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Drelbs

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Designer(s)
  
Kelly Jones

Initial release date
  
1983

Mode
  
Single-player video game

Genre(s)
  
Maze

Developer
  
Synapse Software

Drelbs wwwatarimaniacom8bitboxeshiresdrelbsd72jpg

Release date(s)
  
1983 (Atari) 1983 (Apple II) 1984 (C64)

Platforms
  
Commodore 64, Atari 8-bit family, Apple II

Publishers
  
Synapse Software, U.S. Gold

Similar
  
Synapse Software games, Strategy video games

Drelbs game review 1983


Drelbs is a maze game written by Kelly Jones for the Atari 8-bit family and published by Synapse Software in 1983. An Apple II port by Jonathan Tifft was released the same year. A Commodore 64 version followed in 1984 implemented by Miriam Nathan and William Mandel.

Contents

Drelbs Atari 400 800 XL XE Drelbs scans dump download screenshots ads

Jones later teamed with fellow Synapse designer Bill Williams on the biofeedback game suite, Relax.

Commodore 64 drelbs game ending by synapse software


Gameplay

Drelbs Drelbs C64Wiki

The playfield is a maze of gates, similar to the Lady Bug arcade game, which can be rotated 90 degrees by walking into them. The player controls a walking eyeball called a Drelb, with the goal of flipping the gates so they create closed boxes. Pursuing the Drelb are square Trollaboars who can also use the gates, but can't seal them into boxes. There is an empty border on the outside the maze patrolled by screwhead tanks which shoot at the Drelb.

Drelbs Atari 400 800 XL XE Drelbs scans dump download screenshots ads

Occasionally one of the boxes becomes a "Drelbish window to the dark corridor." These lead to a separate screen where the goal is to free—by touching—as many Drelbs as possible while avoiding Gorgolytes. Completing the dark corridor, or kissing a randomly appearing "mystery lady," awards a bonus based on the number of completed boxes.

There are eight rounds, each named after a gemstone, and three difficulty levels: Novice, Tough, and Super.

Reception

In a 1984 ROM magazine review, Tim Ruscheinsky concluded "I highly suggest that you get your copy of Drelbs, especially if you enjoy well made maze games" and scored the game an 8.8 out of 10.

Drelbs Lemon Commodore 64 C64 Games Reviews amp Music

In a 2009 write-up about the C64 version for "Retro Videogames Reviewed," the author commented, "Even today, this game manages to captivate me with its unique ambience and absolutely weird, but fun gameplay," and "the game is such fun and so easy to discover and is so captivating...." In "Forgotten Gems of the Maze Chase Genre," Sean Wheatley called Drelbs "one of the oddest maze chase games out there."

Drelbs Forgotten Gems of the Maze Chase Genre Feature The Next Level

References

Drelbs Wikipedia