Lost Patrol

Lost Patrol

Developer(s) Shadow Development
Publisher(s) Ocean Software Ltd
Designer(s) Simon Cooke
Ian G.Harling
Composer(s) Chris Glaister (Amiga)
Jonathan Dunn (Atari ST)
Platform(s) Amiga, Atari ST, DOS
Release date(s) 1990
Genre(s) Action role-playing game
Mode(s) Single player
Distribution Floppy disks

Lost Patrol (also known as The Lost Patrol) is a survival action role-playing game with strategy elements developed by the team Shadow Development and published by Ocean Software Ltd for Amiga computers in 1990 and the Atari ST in 1991; a DOS version was also released by Astros Productions.

Plot

The game is set during the Vietnam War, where on June 7, 1965, a U.S. helicopter returning troops from a R&R break in Saigon crashes in remote Central Highlands of Vietnam. Seven American soldiers, survivors of the crash, face the task of trekking across 58 miles of harsh terrain infested with booby traps and enemy soldiers and make their way to Du Hoc, the nearest U.S. military base. The team has little food or ammunition and their chances of making it home are slim.

Gameplay

The player assumes the role of Sergeant Charlie Weaver, the only man left to take charge of the surviving crew. The player must learn the characteristics of the team, as completing the mission may hinge upon character reactions to the player's decisions, and then try to keep the group's morale high (or risk being fragged) and fatigue low, managing the dwindling resources (food rations, ammunition, hand grenades and Claymore mines) and fending off the enemy.

The game also features action sequences:

The player may always try to retreat from each encounter, but this is risky, too. The group may also encounter local Vietnamese (Montagnards in the mountains) civilians, including while entering villages visible on the map. A range of options is then available, from searching area to killing one or even all of civilians. The player may also attempt to communicate with the locals (in a friendly talk or a hard interrogation) using the key words typed from keyboard (for example, typing "VC" to ask for enemy forces).

Characters

Development

Despite their appearance, all graphical cut scenes except the black and white in-game animations are hand drawn, not digitized.

Reception

The game received mostly positive reviews, including the scores of 79% in Amiga Format, 83% in CU Amiga, and 89% in Zero.[1] However, a 1992 Computer Gaming World survey of wargames with modern settings gave the game zero stars out of five, criticizing the joystick controls as "so poorly done that the entire game is totally unplayable".[2]

References

  1. The Lost Patrol - Lemon Amiga
  2. Brooks, M. Evan (June 1992). "The Modern Games: 1950 - 2000". Computer Gaming World. p. 120. Retrieved 24 November 2013.

External links