Beyond the Ice Palace


by David Shea, David Whittaker, Ian Upton, Nigel Brownjohn
Elite Systems Ltd
1988
Sinclair User Issue 75, Jun 1988   page(s) 66,67

Label: Elite
Author: Paradise Software
Price: £8.95
Memory: 48K/128K
Joystick: various
Reviewer: Chris Jenkins

Why is it that girlie heroines have suddenly become popular? Could it be that the success of games like Barbarian, Vixen, Athena and Game Over has given everyone the idea that acres of female flesh on the artwork a helps a game to sell? Beats me. Still, Beyond the Ice Palace is good enough to succeed even if the hero was a fat, spotty male dwarf.

Far to the north, goes the blurb, lies a land of mystery and enchantment, a land of magic, of goblins and dragons, where the forces of of good and evil struggle endlessly for supremacy. They must mean Walsall, home of Elite, though I've never of it as a stronghold of magical adventure.

Due to some shift in the cosmic balance - mortgage rates going up, or something - the forces of evil have bonkers, burning the magic forests and forcing the peaceful woodcutters to flee. The spirits of the forest have put their heads together and come up with a magic arrow which has the ability to summon a guardian spirit. They shoot the arrow into the air, and guess who finds it - yes, muggins, it's you.

Set in the endless caverns of pixie evil, Beyond the Ice Palace revolves around the shapely heroine (as far as a 16x32 pixel sprite can be shapely) seeking out the globes of power which will overcome the forces of nastiness... you get the idea. You can leap, duck, climb ladders, and fire three types of weapon. The knife has a long range, but isn't very powerful and only travels along the ground. The sword is similar but more powerful, while the mace whirls through the air (so it's better for knocking off airborne ghoulies). You can pick up your choice of weapon at the start before plunging into the caverns, and you'll find extra weapons along the way.

Although you start with nine lives, you'll soon lose a few as you're attacked by brain-eating bats, axe-throwing ratmen, vampire moths and scuttling trolls. If you get in a really sticky corner, you can call up your secret weapon, the guardian spirit. This dopey-looking moon-faced weeble shoots around the screen, wiping it clean of your enemies. You start off with two spirits, and can pick up extra ones along the way, in order to keep you spirits up (joke!!!).

The animation is pretty nice, although when some of the flying monsters move across the backgrounds there's a fair amount of colour clash (Ugh). Sound? It's OK. Gameplay? Fair enough. Lots of blasting through mounds of rubble, leaning across moving platforms, climbing ladders, and shooty shooty shooty at the nasties. Music? The usual impeccable David Whittaker performance. Not a classic in any sense, but certainly good enough to occupy you until the NBT (Next Big Thing) comes along.


Overall: 7/10

Summary: Enjoyable though unoriginal arcade adventure romp.

Transcript by Chris Bourne

Sinclair User Issue 98, Apr 1990   page(s) 47

Label: Encore
Author: in house
Price: £2.99
Memory: 48K/128K
Joystick: various
Reviewer: Chris Jenkins

I've seen some poor games in my time, but Ice Palace must surely take the crusty cup. Although the plot has been used so many times it's due for its 600,000 mile service, and the graphics have been surpassed a hundred times already, these aren't the major problems with the game.

It's simply a dull as dull can be. Imagine Myth - all scrolling and mysterious with lots of places to explore and tasks to solve and then take all the good stuff out and you've got Ice Palace.

Your poorly animated alter-ego flickers across impossibly dull screens in search of the a key which will restore the balance between good and evil (Zzz).

Attacked from all directions by flying green sweet wrappers (alright, demonic fiends if you like) and obstructed by menacing and exciting PILES OF ROCKS which you must SHOOT.... REPEATEDLY!

There are also huge trolls which drain your energy. In fact, the whole game is a big drain on your energy, sapping your enthusiasm glands and filling you with utter apathy.

When Ice Palace first came out at full price, a couple of years ago it was generally thought of as a reasonable run/jump/explore larf but now, in the light of Myth and similar exploratory outings it really looks as sick as a dog.


Graphics: 40%
Sound: 50%
Playability: 30%
Lastability: 30%
Overall: 35%

Summary: Dullsville Arizona, Snooze City. Not Even the Mail on Sunday could wake you after playing this.

Transcript by Chris Bourne

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