Impossible Mission II

Impossible Mission II is a 1988 computer game developed by Novotrade and published by Epyx. It was released for the Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Enterprise 128, Nintendo Entertainment System, MS-DOS based PCs, Atari ST, Apple IIe with at least 128K, Apple IIc, Apple IIGS, and Amiga computers.

Impossible Mission II
Developer(s)Novotrade
Publisher(s)Epyx
Platform(s)Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Apple IIe, Apple IIc, Apple IIGS, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, NES, ZX Spectrum
Release1988
Genre(s)Action
Mode(s)Single-player

Impossible Mission II is a direct sequel to Epyx's 1984 game Impossible Mission. The game follows directly from the same plot, with Elvin Atombender seeking revenge, and the player having to stop him. The overall game structure and basic gameplay is mostly similar, but there are a few differences and new features.

Gameplay

The game takes place in Elvin's fortress, which consists of nine towers.[1] Each of the eight outer towers has a specific theme, such as computers, automobiles, furniture and so on. Each tower consists of several rooms connected by two vertical corridors with elevators and two horizontal corridors leading to other towers. The corridors leading between different towers are locked, and can only be unlocked by figuring out a numerical puzzle.

Each tower contains the numbers zero through nine in three different colors. The computer interface allows the player to try various number combinations to see if they are correct.

The elevator to the central tower is unlocked by finding a password, which is encoded in a piece of music. Each of the eight outer towers has a musical piece locked inside a safe.[1] The final password consists of six distinct musical pieces. Two of the pieces in the towers are duplicates. The player must rewind the tape so that the next musical piece records over the duplicate, erasing it.

The main addition over the previous game is the addition of new types of enemy robots and devices for the player to use. Whereas the original game only included security bots and a special flying ball robot, Impossible Mission II has the following types of robots:

  • Security bot, like in the previous game.
  • Shovel bot, tries to push the player character over the edge of a platform.
  • Suicide bot, like a shovel bot, but also jumps off the edge itself.
  • Mine bot, lays deadly land mines on the floor.
  • Pest bot, is harmless to the touch, but rides around on the lifts, foiling the player's designs.
  • Squat bot, springs up from the floor, sending the player character onto a higher floor or crushing him against the ceiling.

The "ball" type robot is no longer present.

As well as snoozes that temporarily freeze the robots and lift resets, the player can now collect bombs and mines that can be used to blow up holes in the floor, or to open safes. Bombs explode after a specific time, whereas mines explode if the player or an enemy robot touches them.

Development

Unlike most computer game sequels of the time, Impossible Mission II did not use any code from the original game.[1] The graphics were remade from scratch using a bitmap animation tool called Film Director.[1] The lead platform was the Atari ST, with work on the Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum ports being started once the Atari ST version was nearly complete.[1] All the rooms in Impossible Mission II were redesigned for the ZX Spectrum version.[1]

According to Novotrade programmer László Szenttornyai, who coded the Spectrum version, the NES version of the game "almost wasn't released because of the strict situation between Epyx and Nintendo."[1]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
Crash84%[2]
CVG90%[3]
Sinclair User46%[4]
Your Sinclair9/10[5]
Zzap!6496%[6]
ACE785[7]
The Games Machine73%[8]
Award
PublicationAward
Zzap!64Gold Medal[6]

The game received mixed reviews from critics. Common criticisms were the game's overt similarity to and lack of improvement from the original Impossible Mission[7][8] and the extremely limited sound.[4][8] However, the challenging puzzles,[5][7][2] impressive player character animations,[2][5][3] and the tension of playing against the clock[2][3] were all praised by multiple critics. It was voted best platform game ("Geschicklichkeitsspiel") of 1988 by German magazine PowerPlay[9].

Legacy

In 2004, Impossible Mission was one of the games included on the C64 Direct-to-TV. Both Impossible Mission and its' sequel were also included in the C64 Mini.[10]

Impossible Mission and Impossible Mission II were followed by Impossible Mission 2025, an Amiga exclusive. Impossible Mission 2025 abandoned the corridor layout of different rooms and instead includes one big room. The player also has the choice of three different characters: the normal secret agent, a female gymnast, and an android.

gollark: No, I'm *not*, but it seems to *just* be checking robots.txt.
gollark: Used to be at search.osmarks.tk, but that's unavailable now because of server reconfiguration.
gollark: My thing pulled down about half of the esowiki and indexed it, but because I do not know how to optimize things it is very slow.
gollark: Yes, I wrote a really bad one, but generally they also look at content pages.
gollark: Why is some search engine crawler from Huawei checking my robots.txt every few hours but not any actual content?!

References

  1. Bevan, Mike (December 2013). "The History of... Impossible Mission". Retro Gamer (122). Imagine Publishing. pp. 44–49.
  2. "Reviews: Impossible Mission II". Crash (55). Newsfield Publications. p. 16.
  3. "Impossible Mission II review". Computer and Video Games (106). Future Publishing. p. 60.
  4. Dillon, Tony (September 1988). "Games Review: Impossible Mission 2". Sinclair User (78). EMAP. p. 64.
  5. David, McCandless (September 1988). "Impossible Mission II review". Your Sinclair (33). Dennis Publishing.
  6. "Zzap!64 100th Issue Pull-Out Special Page 5". Zzap64.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-02-11.
  7. Conner, Pete (June 1988). "Impossible Mission 2 review". ACE (9). Future Publishing. p. 58.
  8. "Version Update: Impossible Mission II". The Games Machine (10). Newsfield Publications. p. 44.
  9. PowerPlay. 1/89: 14. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. https://www.engadget.com/2018-04-06-c64-mini-review.html
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