Castle Master is a 1990 video game developed by Incentive Software and published by Domark. It was released for the ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, Amiga, Atari ST and IBM PC. A compilation was released also in 1990 that contained the original and the sequel, Castle Master II: The Crypt.

Castle Master
Cover art of the compilation release
Developer(s)Incentive Software
Publisher(s)Domark
Designer(s)Ian Andrew
Programmer(s)Chris Andrew
Paul Gregory
Sean Ellis
Artist(s)Mike Salmon
Writer(s)Mel Croucher
EngineFreescape
Platform(s)ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Amiga, IBM PC
Release1990
Genre(s)Role-playing, puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay

edit
 
The player approaches the castle, which is rendered in flat-shaded 3D polygons.

Initially the player chooses between playing as the prince or princess. The character not chosen is then taken away by a dragon to Castle Eternity. (The location of keys and some other items differ slightly between the two characters.)

The game requires the player, through a first person view, to explore Castle Eternity. There are riddles on many of the castle walls, which give gameplay hints. There are also keys and pentacles hidden in various locations for the player to collect. Many rooms contain spirits which attack the player and reduce his or her health. The player's health (represented by a barbell where weights indicate the amount) is also the player's strength which is important for some puzzles. The player's only weapon is an unlimited supply of rocks to throw, but a single hit is sufficient to exorcise most of the spirits. The ultimate goal is to kill the boss spirit Magister (who can only be killed when all other spirits in the castle are destroyed) and thereby rescue the character's opposite number.

There are no lives for the player; if health is reduced to nothing the game is restarted from the beginning unless the player loads a saved game.

Development and Release

edit

Castle Master was built on the Freescape engine, which allows solid, fully three-dimensional environments to be produced. The same engine had been used for Driller, Dark Side and Total Eclipse which had previously been released by Incentive Software. Castle Master marked the first release in a deal with Domark who marketed the game leaving Incentive free to concentrate on the development.[1]

A sequel using the same engine, Castle Master II: The Crypt, was published together with Castle Master on a compilation exclusively for members of The Home Computer Club. The two games later featured on Domark's Virtual Worlds compilation in 1991 which also included Driller and Total Eclipse.[2]

The game's backstory was written by Mel Croucher.

Reception

edit

The game was ranked the 39th best game for the Amiga in Issue 0 of Amiga Power (May 1991). The budget re-release was reviewed by Linda Barker in Issue 17 (September 1992) receiving a 70% score.[4]

Further reading

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Domark takes Incentive". ACE. No. 29. Future Publishing. February 1990. p. 7. Retrieved 7 August 2024.
  2. ^ "Virtual Worlds". Crash. No. 91. Newsfield. August 1991. p. 63. Retrieved 7 August 2024.
  3. ^ Game review, Amstrad Action magazine, Future Publishing, issue 56, May 1990
  4. ^ Amiga Power magazine issue 0, Future Publishing, May 1991
  5. ^ "Jeux & stratégie NF 8". July 1990.
edit