Sunday, February 18, 2018

Fractal Landscape Generator







It's time to get creative

Fractal Landscape Generator was developed by David Billington, who offers us an opportunity to develop mountainous worlds. Now, it's worth stopping to read the disk's doc file before you do anything else, because of an excellent mini-guide. I know, I know, nobody reads the manual... but you should this time!

Creating a brand-new rugged landscape is extremely easy thanks to the fantastic user interface. Not only that, the results can be produced and viewed quickly, even on an 8MHz computer. Thankfully, the program made great use of my 16MHz Mega STe, which is superb. Hatari's versatile speed will be a huge bonus!

The 3D part was initially difficult to grasp but don't give up - keep on tinkering and you'll grasp it. Once you're happy, you can then add light-shading, alter various colour parameters, and increase the detail level. Heck, you can even animate a fly-by through your newly created world.

Dabbling in 16-bit creation was fun, and it's impressive to see what wonders I could knock out. To think I found it by chance: Floppyshop ART-3647. It's a nice feeling to find something "new", and this is a great program to get started in fractal landscaping. Give it a go and let me know what you think in the comments!

I hope you enjoy making mountains...


- My MEGA STe Creations -


 
 

Friday, February 16, 2018

Astro Marine Corps






Creepy monsters are coming to get you!

Sometimes a game doesn't need a long-winded storyline, puzzles, or life-sucking RPG elements. Sometimes all you want is a huge mother of a weapon (with unlimited ammo, of course) and lots of baddies in need of urgent annihilation. Be happy because Dinamic's AMC fits the bill with lots of gratifyingly brutal violence!

This multi-level scrolling shoot 'em up involves nothing more than walking through grim alien landscapes and hammering the fire button to kill everything in sight. Upgradeable weapons use a directional-firing technique, and our marine can crouch and leap high into the air (with wiggly legs). We are equipped with powerful bombs, which are needed when the main gun isn't effective. (tip: perhaps you can drop a few into a crater)

The aliens are an obscene bunch of misfits ranging from man-eating plants to mechanoids that even Robocop would run away from. Don't get close to the unassuming caterpillars, these will suddenly grow in size - with teeth!! I think AMC has some of the best enemies, and the monstrously huge Guardian proves it.

Technically, AMC could have been better; the scrolling is somewhat lacking, and the landscapes look rather "unfinished". Thankfully, the joystick controls are excellent. However, it is awkward reaching for the keyboard to throw a bomb - especially when mechanoids are chasing. With a bit of spit and polish...

AMC is crude and predictable but thoroughly entertaining. It features great baddies, crunchy sounds, and loads of action. I loved it, and being an Astro Marine is ace because it’s fantastic killing alien scumbags!


Waste no more time & play this game!!
Install AMC on your hard drive.
Grab the floppies from Atari Legend.




The plant life is out to get you in this crazy game, so watch out where you walk!!



Awe look, everyone, it's a strange little worm. No, wait... ARGHHH it's growing!!



This thingamabob is absolutely superb. Look at the detail in his eyes and teeth!!



AMC has some huge monsters, but the bosses are even bigger. This beast is ginormous!!

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Gribnif Software





Today is a great day!!

Dan Wilga has released NeoDesk and Geneva as freeware, downloaded directly from the Gribnif website. I've quickly run through a test installation (within Hatari), and it worked without a hitch. My next project is to install this onto my Mega STe and get this amazing operating system running from an SD Card.

What a fantastic opportunity this is, but please don't forget to donate whatever you can. I would love to see your NeoDesk screenshots! Let me know what you guys think of Geneva/NeoDesk in the comments below...

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Killing Machine





The killer from Atlantis

Killing Machine is a vertically scrolling shooter by Atlantis Software released in 1992. We're on a remote planet controlled by a giant brain that identifies your sassy spaceship as an invading bacterium: vermin that needs to be wiped out!! The battlefield spans three levels with lots of kamikaze enemies out for blood.

The first thing that struck me was the graphics, which are uniquely colourful using a sweet palette. The smooth scrolling is slow and steady, with impressive enemy sprites zipping across the screen. Sound effects go beyond mere bleeps for some rather raspy samples, and that grunge works well and suits the style.

Killing Machine is brutal and requires lots of practice before you get close to beating the first level. That learning curve is nothing less than painful. Keep at it - collecting the power-ups and learning the enemy attack patterns is a must. Or you die a suckers death. This isn't the best shooter, but it's still loads of fun.
  • Atarilegend has floppy disks (Pure Energy #53)
  • 8BitChip has a great version for hard disk installation.
  • AtariMania has this listed along with scans of the manual.