DARTS
Professional, Originally Released On Cassette Only
Game Type : Arcade Maze And Patrolling Nasties Game
Author :
Standalone Release(s) : 1987: DARTS, Blue Ribbon, £1.99
1989: DARTS, Blue Ribbon, £1.99
Compilation Release(s) : 1987: BLUE RIBBON GAMES DISC 1, Blue Ribbon, £9.95
Stated compatibility : Electron
Actual compatibility : Electron
Supplier : BLUE RIBBON, CDS House, Beckett Road, DONCASTER DN2 4AD
Tel: 01322 21134
Disc compatibility : ADFS 1D00, CDFS 1D00, DFS 1D00
Instructions
Step up to the ocky and enjoy all the fun of competition darts with this high resolution version by Blue Ribbon. A choice of three popular dart games: 501, Round the Board and Cricket. All available in this package.
501
Enter start score - usually 501 or anything up to 1001. Each player has three darts in turn. You must finish on a double.
Round The Board
Degree of Difficulty - Singles/Doubles/Trebles.
Start at 1 and finish with outer bull followed by inner bull.
Cricket
Player 1 tries to score as many runs as possible while Player 2 aims for the outer or innre bull. Inner = 2 Wickets, Outer = 1 Wicket.
Player 1 continues to score until Player 2 has scored 10 Wickets. The roles are then [reversed].
Time Limit
Quick reactions are necessary as time is limited.
Control Keys
Z - Left, X - Right, : - Up, ? - Down
<SPACE> - Throw Dart, <ESCAPE> - Change game
Instructions' Source : DARTS (Blue Ribbon) Inner Inlay
Review (Electron User) - "One Hundred And Eighty!"
Judging by the amount of prime time television devoted to darts, it must be one of the most popular sports around - at least with the armchair athlete brigade. I prefer to get up and have a bash rather than sit and watch, so it was with some enthusiasm that I tackled Blue Ribbon's latest budget release, titled simply, DARTS.
The loading screen is plain, but I'm not grumbling as there is nothing more irritating than waiting for a 20k title screen to load from tape. After this comes a short program containing instructions, which is essentially the same as that supplied on the cassette insert. The main game is then loaded.
First comes a menu from which you can choose three different types of game, all played on the dartboard. The first is 501 - the one so popular on television. Both players enter their names followed by the score they wish to start on - there is no need to start on 501, and anything up to 1001 is possible. All games are two player and I was disappointed to find that there's no option to play against the computer.
In 501 each player takes it in turn to throw his darts and his score is subtracted from his total. The object is to reduce your total until you can throw a double to zero it.
The screen displayed a large dartboard with scores down each side, and you use the Z, X, * and ? keys to position your erratically moving dart as best you can. Holding down the spacebar releases it.
The second game is Round the Board, involving throwing a dart into each number, followed by the outer then inner bull. You can make it harder by specifying that the doubles or trebles only must be hit.
The third game, my favourite, is cricket. Each player takes it in turn to throw as usual, but this time one is batting and the other bowling. The batter scores as many as possible, while the bowler tries for an outer or inner bull. The outer counts as one wicket, and the inner three.
The innings is over when ten or more wickets have fallen; the players then swap batting and bowling. The winner is the one with the most runs.
The graphics are simple, with a board shown head on with the darts as crosses. The throwing action is again simply executed with a randomly moving dart which you can control to some degree by its four keys. Throwing just fixes the dart at its current position. There's no sound to speak of, just a few notes played when you win the game.
For a budget title it's OK, but nothing to write home about. I found it quite interesting at first, but it soon became tedious, despite the three different games.
Roland Waddilove
* * * Second Opinion * * * (Electron User)
I love pub games like darts, and this offering from Blue Ribbon is a good simulation - though not quite up to the standard of Tynesoft's INDOOR SPORTS. The graphics are good, and the variety of games played on dartboard adds interest to what might otherwise be a dull simulation. At a budget price you can't complain.
Janice Murray
Sound ........................... 3
Graphics ........................ 6
Playability ..................... 6
Value for money ................. 7
Overall ......................... 6
ELECTRON USER 6. 1