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Mutant Herd
1983 video game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mutant Herd is an action game written by Jeremy Smith and Grahame Hampton-Matthews for the VIC-20 and published by Thorn EMI in 1983.
Gameplay
Mutant Herd involves protecting a powerhouse from a mutant invasion. The mutants crawl towards the player from multiple burrows located at each corner of the screen. Using laser beams, the player must prevent the mutant herds from destroying the powerhouse.
It is possible to enter the burrows and to shut them down. After entering a burrow, another phase of the game begins. A queen mutant and her eggs are hiding in each burrow. The eggs must be destroyed using an explosive charge, while avoiding the queen mutant. After blowing up the eggs, the burrow is sealed and is no longer a threat.
After each burrow is sealed, the player's lasers weakern and the next burrow has more eggs and is more challenging. Victory requires sealing all the burrows.[1][2]
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Reception
COMPUTE! wrote that "There are enough little problems to always keep you thinking about what you'll have to do next".[1] Electronic Games stated that Mutant Herd "may not be the ultimate VIC-20 game, but the graphics are fun, the action is challenging, and it takes at least one step off the beaten game-track".[2] Ahoy! called it "a two-part arcade game with a unique twist", favorably reviewing the graphics, sound, animation, and gameplay.[3]
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References
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