Software:Armalyte

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Armalyte
ArmalyteUSBoxShotC64.jpg
North American cover art
Developer(s)Cyberdyne Systems
Publisher(s)Thalamus Ltd
Platform(s)Commodore 64, Amiga, Atari ST
Release
Genre(s)Scrolling shooter
Mode(s)Single-player
Multiplayer

Armalyte is a left-to-right scrolling shooter in the style of Gradius released for the Commodore 64 by Thalamus Ltd. It was marketed by Thalamus as the sequel to Delta, which was also a left-to-right horizontally scrolling shoot 'em up, but Delta was created by a different programming team.

Gameplay

The aim of Armalyte is to progress to the end of a long, horizontally scrolling level where the screen will cease scrolling and battle will commence with a boss. Beating the Boss allows the player to progress to the next level. There are eight levels in all. Smaller Bosses are encountered midway through each level and these also have to be beaten to progress further.

During each level the player encounters numerous small enemy ships, many of which fly in fixed formation. Levels also feature scenery which can destroy the player's ship if touched. Weapons can be upgraded through an upgrade system (see below).

A crucial difference with a number of earlier scrolling shooters is that any weapons upgrades gained during a level are not lost if the player's ship is destroyed. However, at the start of the next level, the player's ship loses all upgrades (except for the Batteries and Generators).

Weapon system

The player's ship (coloured blue) begins the game with a forward-firing laser that produces two shots, and a battery with a single storage cell that powers the ship's 'Super Weapon' (see below). In the one player game there is also an automatic drone ship that has the same capability as the main ship and which follows the main ship around the screen. In the two player game the drone is replaced by a second ship (coloured red and with a different design) that is fully controllable by the second player.

A number of "munitions pods" are positioned throughout the levels and, if shot repeatedly, transform sequentially into a variety of power-ups:

  • Extra forward fire - increases the number of forward shots from two to four.
  • Tail fire - adds rear-firing shots.
  • Vertical cannon - adds vertical fire (both up and down directions on screen).
  • Trident - adds two flanking guns to enhance the forward firing rate.
  • Converge - adds two more shots to the forward-firing gun by diverting ammo from the tail gun.
  • Generator - increases the recharge rate of the ship's battery.
  • Battery - adds an extra storage cell to the ship's battery, up to a maximum of four.

The power-ups are collected simply by colliding the ship with them. If the munitions pod is captured without having been converted to a power-up then it makes the ship invulnerable for 5 seconds.

When there is charge in the ship's battery, the player can fire a 'Super Weapon'. There are three types of Super Weapon each of which is fired in the forward direction:

  • Type A - a long, sustained blast that can pass through scenery features.
  • Type B - releases several small laser blasts around the spacecraft.
  • Type C - similar to Type A, only the blast is much shorter and does not pass through scenery features.

Firing these weapons reduces the charge in the battery, with Type A the greatest drain, and Type C the least.

The drone ship in single player mode is indestructible and follows the player's ship around the screen. When the main ship fires any of its weapons, the drone will fire the same weapon at the same time. The drone ship can be made to freeze in its position by pressing the space bar on the keyboard, thus allowing the main ship to move independently.

In the Two Player Mode, the drone ship is replaced by another ship which is fully controllable by the second player and has all the same features. The number of Munitions Pods is doubled in the Two Player Mode.

Development

The in-game credits list the members of Cyberdyne Systems as John Kemp (systems programming), Dan Phillips (main programming), and Robin Levy (all graphics, attack waves, level design). Music and sound effects were provided by Martin Walker, who was the programmer of Thalamus' fourth release Hunter's Moon.

Reception

Reception
Review score
PublicationScore
Zzap!6497%[2]
Award
PublicationAward
Zzap!64Gold Medal

Armalyte was critically acclaimed by several magazines and was given the following awards and/or ratings:

  • Gold Medal in issue 46 of Zzap!64 magazine, with an overall rating of 97%.
  • SuperStar from Commodore User magazine.[citation needed]
  • C&VG Hit from Computer and Video Games magazine.[citation needed]
  • A FAB award and a 93% rating from Computer Games Week magazine.[citation needed]
  • Best 8-bit Graphics of the Year at the Golden Joystick Awards.[3]

Legacy

Cyberdyne Systems announced that Armalyte 2 was being developed for the Commodore 64, with an intended 1990 release date. However, the moving away of key team member Robin Levy made it impossible to progress on the graphical elements, and the game was ultimately cancelled.[4] In 1991 a game called Armalyte was released on the Amiga and Atari ST by Arc Development. This wasn't a port of Armalyte, but a remake created by Arc Developments. A remake for the Game Boy Advance was in the works, but never completed.[4]

In 2013 Dan Phillips and Robin Kemp formally announced that they had reunited and were resuming work on Armalyte 2. However, they stressed that due to the geographic separation between them and their lack of access to working Commodore 64 hardware, it would be a very long time before the game was finished, if ever, and that it might consist of no more than a single level.[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Armalyte at GameFAQs
  2. "Zzap!64 100th Issue Pull-Out Special Page 5". http://www.zzap64.co.uk/zzap100/100thspec5.html. 
  3. "Computer & Video Games". http://www.worldofspectrum.org/showmag.cgi?mag=C+VG/Issue092/Pages/CVG09200062.jpg. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Fisher, Andrew (December 2013). "The Commodore 64 Games that Time Forgot". Retro Gamer (Imagine Publishing) (122): p. 53. 

External links