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Zombi Amiga

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front image
Score: 7.8
Publisher:Ubi Soft Ltd.
Year:1990
Languages:English, German, French, Italian
Developer:Alexander Yarmitsky
Players:1
Missing short game description
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The nightmare has just begun. For mysterious reasons, dead people came  back to life to feed themselves on the flesh of human being. The Earth  is inhabited by millions of Zombies, who are spreading terror, and by  gangs of hooligans, who are ready to anything to survive.

Yet four people didn't lose hope and decided to run away for new  horizons. 

When there is no room left in Hell...

...dead people come back to Earth. — Game Box

Zombi is an icon-driven arcade adventure video game. It was  Ubisoft's first publication, released when the company was established  in 1986.

A first-person arcade adventure, it draws inspiration from the  George A. Romero film Dawn of the Dead; the player controlling four  protagonists exploring a zombie-filled shopping mall. It draws from  many parts of the film, including the gun shops, the escalators, and  the articulated trucks used to block the entrances. If a character's  health is depleted, he turns into a zombie, which then roams the room  they died in. Zombies can be killed either by numerous body shots,  or a single shot to the head. Characters were named after the creators  of the game.

The original Amstrad CPC version was programmed by Yannick Cadin and  S.L. Coemelck, with graphics by Patrick Daher and music by Philippe  Marchiset.

It was re-released in 1990, with ports developed for the ZX Spectrum  (by Geoff Phillips, Colin Jones and Steve Chance), Commodore 64  (Jean Noel Moyne, Laurent Poujoulat, Jean Francois Auroux), Amiga  (Alexander Yarmitsky), Atari ST and DOS.

The ZX Spectrum version was awarded 87% by Sinclair User magazine and  77% byYour Sinclair, both reviewers were impressed with the  immersive atmosphere.

CU Amiga awarded the Amiga version of the game 85%, whilst German  magazine Amiga Joker scored it at 69%.

Zzap!64 awarded the Commodore 64 version of the game 72%. The  reviewer said that the gameplay is outdated and is very similar to  Catch 23, a 1987 ZX Spectrum game.

Source:Wikipedia