Enchanted is a Pinball game in which a magician must travel through his space-time ship to different worlds to prevent them from being destroyed by an evil entity that threatened the entire galaxy. With this argument, the player must visit these worlds through different boards, obtaining, of course, the highest score
Elven Warrior is a flick-screen platformer where you play the role of Elf as you explore the land and the underground passages for various bottles of potion to fill a cauldron up. As you search the land there are various creatures that must be avoided or shot with one of various limited weapons that can be found and collected, a long bow, staffs or axes. If you touch a creature then you lose part of a health meter but if you fall into water or touch spikes then this empties the meter and it is game over. On the surface of the land are various doors which take you underground but keys are needed to open them which can be found in various locations. Once you find a bottle then you take it back to the cauldron and this then opens up other parts of the area when full.
Warnings, S.O.S.’s and stories of total planet annihilation had been banded around a terrified solar system for some time but had been conveniently ‘overlooked’ by spineless, so called Leaders.
And now it was too late. This was incomprehensible. This was immense!
It’s vast appetite was closing in on Earth and the putrid stench of partly digested World’s hung ominously in space, above a society that had refused to believe that it’s very existence would ever again be in question.
Who could fight?
Who would dare venture inside this mutant horror and battle against it’s bodily defence mechanisms, to obliterate its sustaining organs, to finally put a stop to its crazed, hunger induced stampede across the Universe?
Mankind needs you, the Dominator…You need to fight…IT NEEDS TO FEED!
Fantasy platform adventure released by Codemasters in 1989. Released on Amstrad CPC and ZX Spectrum, and unfortunately a planned Commodore 64 version was scrapped after the young programmer tasked with the conversion had problems fitting it into the Commodore’s memory.
Cosmic Sheriff was one of the first computer games to enable the Gun-Stick optical gun system, manufactured by the Spanish company MHT Ingenieros, a revolutionary hardware developed specifically for 8-bit computers. With this peripheral the user could shoot directly at the screen to eliminate his enemies.
Game consists of three zones of several levels each one.
Zone 1: The warehouses. Throughout three levels there are two bombs.
Zone 2: Control system and computers. There are four bombs to defuse along five levels.
Zone 3: Surface. Nine levels where there are six bombs to defuse.
Classic Trainer is a business simulator that allows you to own five horses and race them over various seasons with the aim to win The Derby at the end of each season. Each season lasts 20 weeks, with the choice of three races in a meeting every week if you choose to race a horse. You start the game with £5000 and before a meeting you have various options for your horses and yourself, which cost you money. Give your horses a workout, treat their injuries, get a loan and retain a jockey. Once you are happy with your selections, you are then shown your horses and their fitness, class and race stats. You also have the option to sell a horse.
Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer 2.0 is a flight simulator game. Follow Yeager's cursor, instrument settings and instructions on a couple of landings and you'll set her down right every time. Hug the ground at 50 feet, pull 8 G's around the pylon and streak full-throttle for home. Screaming toward earth at supersonic speed, you're a breath away from drilling a hole. In test piloting, the real hero is the one who survives.
ou control whether the head shall bump left or right, and how far up it will bounce, in a similar fashion to Mappy. You have to move across a series of bouncy platforms and pick up all items on the screen. Once all items are collected, the exit will appear so that you can go on to the next screen.
While most platforms are perfectly harmless, some have additional qualities, such as being destructible, thereby granting access to other parts of the screen. Some platforms are on fire, which will turn out lethal unless you have picked up a water droplet in advance.
Bumpy was remade for 16-bit platforms as Pop-Up, and then ported back once more to the Amstrad CPC.