Little Puff in Dragonland
| Little Puff in Dragonland | |
|---|---|
ZX Spectrum cover art | |
| Developer | Consult Software |
| Publisher | Codemasters |
| Platforms | Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum |
| Release |
|
| Genre | Action |
| Mode | Single-player |
Little Puff in Dragonland is a 1989 platformer video game developed by Consult Software and published by Codemasters for personal computers. Upon release, the game received mixed reviews, with critics considering the game had value as a budget title, but was too similar to other Codemasters platformers, including Dizzy. A sequel, DJ Puff, was released by Codemasters in 1992.[1]
Gameplay
[edit]
The game is a platformer where players are Puff, a dragon, navigating levels to collect four envelopes to assemble a passport to travel home to see his family in Dragon Land.[2] Players explore the levels, avoiding enemies, and collecting power-ups including magic potions and food to restore energy, or revolvers and air pumps to shoot projectiles or jump higher.[3] However, players only have one life, and can only hold three items for use at a time.[3] The game features puzzles where players must collect and use the items in the correct location to pass by or remove enemies or obstacles.[4]
Reception
[edit]| Publication | Score | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Amiga | C64 | ZX | |
| Aktueller Software Markt | 6.1/10[2] | ||
| Your Sinclair | 83%[4] | ||
| Amiga Joker | 65%[3] | ||
Little Puff in Dragonland peaked in eleventh place in UK Gallup sales charts for the Amiga.[5] Reviews were mixed, with several critics feeling the game was largely similar to the Dizzy series of Codemasters games.[4][3] Amiga Joker considered the game's graphics, sound and handling to be "decent" for a budget title, praising the "relatively complex" level design, although felt the difficulty was "enormous" due to only having one life.[3] Your Sinclair considered the game to be "colorful" and "cute" and value for money as a budget title, but felt the game was a "rip-off" of the Dizzy series.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "T-Zers". Your Sinclair. No. 79. July 1992. p. 9.
- ^ a b Alter, Sandra (October 1990). "Is Okay". Aktueller Software Markt (in German). p. 76.
- ^ a b c d e "Little Puff in Dragonland". Amiga Joker (in German). April 1991. p. 28.
- ^ a b c d "Little Puff in Dragonland". Your Sinclair. No. 55. July 1990. pp. 76–7.
- ^ "Amiga Power Gallup Charts: Amiga Top 100". Amiga Power. No. 3. July 1991. p. 17.