Bobby Bearing

Bobby Bearing

Developer(s) Robert Figgins, Trevor Figgins
Publisher(s) The Edge
Platform(s) Sinclair Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64
Release date(s) 1986
Genre(s) Arcade adventure
Mode(s) Single-player
Media/distribution Compact Cassette

Bobby Bearing is an isometric 3D arcade adventure game released by The Edge in 1986 for the Sinclair Spectrum, Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64.

Contents

Plot

Bobby and his family are ball bearings who live in Technofear, "a land of the future made of steel, and inhabitated by things of steel."[1] Bobby's brothers have been led astray by their rogue cousin and are now lost in the Metaplanes outside their home - stunned and captured by the evil Bearings that inhabit the Planes.

Gameplay

The player controls Bobby Bearing in his search for his four lost brothers and their cousin. He must avoid the evil Bearings, find his missing and unconscious relatives, and roll them out of the Metaplanes to safety.

The mission must be accomplished before the time limit runs out, otherwise the game ends and Bobby's relatives are lost forever. A time penalty is incurred each time Bobby dies or is stunned. If Bobby is trapped and unable to leave a screen, pressing 'Q' will reset the screen at the cost of a time penalty.

Air vents, lifts, switches, crushers and evil Bearings can help or hinder Bobby in his quest.

Development

Robert Figgins and Trevor Figgins, the developers:

"It's hard to believe now so many months after the project began, but Bobby Bearing began life as an action-packed arcade-style game inspired by Q-Bert! In fact originally it wasn't intended for commercial sale at all. Even though the game didn't have much resemblance to Q-Bert, we were really pleased with the final result. The funny thing is, though, that there was no sense in which Bobby was based on Marble Madness, or any home micro game such as Gyroscope, and especially not Spindizzy! Bobby was more than 50% finished and looking very much as it does in the final commercial version almost a year ago now, and was around 18 months in the making. In fact we hadn't heard of Marble Madness and Spindizzy until we spoke to The Edge. In fact, acknowledgements for inspiration are really due to Knight Lore by Ultimate."[2]

Conversion to the Commodore 64 was performed by Trevor Inns

References

  1. ^ Game manual.
  2. ^ "Background Noise", Sinclair User, October 1986 

External links