Penetrator (video game)

Penetrator
Publisher(s) Melbourne House (1982)
Designer(s) Philip Mitchell
Veronika Megler
Platform(s) ZX Spectrum (original)
Commodore 64
TRS-80
Release date(s) 1982
Genre(s) Horizontal;y scrolling shooter
Mode(s) Up to two players, alternating turns

Penetrator is a 1982 Sinclair ZX Spectrum game made by Melbourne House programmers Philip Mitchell and Veronika Megler. The game is a clone of Konami's 1981 Scramble arcade game. Penetrator was later ported to the TRS-80 and Commodore 64.

Gameplay

In Penetrator, the gamer flies a ship, which can shoot forwards and drop bombs beneath the ship. The first level is on open air, with just mountains to dodge, missiles which try to hit the ship, and animated radars. From the second level onwards, the game is inside increasingly complex caverns, so the ceiling is also a danger, as well as new enemies - the missiles are now sometimes replaced with skulls that can move up and down, blocking the path.

The levels change with no pause, only the screen colour changes. After four levels there is a short fifth level where a base needs to be destroyed by dropping a bomb precisely, and then there is a firework animation as a reward. After all levels are finished, the ship goes back through inversed levels, with backward turned landscape. The ultimate level results in an seemingly impassible landscape, however due to a bug if you accelerate into it you could actually get through but the game crash shortly after.

There is an edit mode for designing levels, and a training mode with infinite number of lives in which one can start from any level. Also, there is a simultaneous two-player mode. The game's sound consisted of a characteristic uplifting theme before ship launch, while in-game there were simultaneous shooting/explosion effects, which was relatively advanced use of the limited one channel Spectrum beeper system at the time.

Reception

Reviews at the time said that graphics and the game were impressive, even stunning.[1]

BYTE praised the graphics of the TRS-80 version of Penetrator and described the game as "eminently playable".[2]

References

  1. ZX Computing review at World of Spectrum
  2. Wszola, Stan (December 1982). "Penetrator". BYTE. pp. 162–164. Retrieved 19 October 2013.


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