Explorers of Space
Explorers of Space (Russian: Разведчики космоса) is a portable electronic LCD game released by Elektronika (Russian: Электроника) in 1989. The game is a clone of Nintendo's Game & Watch handheld LCD game Egg (1981) but set in space.
A spaceship has landed on a hostile planet. Enemy ships attack from four directions by shooting missiles at the spaceship. The are 3 game modes available.
Repel the Attack (Game A and Game B)
In the first two game modes, Game A (easy) and Game B (difficult), the player must move the spaceship's energy shield to deflect the incoming enemy missiles.
A point is scored for every missle deflected.
A miss is scored when an enemy's missile hits the spaceship. If however the mothership is visible (top left of screen) when a miss occurs then only a half miss is scored. Half misses are shown by a flashing miss mark. Two half misses become 1 full miss. Score 3 full misses and the game is over.
At 200 and 500 points, if there are one or more misses, a fanfare sounds and all misses are cleared.
In Game A attacks are limited to at most 3 enemy ships, but in Game B attacks can come from all 4 enemy ships, which adds to the difficulty.
Hit the Target (Game A+B)
Elektronika added a third game mode (not included in the original Nintendo game) which reverses the roles of the player and the computer. The player shoots missiles from the enemy ships while the computer controls the landed spaceship's energy shields.
1 point is scored when the player hits the spaceship with a missile. The player has 300 missiles to try and score as many points as possible.
Every 50 missiles used will be displayed as a half miss on the screen. When 3 solid miss marks appear on the screen, all 300 missiles have been fired, and the game ends.
In addition to the Russian (IM-13) model produced for the Soviet market, Elektronika also produced an alternate edition (MG-13) at their Moscow-based Angstrem (Russian: АО Ангстрем) factory for the European market with different packaging and English inserts. You can switch between these two editions through the game settings.
Most Elektronika-branded electronic handheld games were Nintendo Game & Watch clones using the KB1013VK1-2 4-bit microprocessor, a Soviet clone of the Sharp SM-5A microprocessor used by Nintendo in their Game & Watch games.
Status | In development |
Platforms | HTML5 |
Rating | Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 total ratings) |
Author | Itizso |
Genre | Simulation |
Tags | 3D, handheld, lcd, minigames, Retro |
Inputs | Keyboard, Mouse, Gamepad (any), Touchscreen |