ST Format


Oh No! More Lemmings

Categories: Review: Software
Author: Ed Ricketts
Publisher: Psygnosis
Machine: Atari ST

 
Published in ST Format #32

Oh No! More Lemmings

To say that the original Lemmings were an enormous success is understating the case just a bit, so we won't. Since their introduction to the world more than half a year ago, the world has smiled coyly, invited them in for tea and given them a quick peck on the cheek in a big way.

What happens in a game of Lemmings? Well, on each level the little fellas drop out of a trapdoor somewhere on the screen and immediately proceed to try and throw themselves off the nearest precipice.

Your job is first, to stop them killing themselves and second, to get them home. "Home" is usually placed far, far away from the start point, and in between there's a massive amount of scenery: all sorts of drops, traps, ramps, water, and so on, and none of them are good for you.

Oh No! More Lemmings

You can give certain of the lemmings special powers, such as the ability to dig vertically or diagonally, to climb walls, or to block the path of the other lemmings - very useful, that. Using a combination of these powers - of which you're only given a certain amount on each level - you work your way through the level ot guide the lemmings home.

Oh No! More Lemmings provides you with 110 extra levels to add to the original 120. It comes in two forms - one with just the data disk so you need the original game to run it, or a complete standalone version - hence there are two different prices. As before, the levels are divided into varying difficulties: Tame, Crazy, Wild, Wicked and Havoc. There are a whole new set of graphics - just as wild and wonderful as before - and even the sound effects have changed slightly - for the better, though they're still nowhere near as good as they could have been.

Verdict

DMA Design couldn't really have gone wrong whatever they did for this disk - Lemmings is such an excellent concept it's extremely difficult to muck it up. There's a slight problem with the difficulty gradient of the levels, though; the Tame levels really are very tame and can be completed in ten minutes, but as soon as you hit the Crazy, you're having real problems - even if you're only on the first level. And £20 is perhaps a bit steep for a data disk - £15 would have been better. Apart from these pretty wrinkles, have no hesitation at all in rushing out and buying Oh No! More Lemmings immediately.

In Brief

  1. There are no competitors to Lemmings - it's a unique idea, brilliantly executed.

Ed Ricketts

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