[{"TitleName":"Micronaut One","Publisher":"Nexus Productions Ltd","Author":"Ian Ellery, Pete Cooke, Robin Candy","YearOfRelease":"1987","ZxDbId":"0003182","Reviews":[{"Issue":{"Name":"Crash Issue 43, Aug 1987","Price":"£1","ReleaseDate":"1987-07-30","Editor":"Roger Kean","TotalPages":116,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Roger Kean\r\nAssistant Editor: Barnaby Page\r\nStaff Writers: Lloyd Mangram, Richard Eddy, Ian Phillipson, Ben Stone\r\nPhotographers: Cameron Pound, Michael Parkinson\r\nOffice: Sally Newman\r\nTechnical Editor: Simon N Goodwin\r\nAdventure: Derek Brewster\r\nPBM: Brendon Kavanagh\r\nStrategy: Philippa Irving\r\nLondon: John Minson\r\nContributors: Gareth Adams, Jon Bates, Robin Candy, Mel Croucher, Mike Dunn, Franco Frey, Dominic Handy, Nick Roberts, Mark Rothwell, Paul Sumner\r\n\r\nPRODUCTION\r\n\r\nProduction Controller: David Western\r\nArt Director: Gordon Druce\r\nIllustrator: Oliver Frey\r\nLayout: Tony Lorton, Mark Kendrick, Tim Croton, Seb Clare\r\nProcess and Planning: Matthew Uffindell, Jonathan Rignall, Nick Orchard\r\nAdvertisement Manager: Roger Bennett\r\nAdvertisement Assistant: Nick Wild\r\nSubscriptions: Denise Roberts\r\nMail Order: Carol Kinsey\r\n\r\nEditorial and Production: [redacted]\r\n\r\nMail Order and Subscriptions: [redacted]\r\n\r\nADVERTISING\r\n[redacted]\r\n\r\nTypesetting by The Tortoise Shell Press, Ludlow\r\n\r\nColour origination by Scan Studios [redacted]\r\n\r\nPrinted in England by Carlisle Web Offset, [redacted] - member of the BPCC Group.\r\n\r\nDistributed by COMAG, [redacted]\r\n\r\nNo material may be reproduced whole or in part without written consent of the copyright holders. We cannot undertake to return any written material sent to CRASH unless accompanied by a suitably stamped addressed envelope. Unsolicited written or photo material which may be used in the magazine is paid for at our current rates.\r\n\r\n©1987 Newsfield Limited\r\n\r\nCover by Oliver Frey"},"MainText":"Producer: Nexus\r\nRetail Price: £7.95\r\nAuthor: Pete Cooke\r\n\r\nAs a member of the Guild of Equalisers, you control a ship passing through the tunnel network of a biocomputer. The passageways are infested with Scrim - mutated fly-like predators, thriving on the computer's warmth and energy. Their eggs hatch into larvae and develop into web-spinning adult Jellyflies.\r\n\r\nYour craft can be guided along an intricate network of rectangular tunnelling, punctuated by junctions and projections, all shown on a split screen.\r\n\r\nA map of the tunnels can be called up, with your position shown. And you can set up markers as homing points for the ship's Navigational Locking System.\r\n\r\nThe vehicle can move to avoid obstacles, take alternative routes, and stalk Scrim. Collisions cause interference on the viewing screen, and directional changes are indicated on a central window in terms of spin. You can only reverse when you hit an obstacle.\r\n\r\nYour craft is equipped with a targetable weapons system which throws forward energy tendrils. Killing parasitic Scrim may require persistent firing - and exhaust your energy. Passing through a nebulous energy swarm restores it, though.\r\n\r\nAnd the craft's energy must be kept within a narrow range. Energy can be transferred to and from the craft by docking at any of four Cyclopean stations, protected by periodically closing translucent doors. At each of these, energy can be pumped into or drained from the vehicle's corresponding Energy Transfer Units (ETUs). At a safe level the energy bar is green, otherwise it's red.\r\n\r\nIf the energy level goes way beyond the limits - as it does if the craft is blocked in by Scrim webbing - the whole biocomputer complex could face explosive consequences.\r\n\r\nWhen all the Scrim on a level have been destroyed, the craft is automatically transported to the next - and worse infestation. Information on all alien life forms and the biocomputer can be accessed.\r\n\r\nAnd you can always cop out - by leaving the creature-infested passages and simply competing against time in a five-lap race through the tunnels. A pacer provides additional motivation.\r\n\r\nMicronaut One programmer Pete Cooke (Tau Ceti, Academy) reveals all - well, some - in the last CRASH.\r\n\r\nCOMMENTS\r\n\r\nControl keys: definable\r\nJoystick: Kempston, Sinclair, Cursor\r\nUse of colour: monochromatic - but you can choose the ink colour\r\nGraphics: excellent vectors and a good score line\r\nSound: limited spot FX\r\nSkill levels: two separate games: one easy, one very difficult","ReviewerComments":["Pete Cooke's works have been definitive landmarks of innovation, and Micronaut One follows suit. It's not exactly a complex game, but it is involving. The inlay sets the scene beautifully and explains the myriad of options. The tunnels appear very solid because of the mixture of masked vector graphics and the occasional wall. And perspective has been used well: not only do the Scrim move forward and backward in perspective but also, if the angle of view is changed vertically, the perspective changes accordingly. The only letdown is the sparse sound. The Tau Ceti duo were, I felt, too open visually, provoking a sense of 'what do I do next?'. But Micronaut is my sort of game - enthralling, exciting and highly playable.\r\r\nRichard Eddy","Wow! Micronaut One is really attractive - and there's a full, polished, and thoroughly enjoyable game lurking under the smooth and fast vectors. The race subgame is a nice distraction, and supplements the full gam well. The front end is polished to the point of being shiny; the vast array of options are all easily accessible from the superb select system; and it's obvious Pete Cooke has paid attention and time to all the tiny little details which make a good game seem great.\r\r\nMike Dunn","Pete Cooke has always produced first-class games, so I loaded Micronaut One in anticipation. The loading screen is a letdown - but the rest is fantastic. Graphically, Micronaut One is a smoother-moving, better-presented version of the 3-D tunnel game Zig Zag (an ancient hit by DK Tronics - CRASH Issue Five, June 1984). Gameplay is fast and furious, and the huge playing area features complex maps (one designed by yours truly...) so hours of fun can be had just exploring. Micronaut One can be a bit hard to get into, but perseverance and the inclusion of the simple race game more than make up for this. Pete Cooke has another hit on his hands, and no self-respecting games player should be without it.\r\nRobin Candy"],"OverallSummary":"General Rating: Original, visually stunning, very playable and addictive.","Page":"92,93","Denied":false,"Award":"Crash Smash","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Richard Eddy","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""},{"Name":"Mike Dunn","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""},{"Name":"Robin Candy","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[{"Text":"Flight is fast, death swift in Pete Cooke's Micronaut One."}],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Presentation","Score":"96%","Text":""},{"Header":"Graphics","Score":"91%","Text":""},{"Header":"Playability","Score":"89%","Text":""},{"Header":"Addictive Qualities","Score":"93%","Text":""},{"Header":"Overall","Score":"92%","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Your Sinclair Issue 21, Sep 1987","Price":"£1.5","ReleaseDate":"1987-08-13","Editor":"Teresa Maughan","TotalPages":100,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Teresa Maughan\r\nArt Editor: Peter George\r\nProduction Editor: Sara Biggs\r\nTechnical Editor: Phil South\r\nSoftware Editor: Marcus Berkmann\r\nDesigner: Darrell King\r\nEditorial Assistant: Angela Eager\r\nContributors: Richard Blaine, Chris Donald, Mike Gerrard, Ian Hoare, Gwyn Hughes, ZZKJ, Cliff Joseph, Tony Lee, Rick Robson, Rachael Smith, Tony Worrall\r\nAdvertisement Manager: Mark Salmon\r\nAdvertisement Executive: Julian Harriott\r\nProduction Manager: Sonia Hunt\r\nManaging Editor: Kevin Cox\r\nPublisher: Roger Munford\r\nPublishing Director: Stephen England\r\n\r\nPublished by Dennis Publishing Ltd, [redacted] Company registered in England.\r\nTypesetters: Carlinpoint [redacted]\r\nReproduction: Graphic Ideas, London\r\nPrinters: Chase Web Offset [redacted]\r\nDistribution: Seymour Press [redacted]\r\n\r\nAll material in Your Sinclair ©1987 Felden Productions, and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without the written consent of the publishers. Your Sinclair is a monthly publication."},"MainText":"Nexus\n£7.95\nReviewer: Rachael Smith\n\nAstronauts swing their thing in space, aquanauts do it under water but micronauts...?\n\nThe naughty 'nauts roam the tunnels which run through the organic, artificial brains of the biocomputers. And there's one very good reason for venturing into the grey matter of the galaxy - bugs! Not the sort of things that make a shoot 'em up crash every time you pass a zillion points... I mean real yucky nasties which hatch into grubs before growing into jellyflies.\n\nJellyfiles? Well only if you throw it. If you zap it, it vanishes, which stops it spinning a web across the tunnels and laying eggs which hatch into more larvae and - you guessed it! Isn't nature wonderful in the way that it adapts to produce a parasite capable of living on the very highest tech level?\n\nThese parasites go by the name of the Scrim and are descended from fruit flies. Their presence is far more than mere irritation because, for all the wonderful bio-engineering, the computers are highly unstable and the presence of impenetrable webs makes maintenance difficult, if not downright impossible.\n\nYou can't just leave the biocomputer running or it'll overheat faster than a Commodore power supply. What you've got to do is reach one of the four Energy Transfer Units and either drain off or pump back some power. This means you're going to be a busy little micronaut, with bugs to kill and systems to stablize.\n\nHow nice to have a game where the scenario makes some sort of sci-fi sense, but then again, Pete (Tau Ceti) Cooke has always been one for the credible plot. He's also a fine programmer, which means that your race round the passage is in just about the fastest, smoothest vector 3D seen on the Speccy.\n\nThe three stages of the nasties are well animated too. I particularly liked - or rather, particularly didn't like - the crawling, maggot-like larvae. Definitely yucky! And be prepared for a top speed chase if you encounter a jellyfly. There are also roaming service droids - at least, I think that's what they are - which get in your way unless you zap them.\n\nThe game's other elegant feature is its use of menu control complete with windows. You reach the options bar by pressing Break at any time during the game, and that's where the fun really starts.\n\nYour ship contains a lot helpful devices, first and foremost of which is a map of the tunnels. But this is more than an A to Z of the bio-brainbox. You can ask it to display a course to a sector, or perhaps one of the ETUs, and then an arrow on the control screen will indicate which way to go.\n\nThere's also an ETU panel which lets you see the state of each of the Energy units, though impending overloads are also indicated by a scrolling message on the dashboard. You stabilize the ETU that you're docked with from this screen. Add to this a quick introduction to the Scrim - a sort of instant know-your-enemy guide - and a notepad for jotting down where potential hazards lie and you're all set for a deadly time.\n\nThe game's greatest failing is killing things. It's too hard! Instead of a laser, plasma cannon or photon-blaster, your ship's equipped with a Van Der Graaf Generator.\n\nUnluckily this particular piece of kit puts a heavy drain on your power supply, and before you can say Mallory you'll be searching for an ETU to drain or perhaps a floating cloud of energy. The problem is that it takes several shots to zap even the vulnerable larvae, and despite the aid of a targetting computer, the damn things wouldn't die before my batteries did.\n\nI'm not sure whether this isn't a bit too tricky, but I'll give it the benefit of the doubt, because if you can beat the bugs on one level you head up to higher things, a greater menace and an even bigger brain... which is probably called Rachael!","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"Fast maze and shooting game with incredible graphics and a great plot, but rather too difficult for comfort!","Page":"74","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Rachael Smith","Score":"8","ScoreSuffix":"/10"}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Graphics","Score":"9/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Playability","Score":"7/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Value For Money","Score":"8/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Addictiveness","Score":"8/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Overall","Score":"8/10","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Sinclair User Issue 64, Jul 1987","Price":"£1","ReleaseDate":"1987-06-18","Editor":"David Kelly","TotalPages":100,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: David Kelly\r\nDeputy Editor: Graham Taylor\r\nStaff Writer: Jim Douglas\r\nStaff Writer: Tamara Howard\r\nArt Editor: Gareth Jones\r\nAdventure Help: Gordo Greatbelly\r\nZapchat: Jon Riglar\r\nHelpline: Andrew Hewson\r\nContributors: Richard Price, Andy Moss, Gary Rook\r\nHardware Correspondent: Rupert Goodwins\r\nAdvertisement Manager: Louise Fanthorpe\r\nDeputy Advertisement Manager: Mike Corr\r\nProduction Assistant: Alison Morton\r\nAdvertisement Secretary: Linda Everest\r\nSubscriptions Manager: Carl Dunne\r\nPublisher: Terry Pratt\r\n\r\nTelephone [redacted]\r\n\r\nSinclair User is published monthly by EMAP Business & Computer Publications\r\n\r\nCover Illustration: Warner Bros\r\n\r\nTypeset by PRS Ltd, [redacted]\r\nPrinted by Nene River Press, [redacted]\r\nDistributed by EMAP Publications Ltd.\r\n\r\n©Copyright 1986 Sinclair User ISSN No 0262-5458\r\n\r\nABC 90,215 July-Dec 1985"},"MainText":"Label: Nexus\r\nPrice: £9.95\r\nJoystick: Kempston\r\nMemory: 48K/128K\r\nReviewer: Tamara Howard\r\n\r\nOh, alright, I admit it, when I first saw Pete Tau Ceti Cooke's latest, Micronaut One, the only thing that I could think was Ooer!\r\n\r\nAnd with good reason. Micronaut One defies any other sort of description. Not only that but it contains some of the most brilliant 3D graphics ever seen on the Spectrum. For the first time ever, as far as I'm aware, you've got solid 3D fast scrolling creating a brilliant illusion of travelling along tunnels.\r\n\r\nOne recent point of reference would be Firebird's Hive.\r\n\r\nDon't even think about it - there's no comparison.\r\n\r\nMicronaut is real and solid - you'll believe you were there!! And also, Pete Cooke knows all about gameplay.\r\n\r\nIt's the graphics and gameplay which matter here so the story behind Micronaut is simple.\r\n\r\nCivilisation has taken something of a turn for the worse. Mutations are rife, barbarism is the order of the day and society has built this computer. But not just any old computer. Due to the fact that metal is in such short supply, computers have to be formed out of (gulp) living biological organisms. The resulting biocomputer is a bit on the unstable side, and needs constant maintenance. And then, there's the Scrim to think about.\r\n\r\nThe Scrim are the bad guys. Or, in this case, the bad flies. A mutated descendent of the common fruit fly, Scrim feed off the energy generated by the biocomputers. Owing to the fact that they lay eggs left, right and centre, and spin sticky webs all over the place, the scrim tend to block off access to the Energy Transfer Units (ETUs) leading to lack of maintenance, extreme instability, a short explosion and a nasty case of death for all concerned. Mass elimination of the Scrim is therefore the order of the day, making Micronaut One a sort of computerised, space-age version of Rentokil.\r\n\r\nDealing with the Scrim is not easy. Flying around in your craft, armed only with a rather puny generator, it's important to keep up the energy levels, or else your generator won't kill anything. Scrim eggs are practically indestructible, and the larvae and adult jellyfliers are pretty, tough too. So you have to keep on topping up the energy levels of your own craft, as well as those of the biocomputer. Energy clouds are useful here. Don't, as I did, keep firing at the little swarm-like things that keep coming your way, they're not masses of Scrim, they're energy particles, and if you fly into them, you'll absorb them. (By the way, when you do come across a Scrim, you'll know about it).\r\n\r\nScrim are huge. Great big umbrella shaped things that fly straight into your ship and make you go all wobbly. Huge wobbly larvae which head butt you and push you backwards for several feet. Golf-ball sized eggs which no amount of firing at, pushing about or swearing at will destroy. And thick, sticky webs which cling to the ship, and ripple gently as they pull away from the window.\r\n\r\nThe graphics are astounding. The sensation is of flying through tunnels, things appearing around corners. Scrim flying out of nowhere, and larvae leaping out at you. The ETUs are huge, blinking eyes; solid graphics which seem to fill up half the screen. Attribute problems are avoided by the use of two colours.\r\n\r\nIt's a triumph of programming, and a fiendishly difficult game.- There are several windows which you can summon from the main menu to help you. Maps, ETU energy displays, information about the Scrim. The skill lies in knowing which window to summon up when you get a message or a warning. A monitor will tell you where the webs are, and which of the ETUs is in danger. It's up to you to get there and sort it all out. And boy, is that hard.\r\n\r\nThere's also a race game in here as well - if you really want it - which is five laps of the tunnel as fast as you can go. It doesn't appear to be very interesting, there's nothing to shoot at, or obstacles in the way. but as an exercise in learning the layout of the tunnels and learning to fly the ship, it's pretty useful.\r\n\r\nMicronaut One is pretty ingenious. It requires thought and strategy to get through it but instant oblivion is always around the corner. It's a really nice mix of blast and skill.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"Brilliant 3D graphics, and gameplay. You may take a while to understand it, but in the end, you'll be hooked.","Page":"76,77","Denied":false,"Award":"Sinclair User Classic","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Tamara Howard","Score":"10","ScoreSuffix":"/10"}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Overall","Score":"10/10","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"C&VG (Computer & Video Games) Issue 70, Aug 1987","Price":"£1","ReleaseDate":"1987-07-16","Editor":"Tim Metcalfe","TotalPages":124,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"C+VG TEAM\r\n\r\nEditor: Tim Metcalfe\r\nDeputy Editor: Paul Boughton\r\nEditorial Assistant: Lesly Walker\r\nSub-Editor: Seamus St. John\r\nArt Editor: Craig Kennedy\r\nAdventure Writers: Keith Campbell, Steve Donoghue, Matthew Woodley\r\nAmerican Correspondent: Marshall M. Rosenthal\r\nArcades: Clare Edgeley\r\nSoftware Consultant: Tony Takoushi\r\nPublicity: Clive Pembridge\r\nAdvertisement Manager: Garry Williams\r\nAdvertisement Executive: Katherine Lee\r\nAd Production: Debbie Pearson\r\nPublisher: Terry Pratt\r\nCover: Gary Ward\r\n\r\nEditorial and Advertisement Offices: [redacted]\r\n\r\nJuly-December 106,571"},"MainText":"MACHINES: Spectrum\r\nSUPPLIER: Nexus\r\nPRICE: £8.95\r\n\r\nHey, there's something wrong here! This game isn't a coin-op conversion. It doesn't feature characters from a TV cartoon. It doesn't feature characters to do with a new film. Some mistake surely?!\r\n\r\nTell you what though, it is a cracking mixture of action and strategy and features some of the most stunning 3D I've ever seen on the Spectrum.\r\n\r\nPeter Cooke can be relied upon to produce original and challenging games and he's done it again with Micronaut One - set inside a massive Biocomputer riddled with enough pests to keep Rentokill in business for at least a couple of light years.\r\n\r\nPlay the game and you become a member of the Guild of Equalisers, formed to protect the asteroid based biocomputers from infestation.\r\n\r\nAs with all systems, the biocomputer has predators, the Scrim, a mutated descendant of the fruit fly, Drosophilia.\r\n\r\nThe Scrim live in the Tunnels, feeding on free energy and thriving on the warm and damp environment. As part of their work Guild must keep the tunnels clear of Scrim eggs and webs.\r\n\r\nThe Scrim has a three stage life-cycle in the tunnels. Eggs are laid by adult Scrim. They are very strong and usually impervious to the Guild's weapons.\r\n\r\nThe eggs grow very quickly in the energy rich tunnels and continue to feed until they split and form the fully adult Jellyfly.\r\n\r\nJellyflyers are fast moving and will search for a section of tunnel to build an energy web and lay their eggs to begin one lifecycle all over again.\r\n\r\nThe objective of the game is to rid the tunnels of any Scrim while maintaining the energy.\r\n\r\nWhen all the Scrim have been eliminated in a tunnel complex the Guild will transfer you to a more unstable and heavily infested area.\r\n\r\nTo begin life as a Guild member, move the arrow to the Play option on the main menu and press fire. The screen will clear and a new set of options will appear, the game menu, You'll see View, Map, E.T.U., Info, Pad, and Misc, options at the top of the screen.\r\n\r\nSelect the View option, The top of the screen, the viewscreen, will show you view of the tunnels. Now left, right, up and down will move you ship about through the tunnels and fire will fire the ships weapons. In addition the keys Q and W allow you to move up and down in the tunnel to avoid obstacles.\r\n\r\nBelow the viewscreen are the ship's instruments. A small rectangular window, the scanner shows the tunnel section that you are in, the direction that you are facing, the time and whether your weapons are targetted.\r\n\r\nBelow the scanner are three bars. The first shows the ship's speed, the second the ship's energy level and the third is a message window for information about the Biocomputer.\r\n\r\nThe next menu is Map. This shows a map of the tunnels which wraps round the screen and can be scrolled from left to right.\r\n\r\nYour position is marked by a X and you can also set a marker to any section simply by pointing at it and pressing fire.\r\n\r\nThese markers are used by the ships Navigational Locking System (Navlock on the map menu bars) to calculate a route for your ships to anywhere in the tunnels.\r\n\r\nThe E.T.U. menu shows the energy levels of the four Energy Transfer Units in the tunnel complex.\r\n\r\nThe Info menu simply gives an overview of the biocomputer and provides a valuable identification chart for the differing life stages of the Scrim.\r\n\r\nThere are several extra options available on the main menu.\r\n\r\nOf course you can always work out your own routes to the ETU's if you reckon you know better than your on-board computer.\r\n\r\nThe scrolling is amazingly fast for the Spectrum - you can make things move VERY rapidly. And then there's the terrific sense of being enclosed by the tunnel walls. All very atmospheric.\r\n\r\nMicronaut is Pete Cooke's best yet. And the blurb contains the best excuse why there's no real sound effects in a Spectrum game I reckon I've ever read.\r\n\r\nWhat is it? Well Pete says that because the tunnels are kept in a semi-vacuum condition you wouldn't be able to hear much. Nice excuse - great game.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"28","Denied":false,"Award":"Game of the Month","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Tim Metcalfe","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Graphics","Score":"9/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Sound","Score":"5/10 (for cheek!)","Text":""},{"Header":"Value","Score":"9/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Playability","Score":"9/10","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]}]}]