Jump to content
  • entries
    430
  • comments
    1,870
  • views
    662,864

Playing Scorpio (Amiga)


Cybergoth

1,183 views

Hi there!

 

Coming a long way from Zyron, Kingsoft did another vertical shoot'em up in 1988, this time for the Amiga:

 

scorpio.gif

 

Unfortunately, this playing experience came to a sudden and unexpectedly early halt, when the game constantly started crashing midway through the third level.

 

Before that, the game mostly felt like a 90° flipped R-Type. It really stole almost everything from R-Type, just turning it into a vertical experience. The level flows, some enemies and their movement schemes, the sattelite and its weapons, even the bosses - it all looked awfully familiar.

 

The game has a very arcadish presentation, basically just the "insert coin" message is missing. The graphics are nice (for an Amiga game that old) and smoothly animated, the explosion and shot sound samples fitting.

 

Scorpio plays very hard, but mostly fair. The first two stages each took over an hour to make it through and what I saw from the third was even harder.

 

Overall I think it's far too generic to recommend, a game that time rightfully forgot ;)

 

Some future day the "Playing..." series may see another vertical shoot'em up in the form of "Dragon Spirit", but first it'll continue with something different.

 

Greetings,

Manuel

10 Comments


Recommended Comments

"REGENTED"...WTF? I can't even figure out what that word is supposed to be.

 

It's a german game, so I've to apologize for the butchering of your fine language. I assume 'reigned' is the word they actually wanted there? :ponder:

Link to comment
ah, the German form of Engrish ;)

 

Germish? :ponder:

 

I like the colors of the message. Are they animated?

 

Just had another look. Surprisingly enough, no. There's several things in the game that color cycle, like e.g. the top right score block, but that one message doesn't.

Link to comment

Pretty sure they meant "ruled"

 

regent |ˈrējənt|

noun

1 a person appointed to administer a country because the monarch is a minor or is absent or incapacitated.

2 a member of the governing body of a university or other academic institution.

 

adjective [ postpositive ]

acting as regent for a monarch : the queen regent of Portugal.

ORIGIN late Middle English : from Old French, or from Latin regent- ‘ruling,’ from the verb regere.

Link to comment
Guest
Add a comment...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...