REVIEWS COURTESY OF ZXSR

Quackers
by John F. Cain, S. Grant
Rabbit Software Ltd
1983
Your Spectrum Issue 1, Jan 1984   page(s) 50

Rabbit Software's Quackers is virtually identical to a shooting gallery at the fair. Ducks and rabbits glide across the screen so slowly that it's almost impossible to miss them, although it's almost more fun if you try. Slightly more difficult is the last part of the game where, having gunned down all the targets, you're given the chance to 'keep the turtle hopping' by shooting at it as it moves quickly across the screen. A few moments of gratuitous violence for all concerned.

Slap Dab and Traxx are both joystick compatible, but surprisingly, Quackers isn't. It does, however, let you define your own keys.


REVIEW BY: Ron Smith

Transcript by Chris Bourne

Crash Issue 1, Feb 1984   page(s) 56

Producer: Rabbit, 16K
£5.99

Quackers is designed more for children than shoot 'em up addicts, but its cheerful graphics should make it popular. It's set in a fairground duck shooting gallery, where four rows of repeated objects, ducks, cats, rabbits, faces and a giant turtle, move alternately in opposite directions before your gun barrel. User-defined keys or cursor, which means you can use AGF or Protek joysticks.


Transcript by Chris Bourne

Crash Issue 2, Mar 1984   page(s) 60

Producer: Rabbit, 16K
£5.99

Quackers is designed more for children than shoot 'em up addicts, but its cheerful graphics should make it popular. It's set in a fairground duck shooting gallery, where four rows of repeated objects, ducks, cats, rabbits, faces and a giant turtle, move alternately in opposite directions before your gun barrel. User-defined keys or cursor, which means you can use AGF or Protek joysticks.


Transcript by Chris Bourne

Crash Issue 3, Apr 1984   page(s) 78

Producer: Rabbit, 16K
£5.99

Quackers is designed more for children than shoot 'em up addicts, but its cheerful graphics should make it popular. It's set in a fairground duck shooting gallery, where four rows of repeated objects, ducks, cats, rabbits, faces and a giant turtle, move alternately in opposite directions before your gun barrel. User-defined keys or cursor, which means you can use AGF or Protek joysticks.


Transcript by Chris Bourne

All information in this page is provided by ZXSR instead of ZXDB