Killer Kong is a clone of Donkey Kong written for the ZX Spectrum by Gary Capewell and published by Blaby Computer Games in 1983.[1]
Killer Kong | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Gary Capewell[1] |
Publisher(s) | Blaby Computer Games |
Platform(s) | ZX Spectrum |
Release | 1983 |
Genre(s) | Platform |
Reception
editCrash magazine called Killer Kong "a very fine version with excellent graphics and plenty of screen variation."[2]
In 2011, retrogaming magazine ZX Spectrum Gamer wrote, "Killer Kong might actually be pretty good if it didn't play like a magazine type-in. The movement is really jerky–character square movement instead of pixel precision, and the barrels tend to flicker enough to make things really tricky".[3]
References
edit- ^ a b Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
- ^ "CRASH 3 - Platform Games", Crash, no. 3, April 1984
- ^ sunteam_paul (October 2011). "KILLER KONG". ZX Spectrum Gamer (1): 16–17.
External links
edit- Killer Kong at SpectrumComputing.co.uk
- Killer Kong can be played for free in the browser at the Internet Archive