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Batman: The Caped Crusader

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Batman: The Caped Crusader
Developer(s)Special FX Software
Publisher(s)
Producer(s)D. C. Ward
Paul Finnegan
Designer(s)Jonathan M. Smith
Programmer(s)Keith Robinson
Frank Robinson
Robert Tinman
Jim Bagley
Artist(s)Andy Rixon
Charles Davies
Karen Davies
Composer(s)Keith Tinman
Fred Gray
Platform(s)Amiga,[1] Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Apple II, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum
Release
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Batman: The Caped Crusader is an action-adventure game developed by Special FX Software (Jonathan Smith, Zach Townsend, Charles Davies, and Keith Tinman) and published by Ocean Software in 1988. It was licensed by Data East and Erbe Software for release in North America and Spain. It was the second of three unrelated Batman games released by Ocean, after Batman in 1986 and preceding Batman: The Movie in 1989. The Apple II version was developed by California-based Quicksilver Software; it requires a 128k IIe or IIc to run. As with many other Ocean releases, the C64 port came in separate cassette and disk releases; the North American NTSC version was based on the latter. The disk version contained slightly remixed music and differences in enemy spawns.

Gameplay

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Screen from the Amiga version of Batman: The Caped Crusader.

Batman: The Caped Crusader is an arcade adventure which uses a unique style, innovated by Jonathan Smith and Charles Davies, to display the action as though it takes place in a comic book.[2] This technique involved having each game location set in its own panel, often with a comic book style caption in the upper-left corner, with inactive panels faded out behind the current active location. This concept was expanded upon by Sega's Comix Zone seven years later.[3]

A further notable feature was that the game was split into two independently playable parts in which Batman is faced with two of his most well-known adversaries: "A Bird In The Hand" featuring the Penguin and "A Fete Worse Than Death" which involved the Joker. The gameplay involves Batman using punches and kicks and his batarang (a thrown weapon) in order to fight the villains' henchmen as well as solving puzzles.

Reception

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Your Sinclair magazine awarded it 9 out of 10,[5] praising the colourful and expressive graphics and the inclusion of two separate adventures. Computer Gaming World also gave a positive review, praising the graphics, particularly the Atari ST's graphics over the C64's, but noted that the game emphasises mazes and puzzles over beating up bad guys, and as such did not quite meet expectations.[6]

References

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  1. ^ Gutman, Dan (July 9, 1989). "Indiana Jones and the last computer". Miami Herald. p. 863. Retrieved February 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ "Special FX". Retro Gamer. Imagine Publishing. 15 May 2014. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  3. ^ Cox, Leon. "Batman - From Spectrum Beginnings To Arkham Origins". BT.com. BT. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  4. ^ Game review, Crash magazine, Newsfield Publications, issue 60, January 1989
  5. ^ Berkmann, Marcus (January 1989). "Batman: The Caped Crusader review". Your Sinclair (37). Archived from the original on 2007-10-27. Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  6. ^ Wilson, David M. (June 1989), "Caped Crusader Combats Crime", Computer Gaming World, no. 60, pp. 20–21