Starglider 2

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Starglider

Cover art of Starglider 2
Developer(s) Argonaut Software
Designer(s) Jez San, Richard Clucas
Platform(s) Amiga, Atari ST, DOS, Macintosh, ZX Spectrum
Release date(s) 1988
Genre(s) Space flight simulator game
Mode(s) Single player
Distribution Floppy disk(s)
Cassette

Starglider 2 is an early 3D space simulator/flight simulator video game released in 1988 by Argonaut Games and was the sequel to Starglider. It was released for the Amiga, Atari ST, DOS, Apple Macintosh and ZX Spectrum home computers.

Plot and gameplay

The game uses solid shaded 3D polygonal graphics (only on 16 bit versions), and features open, continuous gameplay without levels or loading screens after the game had started, despite taking place across an entire planetary system. The player can fly through space, enter a planet's atmosphere, explore the surface, and penetrate subterranean tunnels in one seamless movement.

The goal of Starglider 2 is to destroy an enemy space station with a neutron bomb, and the majority of the gameplay consists of collecting parts for the bomb, or fulfilling other prerequisites (e.g. finding the nuclear professor capable of constructing the bomb, or trade goods for the bombs necessary to destroy the shield generators protecting the space station), while fighting off enemy spacecraft, and delivering collected items to depots inside planetary tunnel systems. The various objects needed to complete the game are distributed across the many planets of the solar system, as well as in the intervening space (e.g. asteroids and space pirates), or even in the atmosphere of the gas giant planet.

Screenshot of Starglider 2 for the Amiga

The flight model is arcade-style as opposed to realistic, as the game features no inertia; the spacecraft banks like an aircraft to turn, in air, outer space, and underground; and it is possible to hover. In addition, the game features many graphic display options, including the ability to eliminate roll, or view the game from outside the cockpit from a non-chase-camera, making it difficult to fly but allowing the player to view the polygonal model of the spacecraft.

The construction of the shield generators and the space station itself progresses continuously over the course of the game, and failure to destroy the space station before construction was complete will result in loss of the game (the space station would be used to destroy the player's home planet). Successfully destroying the space station will not end the game, despite treating the player to a spectacular explosion and congratulatory text; instead, it will simply reset the construction of the space station, and the player can again begin attempting to gain possession of another neutron bomb with which to destroy the station.

Atari ST and Amiga versions

The Atari ST version is one of the few action games that could run on that machine's mono display.

The Atari ST and Commodore Amiga versions use Argonaut's "Argonaut Dual Loading System", a system whereby the discs are supposed to be interchangeable; the Atari ST disc can be used to load the game onto a Commodore Amiga and vice-versa.[1] This was supposed to save money, by allowing publishers to produce a single boxed version of the game for both formats. In practice, the system is unreliable, and after Starglider 2 it was abandoned.

Music

In common with Carrier Command, certain releases of the game include a production made with professional synthesizers of Dave Lowe's instrumental theme on a separate cassette tape.[citation needed]

Reception

A review in Computer Gaming World praised the game for being a vast improvement over the original, saying the game had "no real weak points". Minor criticisms were levelled at the game's joystick controls (preferring to control the game with a mouse) and at the game's philosophy of leaving players no clue as to how to succeed.[2] Compute! cited the game's dual-booting feature as "just one of the achievements" of the developers, praising the addition of solid graphics without losing its predecessor's speed.[3]

References

  1. http://www.birdsanctuary.co.uk/sanct/s_adls.php The Bird Sanctuary's article on ADLS
  2. Eva, Frank (Dec 1988), "Starglider II", Computer Gaming World: 31 
  3. Anderson, Rhett (December 1988). "Dynamic Duo". Compute!. p. 66. Retrieved 10 November 2013. 

External links

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