Amok
Amok portrays a futuristic storyline on a planet which is identified in the
manual as having the same name. There, two gigantic corporations, referred to
by the acronyms NONLUN and AZTK, had previously been having an all-out war
between them for forty-seven years. The war had involved all possible fronts
and theaters, including operations in the air, on the surface of the land and
sea, and beneath the water. Very recently, a weak peace accord had only just
been reached. In the manual, the peace accord is described as being much like
“a blanket covering the fire that smolders in the hearts of the people. The
agreement is sufficiently unsteady that an influential mercenary company,
known only as “the Bureau,” has now decided to hire a capable battle walker
pilot named Gert Staun to restart the war so they can continue to make large
amounts of money by taking lucrative contracts from both sides. The player
takes the role of Gert Staun.
Naturally “the Bureau” has placed a high priority on this, and they are
funding it entirely on their own. Indeed, Gert Staun’s battle walker, called
the “Slambird” is explicitly said to be custom-modified. In particular, the
Slambird can not only survive either on land or underwater, but it can
transition between the two — it can move, fight, and safely control its
vertical position in either environment. These abilities are portrayed as
costly and not standard to such vehicles in the universe where Amok takes
place. The transformation of the Slambird between an underwater vehicle and a
land vehicle is automatically scripted, however. The player has no power to
control this transformation or alter the time when it happens. Instead, the
player must get to the point when Staun will automatically bring the Slambird
ashore to continue his attacks.
The object of this arcade-type game is to meet a series of objectives, and to
do so in such a way that each side will blame the other. The game has a linear
structure, based on levels that present tasks of increasing difficulty, and
all sorts of hazards and targets are encountered. These include military
bases, power generators, land mines, infantry, tanks, submarines — even
sharks and huge, aggressive birds. Infantry elements are poorly armored, so
they can be killed by being run over. In one mission, the only way that the
player will be able to get enough time to escape is to open with a surprise
attack, slowing pursuit by destroying a parking facility full of unattended
troop transport vehicles. Power-ups are scattered throughout the levels. The
Slambird carries a variety of explosive devices and line-of-sight weapons.
Some of the explosive weapons can bounce in a parabolic trajectory, and in
addition there are two laser cannons that can fire rapidly an unlimited number
of times. These cannons are useful in case no other weapons remain, and they
can be used to create complex ripple fire, which can be used to cover an area
that is surprisingly wide. When underwater, propellers are used, while
torpedoes are automatically used instead of missiles.
| Minimum System Requirements | ||
| CPU | Intel i486 DX2 | |
| RAM | 8 MB | |
| OS | Windows 95 | |
| Direct X | DirectX 3 | |
| CD-ROM | 2X (300 KB/s) |