| MICROPROSE | 32K
        CASS. | 
            
              | 1/4
        PLAYERS | 32K DISK | 
          
        Not really what I imagined it to be. I had expected this to be
        another version of Choplifter but it is an underground labyrinth type
        game where you have to fly your chopper and rescue people from ledges
        and various nooks and crannies. Of course there are plenty of things to
        stop you - these games are never THAT easy.
        I was quite taken with Chopper Rescue, it is PLAYABLE yet still has
        quite a lot of challenge. Not being the world's best arcade player, I
        get fed up with games that kill me off every 5 seconds but I found in
        Chopper Rescue that you at least had a chance when danger lurked. There
        are plenty of obstacles to your rescue mission. Laser guns are stationed
        on the walls, bomb pods shoot spinning explosive upwards, whilst force
        fields bar your way. All of these can be destroyed with either your
        missiles or bombs. There are also several pulsating pods that either
        supply energy to the enemy lasers or act as hatching plants for the
        'mutants' that come for you every so often. Didn't I mention them? Oh
        well, you can kill them off. Best idea is to destroy everything in
        sight, that way you are safer and get more points. After rescuing ten
        hostages, you go on to a more difficult labyrinth with more obstacles
        and pods. Some of these are very difficult to get to, but you can
        release your bombs with forward momentum and sort of 'throw' them into
        the narrow channels.
        A word about the confusion over the 'energy pods'. The problem is
        that with these MicroProse games, the documentation is pretty basic to
        say the least. In fact, considering the price (normal Atari Prices), it
        is downright poor. I know that it is the game that counts, and this one
        is very good, but if we have to continue paying these high prices, then
        would it not be asking too much to have some extensive and well
        presented literature for our money?
        
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