[{"TitleName":"The James Bond 007 Collection","Publisher":"Domark Ltd","Author":"","YearOfRelease":"1991","ZxDbId":"0011431","Reviews":[{"Issue":{"Name":"Your Sinclair Issue 72, Dec 1991","Price":"£2.2","ReleaseDate":"1991-11-07","Editor":"Andy Hutchinson","TotalPages":76,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor (Libra): Andy Hutchinson\r\nArt Editor (Leo): Andy Ounsted\r\nGames Editor (Virgo): James Leach\r\nStaff Writer (Cancer): Linda Barker\r\nArt Assistant (Pisces): Maryanne Booth\r\nAdvertising Manager (Aries): Cheryl Beesley\r\nProduction Coordinator (Scorpio): Melissa Parkinson\r\nPublisher (Scorpio): Jane Richardson\r\nPublishing Assistant (Gemini): Michele Harris\r\nGroup Publisher (Gemini): Greg Ingham\r\nCirculation Director (Libra): Sue Hartley\r\n\r\nYour Sinclair, Future Publishing [redacted]\r\n\r\nSubscriptions: Pearl Stokes (Aries) [redacted]\r\nDistribution: MMC [redacted]\r\n\r\nCover Illustration (Taurus): Colin Jones\r\nISSN 0269 6983\r\nABC Jan-June 1991 65,444\r\n\r\nYour Sinclair is lovingly carved out of raffia by the same insane bunch of lollipop theieves who create Commodore Format (Libra), Amstrad Action (Libra), Amiga Format (Leo), 8000 Plus (Libra), PC Answers (Leo), PC Plus (Libra), Sega Power (Virgo), Amiga Power (Taurus), Amiga Shopper (Taurus), Classic CD (Gemini), Needlecraft (Aries), Mountain Biking UK (Gemini), PC Format (Virgo), Public Domain (Virgo) and ST Format (Leo).\r\n\r\nBut what we really want to know is... have you ever leapt into a bowl of trifle from 15 feet wearing nothing but a pair of slippers and a slightly bemused expression?"},"MainText":"THE JAMES BOND COLLECTION\r\nDomark\r\n£12.99 cass\r\nReviewer: Rich Pelley\r\n\r\nIt probably wasn't a massively hard job for Domark to decide which three Bond games to include in their compilation, not when you consider that only three of their conversions have actually been any good. That's right, they've only included the ones with an 'L' in the title, but not The Living Daylights.\r\n\r\nTHE SPY WHO LOVED ME\r\n\r\nFor the most part this is a shamelessly obvious Spy Hunter rip-off. It stars you as the driver of a car which is speeding feverishly up a vertically scrolling screen. Apart from drive, what you've got to do is avoid other vehicles and pick up weapons. A speedboat level, an underwater level and a running-down-a-corridor level are also included, but things become dull pretty quickly.\r\n65°\r\n\r\nA LICENCE TO KILL\r\n\r\nThis is the James Bond game that has been re-released on compilations more times than I've had my appendix out. It's also the oldest of the included games and arguably the best. It adopts the form of six contrasting levels, all of the addictive shoot-'em-up variety. Er, and the graphics are nice too.\r\n75°\r\n\r\nLIVE AND LET DIE\r\n\r\nTake Road Blasters, remove the car, add a speedboat, change the name to Live And Let Die and you'll realise that what I'm trying to say is that Live And Let Die is quite like Road Blasters (but with a speedboat instead of a car). 'Quite' is the most suitable adverb I can come up with to describe the fun factor, but a bug (in my version at least) that won't allow you past Level Three doesn't help. In fact, it completely ruins the whole game.\r\n65°\r\n\r\nAnd there you go, an average compilation. Buy it at your own (and no one else's) discretion.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"68","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Rich Pelley","Score":"73","ScoreSuffix":"%"}],"ScreenshotText":[{"Text":"Doesn't look like any kind of James Bond film I've ever seen."},{"Text":"It's an all-action game. That's why there's no Martinis or girlies!"}],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Overall","Score":"73%","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[{"Header":"Live and Let Die","Score":"65%","Text":"Live and Let Die"},{"Header":"The Spy Who Loved Me","Score":"65%","Text":"The Spy Who Loved Me"},{"Header":"Licence To Kill","Score":"75%","Text":"Licence to Kill"}]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Sinclair User Issue 118, Dec 1991","Price":"£1.85","ReleaseDate":"1991-11-18","Editor":"Garth Sumpter","TotalPages":68,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Garth Sumpter\r\nDesign: Andrea Walker\r\nDesign: Yvette Nicholls\r\nSoftware Editor: Steve Keen\r\nSU Crew: John Cook, Pete Gerrard, Phillip Fisch, Ian Watson, Alan Dykes\r\nAd Manager: Jerry Hall\r\nAd Production: Jo Gleissner\r\nMarketing Man.: Mark Swan\r\nMarketing Women: Sarah Ewing, Sarah Hilliard\r\nPublisher: Graham Taylor\r\nManaging Director: Terry Pratt\r\n\r\n(c)1991 EMAP IMAGES\r\n[redacted]\r\n\r\nColour by Proprint.\r\nPrinted by Kingfisher"},"MainText":"Label: Domark\r\nMemory: 48K/128K\r\nPrice: £12.99 Tape, N/A Disk\r\nReviewer: Steve Keen\r\n\r\nThe name is Bond, James Bond. Over the last few decades this famous celluloid super-spy has struck fear into the hearts and minds of some amazingly camp super-criminals.\r\n\r\nArmed with his PPK and polite English public school banter or schlightly reefined shhcottish drawl, there probably isn't a better cinema character you could choose to transfer onto the computer screen. But the original all-pace action of the Bond films is sadly lacking in DoMark's Bond compilation.\r\n\r\nThe titles included are Live And Let Die, Licence To Kill and The Spy Who Loved Me, the plots meandering around the respective film scenarios. Live and Let Die involves Bond fighting a vicious Caribbean dictator and aspiring drug baron, from the comfort of a powerboat, shooting and rocketing baddies as he whisks his way through canals, swamps and fjords avoiding close contact with enemy mines and fire power. The ever-friendly CIA drop all the weapons and supplies necessary for Bond to finish the mission - all you have to do is pick them up.\r\n\r\nThe Spy Who Loved Me was the movie that unleashed Q's Lotus Esprit turbo special on an unsuspecting world and if I ever discover who stole my model of it twelve years ago I'll have 'em. The plot involves Bond and a beautiful Russian spy investigating the disappearance of Soviet and British nuclear Submarines. The baddie is a big fish called Stromberg and the action takes place on land and water. You even encounter Jaws the famous metal toothed man!\r\n\r\nLicence to Kill has our her takes on an evil drug baron. A variety of transport including a helicopter, a seaplane and some underwater swimming are all represented.\r\n\r\nThe graphics and gameplay of all these games was originally disappointing, and unlike a Chatea Neuf de Pape, they don't improve with age. That's not to say they're completely dire - if anything, like our excellent white wine, they're extremely dry. It's just that you'd have hoped for something with a little more body with licences like this.\r\n\r\nLicence to Kill has the best bouquet of the bunch, due to the number of vehicles and scenarios yo have to master but overall, even with three games in the package I'm afraid they not going to leave you either shaken or even gently stirred.","ReviewerComments":["I'm a great Bond fan, but there's neither Pussy Galore, Plenty O'Toole to keep up your interest. The compilation is certainly never going to give you a Good Night so althought the games are a bit wet, your Martini should always remain dry.\r\nGarth Sumpter"],"OverallSummary":"Disappointing licence but the popularity of the films probably means that this pack will sell well, so don't be too disappointed if you get it for Christmas.","Page":"41","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Steve Keen","Score":"58","ScoreSuffix":"%"},{"Name":"Garth Sumpter","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[{"Text":"Disaster on the rocky river of doom!"},{"Text":"James Bond Helicopter hire, $50 per hour or a quick snog."},{"Text":"Nice dinner jacket Jim, where's the PPK?"},{"Text":"Where are the CIA when you need them? Up the boozer, that's where!"}],"BlurbText":[{"Text":"BOND FAX\r\n\r\nIt is claimed that the author, Ian Fleming who originally invented the character of James got the name from two streets, James Street and Bond Street, both of which are off Oxford street in the heart of London's west end.\r\n\r\nThe Spy Who Loved Me is credited as having the world's largest studio set built in 1976 at Pinewood studios in Buckinghamshire. It accommodated 1.2 million gallons of water an oil tanker and three nuclear submarines!"}],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Graphics","Score":"62%","Text":""},{"Header":"Sound","Score":"61%","Text":""},{"Header":"Playability","Score":"59%","Text":""},{"Header":"Lastability","Score":"64%","Text":""},{"Header":"Overall","Score":"58%","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]}]}]