Pulse Warrior (1988)



| Details (Sinclair ZX Spectrum) | Supported platforms | Artwork and Media | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Publisher: Genre: Author(s): Minimum Memory Required: Maximum Players: Joysticks: Language: Media Code: Media Type: Country of Release: Comments: | Mastertronic LtdArcade John F. Cain, Simon Price 48K 1 Kempston, Redefinable Keys Eng N/A Audio cassette Europe | Sinclair ZX Spectrum |
| Videos | Screenshots (Sinclair ZX Spectrum) |
|---|---|
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| Your Reviews |
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Issue 58 (Crash) 14th Mar 2011 04:54No. this game hasn't anything to do with peas and lentils: it's all about energy pulses. A hostile alien race from Cirrus Major has decided to attack the Earth (crikey, why do all aliens hate our little old planet so much?). Their first targets are the Earth's massive orbiting solar power stations which are completely defenceless.
Naturally this is where you come in, with a hastily-made spaceship that lacks nothing except a weapon. So the only way to eliminate the invading aliens is to exploit the energy pulses generated by the power stations themselves. By using your ship to deflect the pulses into lenses, the pulses can be magnified so that they can destroy the aliens. This task must be achieved in each of the station's 36 sectors, which are all divided into three zones. Each zone has its own colour and, more importantly, time limit for completion.
The idea of bouncing pulses (shown as little lines) around the colourful screens is original, but doesn't quite come off. Severe frustration is caused when, after building up a large pulse, it's too easily lost through one of the exits. What action there is moves at a snail's pace and completely lacks any strategic element to get you thinking. Still, at least there's been attempt at originality and the graphics aren't that bad. If you can take the laborious pace it might be worth investigating at the budget price.
PHIL 52%
THE ESSENTIALS
Joysticks: Cursor, Kempston, Sinclair
Sound: Atmospheric 128k tune which a strange tendency to change into a monotone
Options: definable keys
CRITICISM
'In the long history of computer gaming, saving the Earth has never seemed boring than in this game. In 128K mode, sound is represented by simplistic effects and an atrocious in-game tune. Graphically Pulse Warrior is okay, the monochromatic sprites move around the coloured backdrops well enough, but in the playability stakes, yes folks it's 'zzzz' time again. Maybe you can something more to this game than wandering aimlessly around, deflecting rays and avoiding baddies, but I certainly couldn't.'
MARK ... 40%
Graphics 54% Monochromatic sprites move over mediocre backdrops.
Playability 44% Very slow, repetitive action...
Addictive Qualities 38% ...which fails to hold your interest for long.
Overall 46%
Naturally this is where you come in, with a hastily-made spaceship that lacks nothing except a weapon. So the only way to eliminate the invading aliens is to exploit the energy pulses generated by the power stations themselves. By using your ship to deflect the pulses into lenses, the pulses can be magnified so that they can destroy the aliens. This task must be achieved in each of the station's 36 sectors, which are all divided into three zones. Each zone has its own colour and, more importantly, time limit for completion.
The idea of bouncing pulses (shown as little lines) around the colourful screens is original, but doesn't quite come off. Severe frustration is caused when, after building up a large pulse, it's too easily lost through one of the exits. What action there is moves at a snail's pace and completely lacks any strategic element to get you thinking. Still, at least there's been attempt at originality and the graphics aren't that bad. If you can take the laborious pace it might be worth investigating at the budget price.
PHIL 52%
THE ESSENTIALS
Joysticks: Cursor, Kempston, Sinclair
Sound: Atmospheric 128k tune which a strange tendency to change into a monotone
Options: definable keys
CRITICISM
'In the long history of computer gaming, saving the Earth has never seemed boring than in this game. In 128K mode, sound is represented by simplistic effects and an atrocious in-game tune. Graphically Pulse Warrior is okay, the monochromatic sprites move around the coloured backdrops well enough, but in the playability stakes, yes folks it's 'zzzz' time again. Maybe you can something more to this game than wandering aimlessly around, deflecting rays and avoiding baddies, but I certainly couldn't.'
MARK ... 40%
Graphics 54% Monochromatic sprites move over mediocre backdrops.
Playability 44% Very slow, repetitive action...
Addictive Qualities 38% ...which fails to hold your interest for long.
Overall 46%
| Cheats | Trivia |
|---|---|
| There are no cheats on file for this title. | No trivia on file for this title. |
History
This title was first added on 22nd August 2007
This title was most recently updated on 16th October 2017







