Gameplay
The game is set in a wizard's castle, the player's task being to find the treasure. It employs "very smooth" side-scrolling (termed 'Scrollerama') and imperfect vertical scrolling. Play includes climbing ladders, which are sufficiently wide to simplify this aspect of gameplay. Various objects can be found and used to solve problems. These include everyday items, furniture, specialist equipment and valuables. Other characters include guards, animals, a witch and the wizard. Control is via the keyboard, with 13 keys having various uses, for example accessing the inventory of objects carried in the backpack, viewing off-screen to left/right. Play requires both dexterity and lateral thinking. A saved game facility is not provided. Scores are awarded based on progression through the game. Upon completion, additional rewards are given for remaining lives and a bonus is awarded according to elapsed time. An expert player may complete the game in "around seven minutes".Development
The game was reported as being programmer Tony Sothcott's first machine code game. Its colours are achieved using , requiring more than half of total available RAM. The map is made up from screens comprising blocks, there being 13 different types of such block. Two adjacent blocks are stored as a single byte within the map data, which occupies in total. This technique was noted for its ingenuity.Marketing
The game was marketed as "Probably the most challenging game ever devised for the BBC Micro." The publishers offered small cash prizes to those completing the game within three months of purchase. They also announced a future competition between the four highest scorers, with a prize of computer equipment worth £500. The game's retail price (cassette £12.95, disk £14.95) was noted as being "not cheap" but nevertheless worthy. Self-styled "marketing expert" Chris Payne (at that time a recent graduate employed by Micro Power as a marketing assistant) recalls his memory of Sothcott's game being "terrific". Micro Power did not commission the marketing from any of their usual agents, instead appointing new agency Kidd's of Leeds. This agency devised a "nicely done logo" on a simple black background.Reception
The game was listed as a 'star game' in a 1985 review in '' Personal Computer News'' (''PCN'') and was featured in an illustrated double-page spread in the issue of ''References
{{Micro Power 1985 video games BBC Micro and Acorn Electron games BBC Micro and Acorn Electron-only games Metroidvania games Single-player video games Video games developed in the United Kingdom Video games set in castles Micro Power games