Time Bandit

Reviewed by Mark Hutchinson

 

Issue 22

Jul/Aug 86

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Microdeal
£29.95
Requires Colour monitor

 

 

 

This program comes in an attractive and colourful box with a well written booklet which explains some of the basic details of the game and starts with a poem. On opening the first page I was afraid someone had once read the Epic of Gilgamesh, but the poem is only one page long. The details are concise and enough to get you started and there is nothing complicated beyond the usual arcade game rules except that you do have mysteries to sort out as well as zapping unfriendly creatures. My only complaint is that the book is crudely stapled and the disk is loose in the box.

It is well worth curbing your impatience to try the game out and just let it cycle through its auto routine, this way you will get used to the inhabitants and not die so quickly!. When I played it first, I was so interested in the superb graphics that the game was over before I knew it. A lot of time and effort has gone into this game and it really shows in the detail as the game progresses.

Basically Time Bandit is a maze style arcade game, reminiscent of 'Wizard of Wor'. You start of on a planet with around a dozen timegates, shaped differently (starship, hotel, pyramid etc). Just walk through one of the gates and you appear in different lands, each more varied and dangerous than the last. To survive you must find a key to open the way out, but you will also find some valuable treasures as you wander through the locations. These add to your score and give you a chance to acquire valuable lives. There is a tendency to play this game in the usual fast and furious arcade style. Taking it easy will not get you a good reputation as an adventurer (shown on the screen) but you will last a bit longer. The death throes of the enemy have got to be seen to be believed and some of the humour is very subtle!

There is something here for everyone, you can play Pac Man, wander around the `Enterprise', bust ghosts, solve mysteries and more. The best thing about this game is that you can try all the locations on a simple level by entering them only once, take just one level and enter it time after time so increasing the level of difficulty, or do a combination of both. Your score will be recorded upon your death, and if the disk is protected the error is trapped and the game goes on. 'Wizard of Wor' was the only game of this style (I detest the word genre!) I enjoyed until I had the loan of this, and Microdeal might have a fight on their hands to get it back again!

I would thoroughly recommend this game, and as yet I have found no bugs and only one complaint, the hero moves and shoots in only four directions. It is well worth getting your local ATARI dealer to set up the demo screen, and if he has not obtained it tell him to contact the lovely Jenny Pope at 0726 68020.

Two small hints, as you stumble through the graveyard and you come across an interesting tombstone, think twice about digging it up and do not forget to try other exits such as ladders or holes.

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