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Emerald Mine

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Genre(s)Scrolling tile-based puzzle game
Developer(s)Kingsoft
Publisher(s)Kingsoft
First releaseEmerald Mine
1987
Latest releaseEmerald Mines CD
1994

Emerald Mine is a video game series by Kingsoft for the Personal Computer. The series follows mines filled with various gems.

Emerald Mine

Emerald Mine was released in 1987 for the Amiga and converted in 1988 for the Commodore 64.

Reviews

Emerald Mine received mixed critical reception. Ottfried Schmidt of German magazine Aktueller Software Markt cited the game's high difficulty; saying "If you liked well-programmed, tricky games, then Emerald Mine would be exactly the right thing for you.[1] Richard Löwenstein of Amiga Joker magazine commented on the game's appeal, saying "It's the playing fun that counts", and that the design was well recieved: "Nobody offers such a good control and inventively designed levels".[2]

Emerald Mine 2

In 1988, Kingsoft published Emerald Mine 2 with 100 new levels. A level editor was included which triggered the creation of several thousand levels by players.[3]

Emerald Mine 3 Professional

In 1990, Kingsoft published a selection of levels created by players.

Reviews

Emerald Mine 3: Professional was panned by critics, citing the game being lazy, with Martin Gaksch of Power Play magazine saying "[The third part] has been cobbled too unlovingly. No question, the game mechanics and elements are still fine invented, but they should have removed the dust layer lying on it."[4] Carsten Borgmeier of Amiga Joker was also highly critical of the game's presentation commenting; "There's no change on graphics and sound […], all technical details like animation and scrolling appear substantially dated." Carsten Borgmeier in Amiga Joker issue 10/1990[5]

Emerald Mines

In 1994, Almathera published a collection of 14160 levels on Compact Disk over 80 disks.

Reviews

Emerald Mines recieved a better critical reception than that of EM3, with Amiga Games commenting that the gameplay was as good as ever, "This Boulder Dash clone doesn't come up with spectacular graphics, but the addicting game principle and over 10,000 levels should guarantee playing fun for months."[6] Max Magenauer of Amiga Joker also commented on the gameplay; "The game elements are in such an abundance and variants that variety is presented truely in the whole lot. [… But since it is imbalanced] it is more a CD for fans [...]"Max Magenauer in Amiga Joker issue 2/1995[7]

Miscellaneous

Emerald Mine became well known on the Amiga, because it was the first versatile labyrinth collection game, and had excellent presentation for its time. The Dutch Emerald Mine Club had been founded, which also carried out extensions of the Emerald Mine program. The open source game Emerald Mine for X11 is a port of this extended Emerald Mine to Unix, Windows, and DOS. It is completely compatible with the original Emerald Mine. It includes an archive of over 50,000 playable levels. The freeware game Rocks'n'Diamonds has a similar archive of levels, and includes an obsolete copy of Emerald Mine for X11 to play them.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ottfried Schmidt (11/1987). "Emerald Mine Testbericht in ASM Ausgabe". ASM. p. 17. ISSN 0933-1867. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b Richard, Lowenstein. "Klassiker: Emerald Mine in Amiga Joker". Joker Verlag. p. 87.
  3. ^ Emerald Mines short review in Amiga World issue dec. 1994, p. 57, ISSN 0883-2390 here
  4. ^ a b "Emerald Mine 3 Professional review in Power Play". p. 41. ISSN 0937-9754.
  5. ^ a b Borgmeier, Carsten. "Emerald Mine 3 Professional review in Amiga Joker". Joker Verlag. p. 62.
  6. ^ a b "Emerald Mines short review in Amiga Games". p. 40. ISSN 0946-6339.
  7. ^ a b Emerald Mines review in Amiga Joker issue 2/1995, p. 77, Joker Verlag, Haar, hier