Atari Atari XE/XL games list! 
 
Total reviews!
Handheld: 57
16/32bit Computers: 830
8bit Computers: 416
8bit Consoles: 58
16bit Consoles: 78
32/64bit Consoles: 107
128bit Consoles: 28
OnLine members
Currently: 16
Best on 8bit micro!
International Karate + - Commodore64
Xyphoes Fantasy - AmstradCPC
Arkanoid II - AmstradCPC
Pang - AmstradCPCPlus
Wrath of the Demon - Commodore64
Night Hunter - AmstradCPC
Barbarian - AmstradCPC
Prince of Persia - SamCoupe
Lemmings - SamCoupe
Best on 16bit micro!
Turrican II - Amiga
Shadow of the Beast - Amiga
Jim Power - Amiga
Agony - Amiga
Turrican 2 - AtariST
Project X - Amiga
Super Frog - Amiga
Flashback - Amiga
Dark Seed - Amiga
Flashback - Archimedes
Warlocks - Archimedes
Cannon Fodder - Amiga
Turrican II - PC
Universe - Amiga
Hurrican - PC
Tyrian - PC
Super Stardust - AmigaAGA
Pac-Mania - X68000
Best on 8bit consoles!
Best on 16bit consoles!
Jim Power - snes
Donkey Kong Country - snes
Aladdin - snes
Comix Zone - Megadrive
Alien Soldier - Megadrive
Blazing Lazers - pcengine
Raiden - pcengine
Super Star Soldier - pcengine
Best on 32bit consoles!
Total hits!
Free counters!
Puzzle!
Random Old Ads!
 
Game info
AtariXE

Rescue on Fractalus!

Rescue on Fractalus!
GenreAction Strategy
DeveloperLucasfilm Games
PublisherEpyx
Released1985
Rating
Graphics:8.0
Sound:7.5
Gameplay:7.0
Overall:8.0
Reviewed byndial
Rescue on Fractalus!, it's a first-person perspective sci-fi game using a unique for its time fractal technology by Lucasfilm Games for the graphics, in which your mission is to locate and rescue fellow pilots stranded in enemy territory while fighting off hostile aircraft and ground targets. The game was initially released on Atari 400/800, XL and XE computers, and later ported to Amstrad CPC, Apple II, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum.
 
Review
Rescue on Fractalus!STORY / GAMEPLAY
You take-off from your Mothership and fly your mighty Valkyrie fighter down to the planet Fractalus in order to fight through the Jaggi defenses and find and rescue downed pilots on its surface. Jaggies are an intelligent life-form from the dark sector of our galaxy, who captured the planet and made it a new home, and shot-down many of your pilots trying to free-up Fractalus. The pilots won't be jumping up and down waving at you. So, use your Long Range scanner (watching for a "blip") and view-screen (for a flashing green beacon on the surface) to find their crashed ships, in which they will wait inside until you land in range. As soon as you land and shut down your engines, the pilot will come running and knock on your rear airlock door. The game has a nice humor too. You can even kill your own pilots by not letting them in, and the knocks become slower and weaker until the pilot dies! But be careful, as sometimes a Jaggi instead of a human pilot will run on you! When you pick up a certain number of pilots (there is a flashing indication when pilot quota is reached) or run out of energy, it's back to the Mothership to leave the pilots or refill your powers. When the Mothership is near, a light will flash on the control panel and a message "MOTHERSHIP" will appear at the top of the screen.
Flight instruments also include an artificial horizon, an energy-level meter, two altimeters, a compass, a speed indicator, a device that shows the clearance between your wingtips and the canyon walls, and digital readouts that tell how many Jaggies you've destroyed, how many pilots you have to rescue, and your distance from the pilot on the long-range scanner.
The Jaggi defenses (gun surface mounts mainly) can be everywhere on Fractalus, especially on the mountain peaks. Watch for the crosshairs to appear on the main window when an enemy is near, and use your Targeting Scope to line up the enemy in the cross hairs, then launch a missile by pressing fire button. Be careful, as in advanced levels, the Jaggies will fly their (suicide) saucers directly to you which can either be shot down with your missiles or dodged. If they hit you, your shields will drain off more energy than a gun emplacement hit.
Rescue on Fractalus! was a game way ahead for its time, and what made it special and stands out from the crowd was using this Fractal technology places (hence the name of the...planet), and also it scary-like sci-fi scenario.

GRAPHICS / SOUND
The game features an impressive (for the time) first person perspective of a jagged surface in a 3D-style world using fractal technology. Instead of pre-rending the mountainous landscapes, the developers used fractals for creating distinctive landscapes that rarely duplicates. LucasArts used this technology in several of its other own titles released later (like, Ballblazer). Very few games attempt this perspective, let alone this perspective on a jagged surface like this one. The presentation of the cockpit is far from thrilling, but it's full of "working" instruments and notification lights and bars. Screen scrolling is quite smooth, especially when you use your thrusters and fly fast through the rifts and peaks of the rocky Fractalus.
Sound and music are similarly effective. The music between missions is not bad, and once you go into the levels themselves, all you get are sound effects fulfilling their purpose. There is a spot effect for every single missile you fire followed by its explosion. Cockpit sounds and thrusters' noises are equally effective, while sounds like when the pilots knocking your air-lock doors desperately, is pretty funny.
 
Screenshots
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
  • Rescue on Fractalus!
 
Gameplay sample
 
Hardware information

Atari XL/XE

Atari XL/XECPU: MOS Technology 6502C (1.79MHz for NTSC / 1.77MHz for PAL)
MEMORY: 16Kb, 64Kb to 128Kb RAM (600XL, 65XE/1200XL/800XL, 130XE respectively), 16-32Kb ROM
GRAPHICS: Upto 16 colors on screen at 160x192 or 2 colors at 384x240 (overscan) from an 128 to 256 color palette (the last available only on GTIA chip found in later than the old 400/800 models).
SOUND: (POKEY custom chip) sound generator of 4 voices, 3.5 octaves, capable for polyphonic music and sound effects.
read more...
The Atari XL/XE (default) color palette
256-color palette with 16 on-screen (for GTIA chip based models)
 
Comments
No comments added yet
 
Login to leave your message!
 
Our featured games
Lethal Species
Play old-school now!
Music Player!
Play ZX on-line!!
Play CPC on-line!!
Boot Screens!
Retro-games Trivia!
Old-school Crossword!
Is this my palette?
The logo evolution!
Manuals!
Beat them All!
Design & Developed by ndial
Google+
 
Free counters!