization ports 432, 434 on each radio controller 12. Once the four remote radio controllers are plugged together, they are turned on and a synchronization button (not shown) on one of the radio controllers 12 is depressed to initiate the synchronization process. The radio controller on which the synchronization button is depressed becomes the master and generates a timed pulse on a synchronization line. The other radio controllers are considered to be “slave” units and use the timed synchronization pulse to establish their respective transmission windows at a fixed amount of time after the end of the master synchronization pulse depending upon the identity of the radio controller and to calibrate their processor speeds relative to the processor speed of the master in order to adjust for drift. The slave radio controllers calibrate by measuring the synchronization pulse and using the difference between the measured pulse length and the nominal pulse length (how long the pulses would be if the remote control units ran at exactly the same speed) to calculate an adjustment. During normal play, the slave remote radio controllers use the calculated adjustment to minimize drift. After calibration is completed, the radio controllers move into normal operation.
Weapons
The preferred exemplary toy vehicle 10 further includes a simulated weapons system indicated generally at 308 compromising at least one remotely controlled “weapon” simulative of a weapon employed in an actual fighting vehicle. In the presently preferred embodiment, the toy vehicle 10 includes a first light cannon-like weapon in the form of a front firing narrow beam infrared emission source 310 and a second light cannon-like weapon in the form of a rear firing broad beam infrared emission source 312. The front emission source weapon 310 is used for long range narrow beam targeting while the rear emission source weapon 312 is used for short range spread beam targeting. Preferably, both infrared emission source weapons 310, 312 operate with a carrier modulation frequency of about 40 kHz and with a physical optical wavelength of between about 880 and 900 nm. Other modulation frequencies and/or optical wavelengths may be employed. The front firing emissions source weapon 310 preferably uses a narrow half power beam angle infrared light emitting diode (LED) 510 (
The rear emission source weapon 312 also includes an infrared LED. However, because no focusing lens is provided, the range of the rear emissions source weapon is limited to approximately 0.8 to 0.9 meters (about three feet or less) and the diameter of the infrared signal at 0.85 meters is approximately 0.6 meters. Thus, the front firing emissions source weapon 310 may be used for firing precise beams over relatively long distances whereas the rear firing emission source weapon 312 is capable of firing a much wider beam path but only for a relatively short distance. The firing of both the front firing emission source weapon 310 and the rear firing emission source weapon 312 is controlled by a user using one or more appropriate manual control buttons on the hand-held remote control unit 12 in a manner which will hereinafter be described in greater detail. The infrared beams fired by both the front firing emissions source weapon 310 and the rear firing emission source weapon 312 may be used when playing a game to simulate the damaging or destruction of other toy vehicles playing the game in a manner which will hereinafter be described. The front firing emission source weapon 310 and the rear firing emission source weapon 312 can be activated regardless of whether the toy vehicle 10 is stationary or moving and without regard to the direction of movement of the toy vehicle 10.
Damage Sensing
The toy vehicle also includes one or more infrared receiver modules, or “damage sensors” 314 for sensing when the toy vehicle has encountered a “hit” as a result of receiving an infrared beam “fired” by an enemy weapon from an “opponent” (i.e., another toy vehicle or an autonomous enemy game piece). In one embodiment of the toy vehicle 10, four separate infrared sensors are provided one each on the front, rear, left and right sides of the toy vehicle.
In another embodiment, a generally transparent infrared receiver dome 530 (
Tag Bases
The game with which the toy vehicle 10 is used contains at least one “tag base” such as exemplary tag base 160 (
Each tag 161 incorporates a readable, pre-determined reflective pattern 162, or barcode, which is encoded with information 170 which, in the preferred system being described, identifies an operational mode 350 of the toy vehicle 10 that is associated with the tag base 160. As shown in
The pattern of the marks and spaces of the reflective pattern 162 of a tag 161 are the same in the two principal opposing directions x, y (left or right when viewing
In the preferred embodiment, the toy vehicle 10 preferably includes a downwardly looking tag reader 318, such as an infrared bar code scanner, mounted to the mobile platform 14. The tag reader 318 preferably includes an IR emitter, or light transmitter 320, an IR collector or optical receiver 322 (see
The tags 161 include coded information 170 which is associated with one or more operational modes 350 of the toy vehicle 10. The toy vehicle has a variety of modes which, when activated or deactivated, collectively define the vehicle's powers and/or capabilities. For example, one operational mode may grant the toy vehicle a particular armor strength or level. Additional categories of operational modes include weapons strength, speed and steering capabilities, fuel levels and the ability to employ hazards for an opponent. At least one of the numerous operational modes of the toy vehicle is altered when the vehicle passes over a tag base 160, thereby giving the toy vehicle an advantage (or disadvantage) in playing the game, at least for a pre-determined time period, with respect to other opponents in the game. The vehicle(s) 10 might start with only nominal rather than maximum characteristics including speed/steering which can be maximized or minimized by passage over a tag base. For example, passing over a tag base may create stronger armor for the toy vehicle 10 causing it to be less susceptible to sustaining damage when attacked by another toy vehicle. Alternatively, the tag base 160 may give the toy vehicle 10 the capability of employing a hazard, such as an oil slick from the rear of the toy vehicle, or other weapon/defensive advantages causing any pursuing vehicles to lose steering control, speed or otherwise become disrupted or disabled for a predetermined time period. This would be accomplished by having the rear firing emission source broadcast a coded signal (e.g. a pulsed signal) that could be received and decoded by the following vehicle(s) and cause such vehicle(s) to reprogram a disability into itself. Other special effects which add increased interest to the playing of the game may also be employed.
Preferably, each tag base 160 includes indicia (not shown) in the form of a color code or other marking (e.g. basic monotone colors) to provide a user of with knowledge of the operational mode (i.e., green for advantage or red for disadvantage) which may be obtained by having the toy vehicle 10 pass over the tag base 160.
A flow diagram showing the operation of the control system 300 in reading a pattern 162 is set forth in
In an alternative embodiment, the tag bases 260 and tags 261 may have a generally circular shape, generally resembling a bull's eye design (see
It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that the concept of employing a tag 161 for the toy vehicle 10 to pass over could be implemented using a technology other than the scanning or reading of a pattern. In addition, game features other than those specifically discussed above could also be employed.
One Player Games
In order to permit a single player/user to enjoy meaningful playtime with the toy vehicle 10, the present invention further comprises separate, enemy (opponent) beam weapon firing toy devices in the form of “droids”. In the present embodiment there are three different types of droids: mobile droid vehicles, stationary droids and border droids.
Each mobile droid vehicle 60 takes the form of a mobile platform 62 (see
The described mobile droid vehicle 60 is essentially self-contained and self-operating—i.e., no remote control unit is used with the moving droid. Once the moving droid is turned on and placed in the area of play, the mobile droid controller 66 moves the mobile droid vehicle 60 over the playing surface 16 in one of the predefined patterns 65 while firing the enemy weapon 64 according to its predetermined firing sequence. The toy vehicle 10 must then maneuver and fire its weapons to disable or destroy the moving droid before the moving droid effectively disables or destroys the toy vehicle 10. Alternatively the mobile droid 60 can be configured to track the remotely controlled vehicle 10 in the manner described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,780,077 incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
a,
19
b and 19c show a preferred embodiment of a stationary droid 70. The droid 70 includes a non-mobile platform 72 which remains at a single location throughout the game. The stationary droid 70 includes a single rotating turret 74 mounted to the platform 72 and having simulated enemy weapon 76 in the form of an infrared beam firing cannon. The stationary droid 70 includes a stationary droid controller 78 shown in
a-18c show a preferred embodiment of a border droid 80 formed from a non-mobile platform 82. The border droid 80 is similar to the stationary droid 70 as described above in that the border droid 80 does not move. However, unlike the stationary droid 70, the border droid 80 has one and preferably two fixed simulated weapons 84, 85, each of which is mounted to fire in a single, fixed direction. The firing directions of the two weapons 84, 85 are preferably perpendicular to each other but could be at other angles and could be adjustable. The weapons 84, 84 of the border droid 80 are both preferably infrared beam firing cannons and are fired randomly or partially randomly in their fixed directions to effectively establish or define a pair of intersecting border lines or boundaries within the play area. The border droid 80 includes a border controller 86, shown in
In playing a single player game, the player would initially place the moving droid in the middle of the play area, the stationary droid 70 at a desired location and the border droid 80 at the boundaries of the play area and scatter the tag bases 160 at various locations around the play area. The player would then turn on the mobile droid vehicle 60 and maneuver the toy vehicle 10 in a direction so that it could shoot and hit the mobile droid vehicle 60 while avoiding being hit by the mobile droid vehicle 60, the stationary droid 70 and/or the border droid 80. The toy vehicle 10 may be given a predetermined amount of time to seek out and destroy the mobile droid vehicle 60 before the toy vehicle 10 is disabled and defeated. The predetermined time can be set, for example, for a three minute, five minute or ten minute play time. When the moving droid has received sufficient damage, it can be preprogrammed to indicate it is defeated. For example, it may performs a 360° spin and then shuts down with a loud shut down sound. The toy vehicle 10 can drive around while attempting to attack the mobile droid vehicle 60 and avoid the other droids 70, 80 to run over the tag bases 160 to acquire the use of new weapons and/or other features to help the toy vehicle defeat the mobile droid vehicle.
Game Play—Multiple Players
In a game in which multiple toy vehicles (e.g. up to four) play against each other, each of the toy vehicles is initially placed within the play area of the toy vehicle system 50 (see
Each of the toy vehicles 10 (and its associated simulated driver) may incorporate a separate appearance and styling and its own simulated “personality”. For example, each vehicle may have its own name (for example “Punisher”, “Technoid”, “Stalker”, “Scavenger”), its own preferred or default weapon (laser cannon, splatter gun, Gatling gun, rail gun) its own driving and/or firing sounds and other associated characteristics. Overall, the features of all of the toy vehicles should balance out to be relatively equal. For example, one toy vehicle may have a slightly more powerful weapons but with less speed or weaker armor, whereas another vehicle may be slightly faster but with a weaker weapon or weaker armor. Other features will be incorporated into the toy vehicles. For example, after firing a light weapon a predetermined number of times a “reload” period may be imposed during which a reloading sound will be heard and no firing is permitted. Heavy weapons can only be fired a small number of times unless “revived” be passing over a special tag base.
Players simultaneously try to avoid the fire from other vehicles and, possibly from an autonomous moving droid 60 in the field of play. Once defeated, a toy vehicle 10 is immobilized and credit for the kill can be claimed by another active toy vehicle. As vehicles accumulate kills or minutes of play experience, weaponry and/or mobility for the toy vehicle becomes more potent or robust. When a toy vehicle is killed by another toy vehicle, the dead vehicle will broadcast a “killed” signal through its front emission source weapon 310. When another vehicle (the killing vehicle or some other vehicle) detects the “killed” signal, by being in the dead vehicle's line of fire, it can respond with a “claim kill” request. The dead vehicle can “grant” the kill to the requesting vehicle. If the claiming vehicle does not receive the grant signal, then it is lost. A toy vehicle is not able to accept a granted kill signal if it has not recently requested a claim. The firmware of the claiming vehicle provides for this by allowing claims to be accepted for only a limited period of time following a claim request. As the game begins, each user attempts to destroy the other users' toy vehicle utilizing movement techniques and one or more simulated weapons. As the game proceeds, each player attempts to drive his vehicle over or near the tag bases in order to receive the advantages afforded by the tag bases. The tag bases may provide short time advantages such as heavy, medium or light armor, invisibility, an extra missile launcher, etc. Each player receives points based upon passing over or near tag bases, firing a simulated weapon resulting in a hit of another toy vehicle and achieving other goals. The multiplayer game can be played with teams. In addition, one or more of the droids can be used as a common adversary or to add interest in a multiple player game. Alternatively, all of the toy vehicles can play together as a team against one or more droids.
For example, although wireless radio control is preferred, other known forms of wireless control such as optical control might be used. The control signals might be passed over a band width spaced from the bandwidth used by the vehicle “weapons”. In such vehicles, control signals would be transmitted by an emitter and received by an appropriate optical sensor. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes could be made to the embodiments described above without departing from the broad inventive concept thereof. *It is understood, therefore, that this invention is not limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but it is intended to cover modifications within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US03/34525 | Oct 2003 | WO | international |
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/422,728 filed 31 Oct. 2002 and International Application No. PCT/US03/34528 filed 31 Oct. 2003, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.