[{"TitleName":"The Zacaron Mystery","Publisher":"Players Software","Author":"Ben Hall, Jonathan Nicholson, ROB","YearOfRelease":"1986","ZxDbId":"0007210","Reviews":[{"Issue":{"Name":"Your Sinclair Issue 16, Apr 1987","Price":"£1","ReleaseDate":"1987-03-12","Editor":"Teresa Maughan","TotalPages":114,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Teresa Maughan\r\nSenior Art Editor: Hazel Bennington\r\nProduction Editor: Sara Biggs\r\nAssistant Editor: Phil South\r\nStaff Writer: Markus Berkmann\r\nDesigner: Darrell King\r\nContributors: Luke C, Chris Donald, Mike Gerrard, Tony Hetherington, Ian Hoare, Gwyn Hughes, ZZKJ, Tommy Nash, Rick Robson, Rachael Smith\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 Sportscene Specialist Press 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":"FAX BOX\nTitle: The Zacaron Mystery\nPublisher: Players\nPrice: £1.99\nReviewer: Mike Gerrard\n\nThe year is 3065, which doesn't surprise me at all as we work so far ahead on magazines that anything's possible. I'm actually writing this in 1979 on a ZX-80! Such is the magic of publishing. Players is releasing some interesting adventures, and while The Zacaron Mystery won't be setting the adventure world alight, it's still a very playable adventure and worth a couple of quid of anyone's money.\n\nIn the year 3065, it seems, the earth's fuel supplies have just a few months to go, and having only had about 1500 years notice of this, naturally the governments of the world are taken by surprise. The only way out seems to be to send someone in search of two Zacaron crystals, each of which will guarantee enough energy to heat the earth for thousands of years. Hot stuff. We could do with one of those here at Rathbone Towers for when the radiators are playing up.\n\nThe first crystal is apparently to be found on a place called Prutor, where conveniently enough you find the password you'll need to get to Myra, where the second crystal is, along with acid-filled rivers and a burning sun. Sounds nasty.\n\nThe text has been nicely redesigned to be futuristic, but not so much so that you can't actually read it, as often happens, and there's an option to save to memory and a self-evident START AGAIN command. You'll need to make regular use of the SEARCH command as well as EXAMINE - SEARCH a location and it magically reveals things you didn't know were there. There's a good use of sound effects too, but I found it fairly easy to get quite a way into the game, as I suspect will most people. Don't expect this to keep you occupied till the year 3065 (remember to stock up on thermal undies if you plan being around that long), but at £1.99 it's entertaining enough.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"87","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Mike Gerrard","Score":"7","ScoreSuffix":"/10"}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Graphics","Score":"0/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Text","Score":"7/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Value For Money","Score":"8/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Personal Rating","Score":"7/10","Text":""},{"Header":"Overall","Score":"7/10","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Sinclair User Issue 56, Nov 1986","Price":"£1","ReleaseDate":"1986-10-18","Editor":"David Kelly","TotalPages":124,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: David Kelly\r\nDeputy Editor: John Gilbert\r\nSenior Staff Writer: Graham Taylor\r\nStaff Writer: Jim Douglas\r\nDesigner: Gareth Jones\r\nEditorial Secretary: Norisah Fenn\r\nAdventure Writers: Gordo Greatbelly\r\nZapchat: Jon Riglar\r\nHelpline: Andrew Hewson\r\nHardware Correspondent: John Lambert\r\nContributors: Brendon Gore, Richard Price, Rupert Goodwins, Andy Moss, Gary Rook, John Pope\r\nAdvertisement Manager: Louise Fanthorpe\r\nSenior Sales Executive: Jacqui Pope\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: Stewart Hughes\r\n\r\nIf you would like to contribute to Sinclair User please send programs or articles to:\r\nSinclair User\r\nEMAP Business & Computer Publications\r\n[redacted]\r\n\r\nOriginal programs should be on cassette and articles should be typed. Please write Program Printout on the envelopes of all cassettes submitted. We cannot undertake to return cassettes unless an SAE is enclosed. We pay £20 for each program printed and £50 for star programs.\r\n\r\nTypeset by Saffron Graphics 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: Players\r\nAuthor: Ben Hall, Jon Nicholson\r\nPrice: £1.99\r\nMemory: 48K/128K\r\nReviewer: Gary Rook\r\n\r\nZacaron Mystery is another budget adventure from Players - the budget arm of Interceptor.\r\n\r\nInterceptor itself has some very good full-price adventures and it's good to see that the company can come up with some decent budget games as well.\r\n\r\nThe plot is, admittedly, a bit hackneyed. It's the year 3065, and man is still alive: but it's close. The Earth's fuel reserves will only last a few more months. The only things which can save humanity are two Zacaron crystals. And guess who's volunteered to fly off in his spaceship and find them? Right in one.\r\n\r\nThe crystals, you are told, are located on two distant planets, Prutor and Myra. Unfortunately, you don't know exactly where on each planet. Prutor seems to be a rather rural world. Incidentally, it's well supplied with fuel. Why the population of the earth doesn't just move to Prutor, I don't know ...\r\n\r\nAs to what Myra is like, I can't tell you. To get there, you need to solve the first half of the adventure, pick up the crystal and a password which lets you into the second half.\r\n\r\nThe cassette blurb says you have to beware the acid-filled rivers and the burning sun. So it sounds a lot like Norway - obviously our contribution to the acid rain problem is on rather a larger scale than Mrs Thatcher would have us believe.\r\n\r\nFine, enough preamble - let's get to the meat of the matter.\r\n\r\nYou communicate with the program with standard verb-noun format. Explore and you don't find a great deal. There's a rather nifty lever you can pull, but if you do it too soon you die. Don't worry, if you're in the right time at the right place you'll know when to pull it.\r\n\r\nRight. The ship has landed, you've worked out how to get out of it. and you're standing on Prutor.\r\n\r\nNobody seems to have taken much interest in your arrival, so you'll have to boldly go and find them. While you're at it, it's a good idea to search every location you come across, especially if it seems to be nothing more than a space between one interesting place and another.\r\n\r\nI've managed to find about 15 locations so far, and have met two of the inhabitants of the planet. I have the suspicion that I'm not going to get any further until I do certain things with certain objects. But what I have to do, I haven't the faintest idea.\r\n\r\nI've managed to find what the old man wants, and got his message - but I can't see the castle he refers to anywhere and I can't get into the hut because whoever lives there just throws me out all the time. Maybe I should climb a tree? There's a nice big fire, but I don't seem to be able to get a torch. What am I supposed to do with the copper coins, the penknife, the silver ring...?\r\n\r\nOne nice touch is that the Spectrum Beeps when you type - and just so you don't get sick of the same idiot Beep, it changes every so often from a low pitched sound to a high pitched one.\r\n\r\nZacaron Mystery is a really quite nice budget adventure, with clipped but serviceable location descriptions and vary little of the sudden death syndrome that many game authors use when they can't be bothered to set up a decent challenge.\r\n\r\nTwo little criticisms: firstly, it keeps on printing More at the bottom of the screen, so you think something exciting is about to happen - but all the program is telling you is that it's about to repeat the room description because it's scrolled off-screen. Secondly, if it has to play a silly little tune before the game begins, why did it have to be the First Noel?","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"Budget adventures can be very variable. And this is one of the better efforts - quite a challenge and well worth the dosh.","Page":"93","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Gary Rook","Score":"4","ScoreSuffix":"/5"}],"ScreenshotText":[{"Text":"Here's the lever. I have a nasty feeling this was the wrong moment to pull it."},{"Text":"Seems too idyllic to be true. And you'd be right."}],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":[{"Header":"Overall","Score":"4/5","Text":""}],"CompilationReviewScores":[]}]}]