Overview
Containing elements of Super Mario Brothers, Rana Rama and Rick Dangerous this 2D flip-screen platformer is a mixture of an action (punch 'n' shoot 'em up) and an exploration game. Switchblade puts the player in the role of Hiro, a sort of Japanese comic-style hero and the only surviving Bladeknight who has to reassemble a sword called Fireblade and destroy therewith the evil Havok. The scenario is accompanied by clautrophobic atmospheric backdrops, detailed sprites and moody tunes. It was developed by Simon Phipps (also author of Rick Dangerous) from Core Design and published by Gremlin in 1989 on all popular 8-bit and 16-bit homecomputers at the time.
On August 22nd, 2019 the game was officially released on PC by Piko Interactive.
Story
After 10 000 years of peace Havok has returned on the cyber world of Thraxx. The Fireblade, source of strength for the ancient Bladeknights, has shattered and its power died. Seizing the opportunity, the evil Havok and his nightmare creations have slaughtered the people of the Undercity and taken control of Thraxx. The Bladeknights died helpless alongside their people and only one of their order survived. The last of the Bladeknights is Hiro, a hi-tech warrior armed with a powerfull reprogrammable cyber-arm, who now must enter the Undecity and reassemble the sixteen fragments of the shattered Fireblade. Only then can he take on Havok and avenge the death of his people.
Gameplay
The 128 screens of the cyber world Thraxx (consisting of the surface of Thraxx and the Undercity) are self-mapping. So each screen is made up of smaller screens which only light up once they have been entered. It means the need for careful observation and exploration is enhanced, or a vital entrance to a new area might be missed.
The main protagonist Hiro can run, jump and climb up and down ladders. Hiro can fight in a hand-to-hand mode against his enemies or destroy them with a collected weapon. Fighting in a hand-to-hand mode Hiro can throw a punch, a high kick or a low sweeping kick. Which move Hiro will perform in a hand-to-hand fighting mode depends on how long the fire button is pressed and held down. Because by pressing and holding down the fire button the "power meter bar" increases(shown at the right bottom of the screen) and the combat move Hiro will perform is more powerfull. Hiro can also use up to seven weapons against his enemies like a blade, scorchball, dart, spinblade, needle bolts, trispike and the most powerfull weapon the Fireblade itself after collecting the sixteen fragments of it. Which weapon Hiro is using is shown by the "weapon indicator display" at the middle bottom of the screen by a corresponding symbol. If Hiro is fighting in a hand-to-hand mode the weapon indicator display shows a fist.
Bonuses like gems(which vary in size), flasks or orbs are found throughout the game, hidden in such locations as walls or simply scattered around the corridors and rooms. Also single letters can be collected by Hiro which light up at the bottom of the screen and form the words EXTRA and BONUS. Spelling EXTRA gains the player an extra life and spelling BONUS gains the player a bonus 10000 points.
Boss Enemies
Level 1 | | Giant Spikelouse |
Level 2 | | Giant Scorpoid |
Level 3 | | Giant Cybat |
Level 4 | | Giant Roborganism |
Level 5 | | Havok |
Hand-to-hand combat
Weapons
Reviews
Magazine | Issue | Page | System | Rating | % | Reviewer | Language |
---|
The One | 04/1991 | 81 | Amiga/Atari ST | 5 out of 5 | 100
| Paul Presley | English |
The One for Amiga/ST Games | 08/1991 | 80 | Amiga/Atari ST | 5 out of 5 | 100
| Laurence Scotford | English |
C+VG (Computer and Video Games) | 12/1989 | 116,117 | Amiga | 93 out of 100 | 93
| Julian Rignall | English |
Your Sinclair | 02/1992 | 59 | ZX Spectrum | 93 out of 100 | 93
| James | English |
Your Sinclair | 03/1991 | 73 | ZX Spectrum | 92 out of 100 | 92
| Andy | English |
Mean Machines | 01/1991 | 62,63,64 | Amstrad GX 4000 | 91 out of 100 | 91
| Julian, Matt | English |
Amstrad Cent Pour Cent | 06/1991 | 16,17 | Amstrad CPC | 91 out of 100 | 91
| Robby | French |
Generation 4 | 12/1989 | 40,42 | Amiga, Atari ST | 90 out of 100 | 90
| - | French |
Zero | 01/1990 | 52,53 | Amiga | 90 out of 100 | 90
| Sean Kelly, Duncan McDonald | English |
Games-X | 08/1991 | 35 | ZX Spectrum | 4.5 out of 5 | 90
| - | English |
MicroHobby | 05/1991 | 29 | ZX Spectrum | 89 out of 100 | 89
| - | Spanish |
Zero | 07/1991 | 75 | Amiga | 89 out of 100 | 89
| David Wilson | English |
The One | 12/1989 | 113,114 | Atari ST | 88 out of 100 | 88
| Gary Whitta | English |
Zero | 01/1990 | 52,53 | Atari ST | 88 out of 100 | 88
| Sean Kelly, Duncan McDonald | English |
Joystick | 11/1990 | 117 | Amstrad GX 4000 | 87 out of 100 | 87
| J'm Destroy | French |
Amiga Format | 01/1990 | 46 | Amiga | 85 out of 100 | 85
| Andy Smith | English |
Your Commodore | 08/1991 | 46, 47 | C64 | 85 out of 100 | 85
| Richard Taylor | English |
C+VG (Computer and Video Games) | 07/1991 | 77 | Amiga | 83 out of 100 | 83
| - | English |
ACE (Advanced Computer Entertainment) | 01/1990 | 51 | Amiga | 805 out of 1000 | 81 | Laurence Scotford | English |
Crash | 03/1991 | 45 | ZX Spectrum | 81 out of 100 | 81
| Nick, Mark | English |
Amiga Action | 01/1990 | 94,95 | Amiga | 80 out of 100 | 80
| Steve Merrett, Doug Johns, Steve White | English |
Joystick | 01/1990 | 126 | Amiga | 80 out of 100 | 80
| Duy Minh | French |
Amiga Computing | 02/1990 | 52 | Amiga | 79 out of 100 | 79
| Green | English |
ST Action | 01/1990 | 74 | Atari ST | 79 out of 100 | 79
| - | English |
Power Play | 02/1990 | 48 | Amiga | 79 out of 100 | 79
| Henrik Fisch | German |
Power Play Sonderheft 2 | 1990 | 102 | Amiga, Atari ST | 79 out of 100 | 79
| Volker Weitz | German |
The Games Machine | 01/1990 | 82 | Amiga | 78 out of 100 | 78
| Mark Caswell | English |
Commodore Format | 07/1991 | 32,33 | C64 | 78 out of 100 | 78
| Andy | English |
Zzap | 03/1991 | 37 | C64 | 78 out of 100 | 78
| - | English |
Raze | 03/1991 | 38 | Amstrad GX 4000 | 75 out of 100 | 75
| Julian Boardman | English |
Power Play Sonderheft 2 | 1990 | 102 | C64 | 72 out of 100 | 72
| Volker Weitz | German |
Zzap | 02/1990 | 74 | Amiga | 70 out of 100 | 70
| Robin Hogg, Phil King | English |
Amiga Power | 06/1991 | 89 | Amiga | 70 out of 100 | 70
| Stuart Campbell | English |
Amiga Joker | 02/1990 | 28 | Amiga | 69 out of 100 | 69
| Uwe Rönitz | German |
Sinclair User | 03/1991 | 23 | ZX Spectrum | 69 out of 100 | 69
| Chris Jenkins | English |
Zzap | 08/1991 | 18 | C64 | 67 out of 100 | 67
| - | English |
Amiga Power | 03/1991 | 83,86 | Amiga | 3 out of 5 | 60
| - | English |
ST Format | 08/1991 | 67 | Atari ST | 58 out of 100 | 58
| - | English |
Power Play | 04/1990 | 106 | Atari ST | 56 out of 100 | 56
| Henrik Fisch | German |
ASM (Aktueller Software Markt) | 01/1990 | 39 | Amiga | 6.4 out of 12 | 53
| Bernd Zimmermann | German |
ASM (Aktueller Software Markt) | 01/1990 | 39 | Atari ST | 6.2 out of 12 | 52
| Bernd Zimmermann | German |
Amiga Force | 01/1993 | 14 | Amiga | - | -
| - | English |
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