The Great Escape is a video game which shares a title and similar plot to the film The Great Escape. It was programmed by Denton Designs, which went on to produce the similarly acclaimed Where Time Stood Still. The Great Escape was published by Ocean Software in 1986 for the ZX Spectrum,[1] Commodore 64,[2] Amstrad CPC[3] and DOS. The well-known convertor Trevor Inns created the Commodore 64 version [4]
The Great Escape | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Denton Designs |
Publisher(s) | Ocean Software |
Platform(s) | Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, DOS, ZX Spectrum |
Release | 1986 |
Genre(s) | Action-adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Scenario
editThe player controls an unnamed prisoner of war who has been interned in a POW camp somewhere in northern Germany in 1942. The camp itself is a small castle on a promontory surrounded on three sides by cliffs and the cold North Sea. The only entry to the camp is by a narrow road through the gatehouse and anyone passing through this must be carrying the correct papers. Everywhere else in the camp is surrounded by fences or walls with guard dogs used to patrol the perimeter and guards in observation towers with searchlights posted to watch for any prisoners trying to escape. Beneath the camp, there is also a maze of tunnels and drains, although these are dangerous to enter without some kind of light. The player's task is to escape from the camp. There are a number of different ways that this can be achieved.
Gameplay
editThe gaming environment is displayed in isometric 2.5D with the player's character initially in bed at the beginning of a day in the camp. The prisoner has a daily routine, along with all the other prisoners, which includes roll call, exercising, mealtimes and bedtime. The other prisoners will follow this routine and, if the player does not control the main character for a short period of time, their character will join in the routine. There are soldiers guarding the camp and they will apprehend the player if he is seen out of routine (prison guards only arrest on touch and only detect prisoners in their line of sight or indoors).[5]
Reception
editPublication | Award |
---|---|
Crash | Smash[6] |
The ZX Spectrum version of The Great Escape was placed at number 23 in the Your Sinclair official top 100,[7] after originally being scored 9 out of 10, and a Megagame award in that magazine's January 1987 issue.[8] Both the tense atmosphere and the protagonist's 'automatic daily routine' were highlighted as excellent features.
The game won the awards for best arcade adventure and best advert of the year according to the readers of Crash,[9] as well as being the runner up for best game, and was also nominated in other categories, including best graphics.
Legacy
editA reverse engineering project to create portable C source code from the game's binary was started in 2012. The project reached a compiling state in January 2016.[10][11]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ The Great Escape at SpectrumComputing.co.uk
- ^ The Great Escape at Lemon64
- ^ The Great Escape at CPCZone
- ^ The Great Escape at Lemon64
- ^ Retro Gamer issue 101, page 60
- ^ Game review, Crash magazine, Newsfield Publications, issue 35, December 1986
- ^ The YS Official Top 100 Part 4 Archived 2006-08-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ The Great Escape Archived 2007-03-04 at the Wayback Machine review from Your Sinclair issue 13, at 'The Your Sinclair Rock 'n' Roll Years'
- ^ THE 1986 CRASH READERS’ AWARDS
- ^ The-Great-Escape on github.com/dpt
- ^ The Great Escape slides by David Thomas