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Page 1: Macadam Bumper - Manchester United
Page 2: Mandragore - Mariano the Dragon in Capers in Cityland
Page 3: Mario Bros. - Mata Hari
Page 4: Match Day - Megablasters: Escape from Castle in the Clouds
Page 5: Mega-Bucks - Metaplex
Page 6: Metro-Cross - Microball
Page 7: Micro Mouse Goes De-Bugging - Milk Race
Page 8: Le Millionnaire - Mr. Freeze
Page 9: Mister Gas - Monopoly
Page 10: Monte Carlo Casino - Moonwalker
Page 11: Morris Meets the Bikers - Movie
Page 12: Moving Target - Myrddin Flight Simulation
Page 13: Le Mystère de Kikekankoi - Mythos
Screenshot of Le Mystère de Kikekankoi
Le Mystère de Kikekankoi (French)
(Loriciels, 1985)
Reviewed by Guillaume Chalard

Another text/graphics adventure from Loriciels. You find a message in a bottle written by a young woman who is being held by a mad scientist, and you decide to go and help her! Your adventure starts in a cave, and you must find the appropriate objects in order to progress. You must think quickly because your energy decreases every second and as soon as it reaches 25%, you're dead! Every wrong step means death too, and it's really trial and error, because there are a lot of traps, holes, etc. A good map will prove useful to survive more than 5 minutes... The graphics are cute, but it isn't enough to save the game from mediocrity.

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Screenshot of Mystery of the Indus Valleys
Mystery of the Indus Valleys
(Alternative, 1988)

You are a member of the London Archaeological Society and have been sent to the Indus Valleys of South America, to retrieve two long-lost treasures – the Scytheran tablet, and Alexandrite's starstone. This is a text adventure created using GAC, and it's rather basic. The graphics are nothing special, and the prose and descriptions of each location are not what you'd call verbose or atmospheric. Most of the objects lying around have no use, and it's easy to work out what to do with the useful objects. In short, it's a text adventure for newcomers to the genre, although there seems to be a bug which means that it cannot be completed – as far as I know, anyway...

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4

Screenshot of Mystery of the Nile
Mystery of the Nile (Advert)
(Firebird/Zigurat, 1987)

Abu-Sahl has stolen the immensely valuable Jewel of Luxor, and a trio of characters – Janet Dwight, Nevada Smith and Al-Hasan – set out to recover the jewel. At the start of the game, Al-Hasan and Nevada are being held prisoner, so you control Janet, who must rescue them. However, before you can do so, you must kill all the enemies on each screen using bombs. Soon, things become more hectic, as you can switch between the three characters – although the characters you don't control will quickly wander about the screen and get themselves killed! This makes the game quite frustrating. The difficulty level is also very unforgiving; make even the tiniest mistake and you are punished for it. Well, this is actually a Spanish game that was originally released as El Misterio del Nilo, and you know how difficult most Spanish games are!

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Screenshot of Mystical
Mystical (AA)
(Infogrames, 1990)
Reviewed by Guillaume Chalard

You're a young wizard who made a mistake in a magical formula and scattered all the spells and phials of his master, the Great Wizard. So you have to visit many parallel worlds to get them back from evil forces. Never mind the storyline, Mystical is a shoot-'em-up – and a very good one. The graphics are gorgeous, the animation is smooth (though a bit sluggish at times) and the tune during the intro sequence is great. But it's a shame there are no sound effects in the rest of the game (lack of memory, perhaps?). Every time you collect a spell or a potion, you obtain a new power. There are many different characters and spells, which prevents boredom because the game is otherwise rather repetitive. With a greater variety in the design of the levels (and with sound effects!), Mystical could have been one of the very best CPC games. Incidentally, the cartridge version is exactly the same as the normal CPC version!

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8

Screenshot of Myth: History in the Making
Myth: History in the Making
(System 3, 1989)

The Earth is once again being threatened by the gods, and you are the only person with the ability to stop them. You must travel through four time zones, starting in the fiery depths of hell, then moving on to Greece, Scandinavia and Egypt, where you confront the Egyptian god Dameron and must kill him to prevent him from taking over the Earth in your own time. You must also collect five teleportation globes on each level to be able to leave it. It may be a far-fetched plot, but it's a fantastic game! Ignore the rather Spectrum-like graphics (which are actually still fairly good), and the fact that there's no music – this game is an absolute classic.

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Screenshot of Mythos
Mythos
(Opera Soft, 1990)
Reviewed by Javier Sáez

If there's anything good to be said about this game, it's that it wasn't programmed by Opera Soft themselves; it was coded by a freelance group. The graphics are average, and so are the scrolling and the movements of your character. Nevertheless, Mythos is so unbelievably difficult right from the start, that nothing else matters about it. Games like this one made quite clear the crisis that Spanish companies were about to undergo at that time.

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