Trailblazer (1987) 
| Details (Sinclair ZX Spectrum) | Supported platforms | Artwork and Media | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Publisher: Genre: Author(s): Minimum Memory Required: Maximum Players: Joysticks: Language: Media Code: Media Type: Country of Release: Comments: | Gremlin GraphicsArcade Mr. Chip Software, Shaun Hollingworth, Peter M. Harrap, Chris Kerry, Colin Dooley 48K 1 Kempston, Interface 2 Eng N/A Audio cassette Europe | Click to choose platform: Amstrad CPC Atari ST Commodore 64 Sinclair ZX Spectrum MSX |
| Videos | Screenshots (Sinclair ZX Spectrum) |
|---|---|
Please login to submit a screenshot
| Your Reviews |
|---|
Issue 12 (Your Sinclair) 4th Jan 2010 01:26 Bobby Bearing, Action Reflex, Ballblazer, Bounder and Bounces... if you ask me, this recent trend in games is a load of old spherical objects. And it's not helped by the addition of Trailblazer. If the others drove you dotty, this one will really have you in a spin.
I made the mistake of bouncing into the office when Ed was handing this one out for review. Mistake, I say! That's an understatement. I've been playing it ever since. Trailblazer sort of sneaks up on you... and it doesn't let go.
The idea is simple. Just bounce a footie along a pavement - a pavement in outer space, that is. A pavement with cracks in it. A pavement with more cracks than pavement, at times. And though I'm sure you always try to keep to the straight and narrow, this particular path winds wildly round. You get the idea?
So there you are, guiding your sphere along Aerial Avenue, and its then you discover that different types of pavement have different effects. You'll spend so much time with your ball bouncing over the edge that your sanity could quite easily follow it.
What to do then? Become a student of the 14 courses' layouts, as I have. Spend all day and all night learning which path to take and when to bounce. Luckily there's a very good practice option, which lets you practice against a time limit. But for real thrills try the gruelling arcade version, which only allows you four extra bounces.
This is undoubtedly a classic. But don't touch it. It'll have you bouncing up and down in frustration.
Verdict: 9/10
Review by Rachel Smith
I made the mistake of bouncing into the office when Ed was handing this one out for review. Mistake, I say! That's an understatement. I've been playing it ever since. Trailblazer sort of sneaks up on you... and it doesn't let go.
The idea is simple. Just bounce a footie along a pavement - a pavement in outer space, that is. A pavement with cracks in it. A pavement with more cracks than pavement, at times. And though I'm sure you always try to keep to the straight and narrow, this particular path winds wildly round. You get the idea?
So there you are, guiding your sphere along Aerial Avenue, and its then you discover that different types of pavement have different effects. You'll spend so much time with your ball bouncing over the edge that your sanity could quite easily follow it.
What to do then? Become a student of the 14 courses' layouts, as I have. Spend all day and all night learning which path to take and when to bounce. Luckily there's a very good practice option, which lets you practice against a time limit. But for real thrills try the gruelling arcade version, which only allows you four extra bounces.
This is undoubtedly a classic. But don't touch it. It'll have you bouncing up and down in frustration.
Verdict: 9/10
Review by Rachel Smith
RetroBrothers (Unknown) 21st Sep 2010 04:10| Cheats | Trivia |
|---|---|
| There are no cheats on file for this title. | No trivia on file for this title. |
History
This title was first added on 12th June 2016
This title was most recently updated on 13th June 2016





