REVIEWS COURTESY OF ZXSR

Superman - The Man of Steel
by David Whittaker, Doug Thrower, Mike Talbot, Paul Drummond, Richard Cheek, Sarah Day, Tim McCarthy
Tynesoft
1989
Crash Issue 63, Apr 1989   page(s) 80

Clark Kent changes his clothes

Producer: Tynesoft
Change of Underwear: £7.95 cass, £14.95 disk
Author: Mike Talbot and Tim McCarthy

It's enough to make even a grown superhero cry: first Christopher Reeves buzzes off to be a 'serious actor', then the horrendous Superboy appears, and worst of all I've got a demeaning job with Tynesoft.

My Tynesoft adventure starts at STAR laboratories, where Professor Corwin informs me that unusual seismic disturbances have been recorded across the Earth, threatening the whole planet. He must go to the STAR Lab Satellite to gather further data, so he asks me to escort his space shuttle. I must protect it from floating asteroids - these can't hurt me, but contact with shards of kryptonite temporarily disables my superpowers.

Once the satellite is reached, I must deactivate its security system. Then it's outside again to biff more asteroids before flying to the Lexcorp satellite; the apparent cause of the disaster. Fighting off defence robots, I must destroy a geo-disrupter in the satellite's core to save the Earth yet again.

Superman is one of my favourite comic heroes, but Tynesoft have really messed this licence up. Superman himself looks like a matchstick figure as he walks along the horizontally-scrolling sections. Gameplay is further ruined by an annoying multiload system. The best feature is a handy cheat mode, so you don't have to play the game!

MARK [38%]

THE ESSENTIALS
Joysticks: Kempston, Sinclair
Graphics: a 'matchstick' Superman
Sound: good title tune


Is it a cassette? is it a computer game? No, it's a load of crap! Honestly, I can't believe how such a good licence could be made so bad. Although Superman is immortal (due to DC Comics' insistence), every time he fails you must reload the first level. This would just about be tolerable if the gameplay was anything to shout about. Sadly, it's not, and neither are the simple graphics. About the only thing Superman has going for it is a decent rendition of the famous theme tune.
PHIL [32%]

REVIEW BY: Mark Caswell, Phil King

Presentation40%
Graphics38%
Sound67%
Playability37%
Addictive Qualities32%
Overall35%
Summary: General Rating: There's nothing at all super about it.

Transcript by Chris Bourne

The Games Machine Issue 18, May 1989   page(s) 45

Spectrum 48/128 Cassette: £7.95, Diskette: £14.95

Superman's familiar red and blue costume is exchanged for cyan and black in the Spectrum game in a 3-D Space Harrier-style landscape which passes lowly and jerkily. Character movement also slow, as is the control response which means you have to fire before the enemy is actually in your sights. This is one licence that definitely isn't super-powered


Blurb: COMMODORE 64 Overall: 38% TGM016 ATARI ST Overall: 43% TGM016

Overall34%
Transcript by Chris Bourne

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