Octapolis (video game) explained

Octapolis
Publisher:English Software
Designer:Jukka Tapanimäki
Released:1987
Genre:Shoot 'em up, platform
Modes:1-2 players
Platforms:Commodore 64

Octapolis is a video game for the Commodore 64 written by Finnish game programmer Jukka Tapanimäki and published by English Software in 1987. The game is a hybrid between a shoot-'em-up and a platform game.[1] The title comes from the eight cities in the game.

Gameplay

Each of the eight cities contains a short shoot-'em-up part and a longer platform game part. The shoot-'em-up part includes two screens similar to Sanxion, one of which is a top-down view and the other is a side view. The game is played around a landing platform. The player's ship moves left or right automatically, and its speed can be adjusted. A sound effect tells the player when they can land on the platform and enter the platform game part. The better the player does on the shoot-'em-up part, the easier the platform game part will be.

The platform game part consists of a character resembling an astronaut moving around on single-screen (non-scrolling) rooms in which the character has to reach the exit. The character is armed with a raygun and can jump upwards or diagonally. Some enemies can be shot, some have to be avoided. The challenge is to shoot enemies well in advance and watch the movement patterns of unshootable enemies carefully to get past them. When enough rooms have been passed, the city is cleared. When all eight cities have been cleared, the game restarts with at a higher difficulty.

Development

Octapolis was Tapanimäki's first commercial release. Its shoot-'em-up phase resembles Stavros Fasoulas's Sanxion, which inspired Tapanimäki to try designing games.[2] [3] Tapanimäki sent a demo of the game to several foreign publishers, of which Hewson, CRL and English Software replied with an offer about a publication contract. Tapanimäki agreed to English Software's contract, but the company went bankrupt soon after publishing Octapolis,[4] which limited the distribution of Octapolis.[5]

The music was composed by Wally Beben.[1]

Reception

Finnish magazine C-lehti rated the game five stars out of five.[1]

Sources

References

  1. Kauppinen, Jukka O.: Suomalaisen pelialan varhaiset vuodet ja ensimmäiset suomalaiset pelit, Dome 1 November 2013. Accessed on 21 November 2015.
  2. Kuorikoski, p.13.
  3. Saarikoski, p.267.
  4. Kuorikoski, p.14.
  5. Saarikoski, p.268.

External links