Shoot-'Em-Up Construction Kit (a.k.a. SEUCK) is a game creation system for the Commodore 64, Amiga and Atari ST created by Sensible Software and published by Outlaw (part of Palace Software) in 1987. It allows the user to make simple shoot 'em ups by drawing sprites and backgrounds and editing attack patterns. The advertising promoted the Kit with the phrase "By the programmers of Wizball and Parallax".
Shoot'Em-Up Construction Kit | |
---|---|
Publisher(s) | Outlaw |
Platform(s) | Commodore 64, Amiga, Atari ST |
Release | 1987 |
Genre(s) | Game Creation System |
Design
editThe Kit presents users with a series of menus for customising every aspect of the game. Level graphics are created with the Background Editor, using a series of blocks for plotting into the level maps' all moving elements are designed with the Sprite Editor. Sprites are assigned to "Objects" - for example, enemy bullets - with separate animation and colour settings. Editing the "enemy bits" changes the behaviour of an enemy (which projectiles it may shoot, how many points it is worth), while "player limitations" does the same for Player 1 (or player 2, if enabled). Whereas the Commodore 64 version contains a simple Sound FX Editor with slider controls, on the Amiga and ST versions this feature is replaced with IFF sounds.
Enemies are added to the game by placing them on the background and then moving them, with options to link enemies together. The front end (title screen) may also be edited.
Games can feature still screens (held for a set number of seconds), "push" scrolling (based on the player's movement) or constant vertical scrolling. Bonus point items are possible, as well as extra lives awarded at regular scoring intervals.
SEUCK is packaged with sample games to demonstrate what may be done with the kit. The Commodore 64 version comes with Slap 'n' Tickle (inspired by Slap Fight), Outlaw (a Wild West shoot 'em up in the style of the arcade game Commando), Transputer Man (set inside a computer and partially inspired by the arcade game Robotron 2084), and Celebrity Squares (featuring graphics drawn by several C64 personalities including video game journalists Gary Liddon and Gary Penn).[1] The Amiga and Atari versions (released in 1989)[2] feature Slap 'n' Tickle, Quazar, and an "army man" game, Blood 'N' Bullets, which features a sound effect of "Okay, suckers" sampled from the Red Dwarf episode "Queeg".
At the height of the software's popularity game companies and magazines received many games created with the Kit. [3]
Reception
editSEUCK was well received, earning a Zzap! Gold Medal Award.[4] SEUCK was reviewed in Commodore Disk User Issue 2.
Legacy
editWhile attending college Ray Larabie, later known for his custom typefaces, created several games using SEUCK which spread throughout the Amiga community via the BBS network and some were included on magazine coverdisks. These included Monster Truck Rally, Wielder Of Atoms, Mulroney Blast and Smurf Hunt.[citation needed]
Italian software company, System Editoriale s.r.l. developed some games with SEUCK such as Emiliano Sciarra's Ciuffy and Amadeus Revenge.[citation needed]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "The SEUCK Vault".
- ^ Suck, Michael (February 1989). "Konvertierungen" [Conversions]. Aktueller Software Markt (in German). p. 74. Retrieved 2019-10-16.
- ^ "The SEUCK Vault".
- ^ "Zzap! Test: Shoot 'Em Up Construction Kit". Zzap!64 (32). Newsfield: 28–30. December 1987. Retrieved 2013-05-29.