Shopping is fun. If you don't believe me then fly this game - it's Tesco's and Jet Set Willy rolled into one.
As Wallie, you have to trundle round a supermarket and collect 40 items which have to be taken to the cash desk and checked out. The problem is that you can only carry five things at a time and getting to and from the cash desk is less than easy.
The supermarket has many levels and, in the best traditions of platform games, has lots of obstacles to overcome. There are no individual rooms, it is just one big maze of platforms to be explored - the screen reveals only a small part of the maze; as you move, the picture scrolls, revealing a new section.
You start at the bottom left of the store and the cash desk is at the bottom right. You are blocked in at the start and have to flick a switch to make a wall disappear. This trick is also needed at a later, more testing stage, to open another barrier.
Having escaped, you need to try and locate the cash desk which is difficult to get to but will have to be visited at least eight times.
Along the route many dangers lie in wait for Wallie, who looks like an orange on legs and jumps further than Carl Lewis.
White barriers will move up and down while green ones flash on and off both are fatal if touched. Monsters prowl around in some sections, but fortunately they follow simple set patterns and are easily avoided.
You cannot even trust the floors since they are sometimes coated in a deadly green fungus, which also grows on the ceilings. Moving walkways and conveyor belts move you about the place and floors can disappear or appear beneath your feet.
It's not all bad news though since purple slides and ladders help you move around and the conveyor belts can aid as well as hinder your progress.
The music on the game is excellent and though it has some of the same tunes as Loco it adds some of its own, all from Jean Michel-Jarre. You are guaranteed to get wrapped up in both the tunes
and the game.
Admittedly it's another platform game but it's a good'un and plenty big enough and tough enough to keep you spending the housekeeping.
Fraser Marshall
Astounding! Incredible! Unbelievable! What more can I say? Turn up the volume and tantalise your eardrums with the most melodic tunes ever squeezed out of the SID chip. Wallie, the pumpkin-like star of Wheelin' Wallie returns in a new, incredibly demanding role, in what for me is one of the best releases for the C64 this year.
It's not a game, it's a mind-blowing experience! The graphics designer, 'Claire' must be given a special mention for the sheer variety in the various nasties and objects which Wallie has to collect.
Samantha Hemens
The best thing about this game was the music. Brilliant - I could have sat and just listened to it all day.
Not that the game itself isn't hugely enjoyable. With its slides and ladders, Wallie has a real job on his hands. There are also some nasties to contend with - perhaps they're other shoppers. I'm not sure that I'd like to meet them when getting my groceries!
Another 'Wallie' game from Interceptor. This one is very similar to Alligata's Son Of Blagger, an eight-way scrolling Manic Miner, except this one is, I think, much easier. There are very few baddies and my primary problem was timing my leaps.
Graphics are pretty ordinary in the sense of detail, but scrolling is smooth.
Death returns you to the start - annoying, but the music pushes you on to search yet deeper and further.