Palace of Magic

Palace of Magic is a computer game released on 1 November 1987 for the Acorn Electron and BBC Micro by Superior Software. Combining platform elements with problem solving, it uses extremely similar gameplay principles to that of the earlier and better known game, Citadel. As with that game, it is an early example of the Metroidvania genre.[2][3]

In game (BBC Micro)

Cover art
Developer(s)Martyn R Howard
Publisher(s)Superior Software
Designer(s)Stephen Wileman
Stephen Chester
Robert Asser
Platform(s)Acorn Electron
BBC Micro
Release
  • EU: 1 November 1987
[1]
Genre(s)Platform
Mode(s)Single-player

The game begins with your character in a palace, having been shrunk and taken out of your normal place and time by an evil wizard called Caldeti (an anagram of Citadel). The overall objective is to magically restore your character to his original size and to find the teleporter to their home world. This involves guiding your character through the Palace and other external locations, such as a church, woods and a dungeon, overcoming various obstacles and enemies along the way.

Similarities to Citadel

The player is not automatically killed if they come into contact with hazards; instead the player is allocated a set amount of energy (but this time measured by a bar, subdivided into units), which is depleted through contact, and can be replenished by collecting objects shaped like top hats. As in Citadel, the game is divided into 'rooms' or screens and if the player loses too much energy in a room, the screen turns red and the player is transported back to where they entered the room. This prevents players from passing through a room simply by walking through enemies and taking the damage.

Other similarities to Citadel include:

  • Some areas of the game are not immediately accessible, but are blocked by coloured doors. In order to gain access the player needs to find a key with the same colour.
  • Various objects are scattered throughout the game which must be collected to overcome obstacles and hazards.
  • The location of a particular screen is provided by (x,y) co-ordinates, with (0,0) being the starting screen of the game.
  • The player sprite is not superimposed over objects that it walks "in front" of; rather, the colour of the pixels of the character sprite is overlaid, using an XOR bitwise operation, with the colour of the superimposed object, resulting in a completely different colour.

Differences between BBC And Electron versions

Whilst the layout of the Palace and the mechanics of the game are identical between the two machines, the BBC version runs in a higher resolution (seven-colour Mode 2) whilst the Electron version runs in four-colour Mode 5. The BBC version also includes a vertical hardware scroll when the player strikes the ground after a long fall, and flickering pixels above the collectible top hats.

gollark: Hmm, that is certainly a benefit.
gollark: Tiny stuff like "pagination buttons at bottom" now needs its own thread.
gollark: Er, about ten, actually, but whatever.
gollark: Except now tiny suggestions will be split across about ten million.
gollark: Probably because they contain things they don't like and want to get rid of, but whatever.

References

  1. Palace of Magic at GameFAQs
  2. Szczepaniak, John. "Backtracking: The History of Metroidvania". GamesTM (116). Imagine Publishing. pp. 148–53.
  3. Dransfield, Ian (27 February 2015). "The Swindle preview: The death and rebirth of Size Five's crime caper". Digital Spy. Retrieved 10 July 2016. [T]his harks back to the times of BBC Micro games like Castle Quest or Palace of Magic: really brutal, unfair Metroid-style things.
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