Spaceship combat sims are games that I did not grow up with and that are not really for me. Since I wouldn't do their legacy any justice by rating them as someone who is not in the game's target group, I'll just give quick random thoughts on games like this but otherwise leave them without a rating, in case you were following my challenge to go through as many games as possible starting chronologically in 1990. This would be game 21.

Controls felt pretty complicated and it didn't really feel enjoyable to play with a mouse + keyboard and at the low framerate that was offered, which I don't think was unusual for space combat sims. I'm not sure if people played this with a joystick back in the day or it didn't simply bother them, but I would have been overwhelmed even if the game played at double digits, so this only exacerbated my problems.

That said, I did get through two missions before calling it a day. The vet who accompanied me somehow died after the first mission and while I still have no idea why (she just said "my ancestors await me" as I was trying to figure out how to dock), I could tell that the interaction between the player and other characters - in addition to the neat cinematic story telling - was a big deal. If I had grown up with this genre, I can imagine my experience with this game being positive. That said, the missions already felt repetitive very early on and I can imagine that this is a common complaint about this game, and not a surprising one due to the game's age.

Reviewed on Oct 17, 2022


2 Comments


1 year ago

I'm guessing you played the GoG version? Fun fact, that version has a very low framerate due to DOSbox - The 2000 PC gamer version has the correct framerate, which plays significantly better.

https://www.wcnews.com/wcpedia/2000_PC_Gamer_Coverdisk_Release

8 months ago

Also, you guessed correctly that nobody was playing this with a mouse. At the time, having a mouse plugged in to your computer wasn't common at all; Windows 3.1 was still 2 years away at this point. I remember when I got my first mouse it came with some cheapo pack-in drawing software because the expectation was that you wouldn't have any software on your computer that would support a mouse. I think most people were playing this with a joystick, which were a lot more common.