词条 | Heart of Africa |
释义 |
|title= Heart of Africa |image=Heart of Africa cover.png |caption=Package cover for Heart of Africa |developer= Ozark Softscape |publisher= Electronic Arts |designer= Dan Bunten |released= {{vgrelease|NA|1985|EU|1985}} |genre= Adventure |modes= Single-player |platforms= Commodore 64 }} Heart of Africa is an adventure game for the Commodore 64 similar in style to The Seven Cities of Gold. Created by Ozark Softscape and published by Electronic Arts in 1985, it casts the player as an adventurer searching for the Lost Tomb of Pharaoh Ahnk Ahnk in Africa during the late 19th century. GameplayThe game begins with the player having disembarked a steamer north of Cairo in January 1890. The player uses a joystick to move about and choose various game options. The game is played on a screen with a small map in the center and various icons and information surrounding it. Above the map is the current month and year, to the right is information displaying how much food and money the player has, as well as the number of gifts and what is currently in the player's hands. To the left are four icons that allow the player to interact with the game. By pressing the joystick fire button the player can select one of the icons.
The player obtains items by trading with or buying from the natives. This is accomplished simply by standing next to a native in a hut to learn what he or she will sell or trade. The player then stands over the commodity and buys it. Each city has one merchant who will buy and sell valuable commodities. Native chiefs can tell the player where to find valuables, if they are brought what they want. At various times throughout the game the player can become delirious. When this happens the joystick controls will respond in a random manner until the delirium has passed. To save a game the player must go into a pub in a port city. Up to ten games can be saved on a formatted disk. The game is won when the player finds the Lost Tomb of Pharaoh Ahnk Ahnk. A splash screen is shown and special music is played. The tomb is in a different (randomly generated) spot for each game. ReceptionComputer Gaming World in 1986 called the game "something which none of the participants will soon forget". It praised the graphics and ability to complete quests not related to the main story.{{r|mckames198602}} In 1990 and surveys of pre-20th century strategy games the magazine gave the game two-plus stars out of five, however, describing it as an "arcade-like", non-historical, and less-successful sequel.[1][2] Compute! noted that Heart of Africa only had one map, unlike its predecessor, but concluded that it "should excite anyone who found Seven Cities of Gold even remotely interesting".[3]References1. ^{{cite news | url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1990&pub=2&id=75 | title=Computer Strategy and Wargames: Pre-20th Century | work=Computer Gaming World | date=October 1990 | accessdate=16 November 2013 | author=Brooks, M. Evan | pages=11}} 2. ^{{cite news | url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1993&pub=2&id=109 | title=Wargame Survey Version 2.0 | work=Computer Gaming World | date=August 1993 | accessdate=12 July 2014 | author=Brooks, M. Evan | pages=128}} 3. ^{{cite news | url=https://archive.org/stream/1986-04-compute-magazine/Compute_Issue_071_1986_Apr#page/n61/mode/2up | title=Heart of Africa | work=Compute! | date=April 1986 | accessdate=8 November 2013 | author=Randall, Neil | pages=60}} }} External links
11 : 1985 video games|Commodore 64 games|Commodore 64-only games|Danielle Bunten Berry games|Electronic Arts games|Ozark Softscape games|Strategy video games|Trade simulation games|Video games set in the 19th century|Video games set in Africa|Video games developed in the United States |
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