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Aaargh!

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Aaargh!
Cover Art
Developer(s)Binary Design
Sculptured Software
Publisher(s)Arcadia Systems
Melbourne House
Designer(s)Steve Coleman
Joe Hitchens
Artist(s)Joe Hitchens
Platform(s)Arcade, Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Apple IIgs, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, MSX, ZX Spectrum
ReleaseTemplate:Vgy, Template:Vgy, Template:Vgy
Genre(s)Action game
Mode(s)Single-player

Aaargh! is a single-player action video game in which the player controls a giant monster with the goal of crushing and destroying everything in its path across different lands and periods of history. It was designed for Mastertronic's Arcadia Systems, an arcade machine based on the custom hardware of the Amiga, and was released in 1987. It was ported to a range of other platforms and released on these across 1988 and 1989. Electronic Arts distributed the Amiga version of the game.

Gameplay

The goal of the game is to find the golden dragon's egg. The player achieves this by destroying buildings in order to find Roc eggs, the discovery of each of which triggers a fight with a rival monster. When five eggs are found, the two monsters fight on a volcano to claim the dragon's egg.

The game is a single-player action game with fighting game elements. The player chooses to play as either a giant lizard or an ogre; the character that the player does not select becomes the player's rival to obtain the egg. Gameplay takes place across the 12 cities of the Lost Island, each of which comprises one level of the game. Each city is represented by a single static playing area that uses a form of 2.5D projection in order to give the impression of depth on the screen.

Reception

The game was reviewed in 1989 in Dragon #141 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers normally assign a rating to a game ranging from 1 up to 5 stars, but they disliked this game so much that they ranked it with an "X" instead.[1]

Your Sinclair magazine awarded the ZX Spectrum version of the game a score of 48 out of 100, describing it as a "multi-level, multi-load, beat 'em, blowtorch 'em up which'll have you screaming its title each time you die and have to reload".[2]

Reviewing the Amiga port, ACE magazine said that although the game had "good graphics, atmospheric sound and good gameplay" there was not enough challenge to the game and that players would "not want to spend much time playing a game you know you can beat easily", giving an overall score of 261 out of 1,000.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Lesser, Hartley; Lesser, Patricia; Lesser, Kirk (January 1989). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (141): 72–78.
  2. ^ Ryan, Jackie (August 1989). "Aargh!". Your Sinclair (44): 68.
  3. ^ Smith, Andy (August 1988). "Aargh!". ACE (11): 60.