The Evil Dead (video game)

The Evil Dead

Box art of The Evil Dead
Developer(s) Palace Virgin Gold
Publisher(s) Palace Software
Designer(s) Richard Leinfellner
Keith Miller
Platform(s) Commodore 64
ZX Spectrum
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Adventure, survival horror
Mode(s) Single-player

The Evil Dead is a survival horror adventure game produced by Palace Software for the Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum. It is based on the 1981 horror film of the same name.

Although the C64 version received a full commercial release, the ZX Spectrum version was never released on its own and eventually appeared on the "B"-side of Cauldron.[1]

The Evil Dead was the first (and for some time, only) officially-licensed video game based on the series. Starting with 2000's Evil Dead: Hail to the King, several other Evil Dead games have since been released, albeit from other publishers and with no direct connection to Palace's 1984 game.

Gameplay

Screenshot from the ZX Spectrum version of the game

The game is set at the cabin from the Evil Dead film. The player controls Ash, and must close cabin windows to prevent monsters from entering, while also killing monsters that are already in the cabin.

As the player defeats monsters with various weapons (shovels, shotguns, and axes), Ash's energy level decreases. Ash must continuously pick up new weapons in order to increase his energy. Once he has defeated all the monsters, Ash must obtain The Book of the Dead and destroy it in order to defeat the evil.

Reception

Contemporary opinion and "computer nasties" controversy

Your Computer magazine's 1984 review noted then-contemporary concerns that gaming spin-offs of "video nasties" (such as The Evil Dead) might spawn similarly-explicit "computer nasties". However, it considered that the game itself allayed any such fears, saying "you might have wondered if home computer graphics were capable of the sort of gory special effects video nasties trade in. The Evil Dead would confirm your doubts [..] there is nothing here to keep even the most unworldly 12-year-old awake at night".[2]

Despite this, and the game's similarities to Atic Atac being noted, the review was generally positive, considering the graphics "excellent" and stating that there was "enough variety in it to keep the interest alive".[3]

Retrospective

In a 2004 retrospective, Retro Gamer stated that while the game was simplistic by current standards, it was "fun to play (for about five minutes anyway)".[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Staff (January 2004). "Horror Movie Licenses". Retro Gamer (1): 71.
  2. "Software Shortlist (The Evil Dead)". Your Computer: 43. September 1984.
  3. "Software Shortlist (The Evil Dead)". Your Computer: 45. September 1984. "the game turns out to be a distant relation of Atic Atac. [..] The Evil Dead sports some excellent graphics [..] there is enough variety in it to keep the interest alive for a good few playing hours.


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