The Your Sinclair Rock'n'Roll Years
Front PageSearch SiteE-Mail MeArticle IndexJoystick Jugglers
Screenshot
Loader
YS Scan
Click images to enlarge
Subterranean Nightmare
Americana £2.99 Sep 1986 YS9
Graphics: 7/10
Playability: 9/10
VFM: 8/10
Addictiveness: 8/10
8/10 Overall
 
Search WOS
Get tips for this game
Max Phillips
Ummm, yes. Interesting bit of plot work this. Nuclear test, Nevada Desert 1986. Strange goings on underground 1991. Send in Professor Fusion (we're slipping already).
    Deep under the test site, the pot-bellied, bespectacled Penfold-clone Professor discovers a vast army of mutants, all of them a bit cheesed off with the way they've turned out. Determined to get to the bottom of this, he wanders deeper and deeper until the nightmare unfolds.
    In just five years, this freak zoo has developed a technology far ahead of our own. And its underground city is stuffed with missiles to shoot back at us. (Serve the nuclear weapon merchants right if you ask me, but that's another story...).
    It sounds an original game. But guess what you've got to do? Collect the radium crystals dotted around the various rooms while avoiding the mutants. Shame the Prof. Doesn't have a hat to go with his belly - everything else is pure Jet Set Willy (including the flicker) so why stop at the hat?.
    It's nice to see a game that gets the genre right though. Subterranean Nightmare is extremely professionally and lovingly put together with some great looking mutos, carefully thought out rooms and minor variations on a theme that's about as firmly lodged in everyone's head as "Here we go, here we go...".
    Collecting crystals has the effect of closing or opening other exits and walls. It's also possible to step on some of the mutants to hitch a ride or simply as a way of getting past them. And there's a useful (??) suicide key for getting out of screens (and games) you're stuck in.
    'Tis a bit witty too. On second thoughts, with rooms like "The Fission Chip Shop", maybe witty isn't quite the word.
    But good as it is, it's still a game that's been done a hundred times before and will probably be done again. I hate to say it but there's only one thing to say; if you're sick of platform collecting games, watch out there's another one on the loose. If you really like them, this here's a really good one. Go get it, lock your door and don't forget to eat....

Ratings given by other magazines
   CRASH  5/10   
Info supplied by the SPOT*ON database

Max Phillips has kindly authorised this site
Reviews in other magazines:
     
 
Crash
 
ZX Computing
 
Click pages to enlarge
LOOKING FOR EX-YS WRITERS! Do you know where any are?
READERS NOTE: The original YS articles on this site were written many many years ago, and should provide no indication WHATSOEVER of the author's present writing style. Judge these people on their current work, not articles they wrote decades ago.
All original YS text is still copyright to their original owners, including BOTH publishers and authors. Permission has been granted to reproduce these articles by a few of these owners - if you see your work on here and would like it to be taken down, e-mail me and I'll do it straightaway. All other pages have similar restrictions - email me for more details.
    None of the pages on this website may be reproduced in any way, nor sold to the general public (i.e. put onto a CD-ROM) without the consent of Nick Humphries and the author of each article. If you want to include any of these articles on a site or a CD, contact me for more instructions.
Date Time