Highway Encounter

Highway Encounter

Cover art
Developer(s) Costa Panayi
Publisher(s) Vortex Software
Platform(s) ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, MSX
Release date(s) 1985
Genre(s) Action
Mode(s) Single Player
Distribution Cassette tape

Highway Encounter is a computer game released on the Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48K, Amstrad CPC, MSX, Commodore 64, and Tatung Einstein by Vortex Software in 1985. It was written by Costa Panayi who also coded Android, Android 2, TLL, Cyclone and Revolution.

Summary

Highway Encounter is a strategy/action game played from a 3D isometric perspective in which you must successfully chaperone a bomb along a long, straight stretch of highway and into the alien base at the end of it. There are thirty screens to pass through and most are filled with hazards that threaten to block your progress (such as barrels) or destroy you (aliens and explosive mines).

Players control a robotic "Vorton" (resembling a dalek from Doctor Who) and one of the things that provides Highway Encounter with its unique appeal is that the bomb is constantly being pushed onwards by your extra lives - four more Vortons, who accompany you along the highway. A key strategic element to the game is for the player character to travel several screens ahead of the bomb to clear a safe path for it; normally this would be done by temporarily blocking the bomb's forward motion. However, if the bomb is left in an unsafe location, it is possible for all your extra lives to be lost without the player character being destroyed once. Once all spare lives are lost, the player character must manually push the bomb.

There is also an unfinished and officially unreleased, but available to download version for Atari ST made by Mark Haigh-Hutchinson and graphics by Costa Panayi, from 1990.

The Spectrum version of the game was voted number 40 in the Your Sinclair Official Top 100 Games of All Time.[1]

The game was unofficially ported to Sharp MZ-800 by Ladinek Software.

Highway Encounter was followed by a sequel, Alien Highway in 1986.

References

  1. "YS Top 100 Games of All Time". Your Sinclair. September 1993.