Maziacs
Maziacs | |
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Developer(s) | Don Priestley, Andy French |
Publisher(s) | dk'tronics |
Platform(s) | ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, MSX |
Release date(s) | 1983 |
Genre(s) | Action adventure game |
Mode(s) | Single Player |
Maziacs is an action adventure maze video game published by dk'tronics in 1983 for the ZX Spectrum,[1] Commodore 64[2] and MSX.[3]
History
Maziacs, written by Don Priestley, was based on his earlier ZX81 game Mazogs[4] which was published by Bug Byte in 1982.[5] Mazogs was one of the most successful ZX81 games[4] so Don Priestley adapted it for the higher-resolution, colour-screen ZX Spectrum and MSX. The Commodore 64 port was written by Andy French. In 1987, Dietrich Raisin developed a version of Maziacs for the Atari ST in Omikron BASIC and released it as Public domain software.[6] The gameplay of this port was identical to the original version, but the graphics were newly designed.
Gameplay
Maziacs takes place in a randomly generated, scrolling, overhead-view maze, in which the player-controlled protagonist must find gold and exit the level. The gold is placed at least 200 moves from the start position, and the maze is patrolled by monsters called maziacs. Prisoners are sometimes found in the walls of the maze, who can highlight the path to the gold for a short period of time.
A maziac can only be killed effectively with a sword, several of which are found in the maze but can only be used once. A sword cannot be carried at the same time as the gold. These last two factors lead to the tactic of avoiding groups of maziacs, but killing as many as possible before collecting the gold.[7]
The main game screen shows one fiftieth of the maze, but a 'view mode' expands the view to show one twelfth. Whilst this mode is useful for scouting purposes, the player cannot move whilst viewing it.
Moving through the maze and fighting maziacs decreases the player's energy, which can be replenished by finding food.
Maziacs also supported the Currah MicroSpeech peripheral.
Critical reaction
When Maziacs was published, critical reception was good. CRASH magazine awarded 82%, highlighting the appealing graphics and animation.[7] In a retrospective later in the year, CRASH criticized the slightly unresponsive keyboard controls and felt it was less addictive, but continued to praise the animation techniques.[8]
Maziacs was ranked at number 99 in the Your Sinclair official top 100 ZX Spectrum games of all time, due to the game's claustrophobic atmosphere, choreographed animation and general character.[4]
See also
External links
References
- ↑ Maziacs at World of Spectrum
- ↑ Maziacs at Lemon64
- ↑ Maziacs at Generation-MSX
- 1 2 3 "The YS Official Top 100 Part 1" at The Your Sinclair Rock 'n' Roll Years
- ↑ Mazogs at ZX81stuff.org
- ↑ Dietrich Raisins Maziacs on successdenied.com
- 1 2 Maziacs review, CRASH issue 1, February 1984
- ↑ "Crashback" from CRASH issue 7
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