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Imagine you're Andrew
Angello, a space hero,
searching the asteroid Eroc 1
for whatever nameless horror
is destroying all of its
inhabitants. Too late, all 720
personnel are dead before you
get there... so what does any
normal person do? Go home -
mission unsuccessful. Oh no,
not Andy, he mutters to
himself, 'This is going to
require skill, speed and brains',
and treks off in search of
danger and the missing
segments of the colony's
computer that, once pieced
together, will tell the whole
story of the sad fate of the ex-personnel.
Eroc 1 is what they call a Deep Asteroid Mining Project, or DAMP, which is just a bit of technical jargon to explain the fact that this game has 1000 different rooms to explore, 250 on each of four levels. Yes, we're talking big here - but don't start searching for a massive piece of paper straight away, my first few hours with Core revealed about 30 rooms... Yes, you've guessed it, this is not a game you're going to finish in an afternoon! The mines are split up into small sections, each containing a small number of chambers. You travel between these via teleport devices or doorways. Moving left and right around the chambers, the first thing you notice is that the fire button does not spit the standard 'death-dealing fire', but instead makes Andy bend down to pick up an object. Of course, once he's found a gun then things change - but, until then, you just have to dodge anything that looks deadly. A bit of a shame since virtually everything that moves is deadly, including the flying lightning clouds and sea-mines. Most of these objects just give Andy a shock and deplete his batteries if he touches them, but others, like the walking robot, kill him and that's that! Core is a lot of fun, and very addictive. Success is not that easy, but when you do get a break there's an overwhelming feeling of having accomplished something - especially when you've wandered around the same old rooms wondering if A'n'F had pulled a fast one about the 1000 rooms when suddenly you notice another exit and there lurking off the beaten track are a whole load of objects to be picked up and a new maze of mines to explore. Core can be frustrating if you're only into fast arcade-action extravaganzas, but I reckon it's one of the best mixes of arcade and adventure games I've seen for some time.
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| I'm still trying to find Luke C - Can you help? | ||||||||||||||
| LOOKING FOR EX-YS WRITERS! Do you know where any are? | ||||||||||||||
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