What? By who? No, it's not Vindicator, it's Vindicators (lots of 'em), and this little title has nothing - nowt, nil, not a jot, zilcho - to do with Ocean's fabby title of last winter. Tengen, meanwhile, is the coin-op label - Atari by any other name - whose games are to be brought to the Spec by none other than Domark.
Confused? Yup, me too, but when you load this
up, all it really boils down to is a rather dull tank
battle game of a sort that we've seen four billion
tines before. It's a monochrome shoot 'em up
(level one green) in which you manoeuvre your
tank about a vaguely futuristic scene (also green)
and shoot any tanks that happen to come into
range. Initially this looks terribly easy, as all the
opposing tanks move very slowly. Unfortunately,
your tank also moves very slowly, as this is a very
slow game. By the time you've changed direction
to face him, the other geezer has probably hit you
a few times. Irritating. But pleasingly you only
have to hit him three times or so in order to kill
him, while you can withstand anything up to about
20 hits, as far as I can see.
The idea, as you move through three
increasingly difficult levels (you can start on
whichever one you wish) is to pick up the usual
useful things lying around, to whit, fuel canisters
(your tank uses about as much fuel as a 747) and
battle stars, which, as you collect them, let you
soup up your tank with loads of optional extras.
There's increased shot range, increased shot
power, increased shot speed, spankier shields,
bombs and so on. What you really need, though,
is an optional extra that gives you a faster, more
interesting game - sadly, nothing so helpful is
provided.
So once again the old coin-op problem has
reared its ugly mush. On a coin-op
Vindicators
looks better and plays faster, but deprived of the
16-bitness of its speed and graphics we quickly
discover that there's nothing much else there.
There's no challenge, nothing to make you want to
nave just one more go, nothing except a drab,
utterly mundane game that wouldn't make a
splash if you dropped it in a pond. Which, to be
honest, seems the best thing to do with it. (Tiny,
non-splash-like sound.)
There what did I tell you?
| Arcade version screenshot... |

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| Ratings given by other magazines |
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| Info supplied by the SPOT*ON database |