Galactic Warrior Rats
Developer(s)Mikev Design
Publisher(s)Summit Software
Programmer(s)Kevin Franklin (Amiga)
Nick Thompson (MS-DOS)
Artist(s)Michael Owens
Composer(s)Don Whitaker
Platform(s)Amiga, MS-DOS
Release1992: Amiga
1993: MS-DOS
Genre(s)Platformer
Mode(s)Single-player

Galactic Warrior Rats is a 1992 platformer developed by Mikev Design and published by Summit Software for the Amiga. A port to MS-DOS was released the following year. The game was included in the 1994 Famous Collection compilation.[1]

Gameplay

The player chooses of one of the three Galactic Warrior Rats who pilot a biosphere vehicle. The biosphere can have its speed, weapons, ammunition and handling upgraded. Upgrades require credits. During the gameplay, the player will maneuver the rat in his biosphere. The object is to guide the biosphere through maze-like levels to the exit. The biosphere can fire in one of eight directions. Destroying enemies earns credits. Touching enemies drains the biosphere's vitality. If one rat dies in the biosphere explosion, the player must choose a different rat to play. If all three rats are destroyed, then the game is over.

Plot

Three laboratory rats named Einstein, Newton, and Darwin enter a spaceship, soon crashing on a planet called Smeaton Five. The explosion of the spaceship kills them, but they mutate into humanoid-like creatures termed the Galactic Warrior Rats.

Meanwhile, Smeaton Five is highly polluted. The three rats navigate through the planet's dangerous complex and destroy defense robots. They ultimately shut down the core computer to save Smeaton Five and themselves.

Reception

References

  1. Anderson, Chris (March 1994). "CD-ROM Review". PC Zone. No. 12. Dennis Publishing. p. 108.
  2. MacDonald, Duncan (October 1993). "Bargain.Bin". PC Zone. No. 7. Dennis Publishing. p. 96.
  3. "Budget Games". CU Amiga. No. 43. EMAP. September 1993. p. 96.
  4. Winstanley, Mark (March 1993). "Amiga Power - Game Reviews". Amiga Power. No. 23. Future plc. p. 74.
  5. Upchurch, David (August 1993). "The One - Review". The One. No. 59. EMAP. p. 60.
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