Genre: | Unknown Genre Type |
Publisher: | Newsfield Publications |
Cover Art Language: | English |
Machine Compatibility: | Commodore 64, Commodore 128 |
Release: | Magazine available via High Street/Mail Order |
Original Release Date: | 1st June 1992 |
Original Release Price: | £2.50 |
Market Valuation: | £1.50 (How Is This Calculated?) |
Author(s): | - |
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Linked reviews are available to view in full on this site.
Highly entertaining... It can get really frantic when your sprogs are on the verge of starvation!
There's not a lot to the game really: just barge the other skater off the ball and race for goal - the computer-goalie is totally useless.
Pro Tennis Tour (The Hit Squad)
A fast paced tennis game, requiring ultraquick reactions and snap decisions.
Playability of the highest standard... And excellent graphics with fast smooth scrolling and superb cartoon player sprites.
Escape From The Planet Of The Robot Monsters (The Hit Squad)
A very playable game. Okay, the graphics are slightly ropey, but the urge to rescue the good Prof is strong.
The finest of the Freescape games... It's a work of art, but, at the end of the day, you either like the Freescape games or you don't.
This game has pretensions of being a good RPG. It's not. At best, it's a weak beat-'em-up.
Ivan 'Iron Man' Stewart's Super Off-Road Racer (Tronix)
It's difficult to see how the game could be any better! The graphics are superb, the tiny sprites bounce around magnificently and the dirt shading is so realistic you'll want to clean your shoes after playing.
Seymour Goes To Hollywood (Codemasters)
Brilliant humour and some of the best puzzles and animation ever seen in an arcade adventure, although it plays with all the style and grace of a drunken elephant!
A brave attempt, but spoiled by poor execution. Though the management section is championship material, the arcade game is amateur league only.
Difficult at first, but keep persevering - with four spectacular levels, there's enough here to keep anyone happy.
Presentation is excellent throughout with a clear, attractive board layout and easy-to-use menus.
Turrican II is possibly the greatest technical achievement ever on any computer.
Millenium Warriors (First Star)
The two shoot-'em-up levels are also irritatingly similar. And shallow, samey gameplay ruins what should've been a really rad game.
An addictive, shooty riot of a game... You won't stop until the mad dictator is dead!
Strip Girl Poker (The Sales Curve)
Hmmm, okay for a quicky game of cards... but that's all. Features badly digitised photos that you have to squint at.
The multi-load is well thought out and the game doesn't auto-restart once later levels are reached... but when each level is exactly the same as the one before it, except with a different background, it hardly matters.
Another potentially terrific game scuppered by an irritating multi-load.
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