Time Traveler (1980 video game)

Time Traveler[2][4] is a 1980 fantasy text adventure developed by Krell Software. The game was released on the 16K, Level II TRS-80, Apple II, Commodore PET, and Atari 8-bit family

Time Traveler
Apple II title screen
Developer(s)Krell Software
Platform(s)Apple II,[2] Atari-8bit,[3] TRS-80,[2] PET[2]
Release1980[1]

Plot edit

Time Traveler is a game in which the player goes back in time to 14 different eras to collect a hidden ring from each era, each one having a different special ability to help the player. The player then brings the rings back to the time machine laboratory.[5]

Reception edit

The game was reviewed in The Dragon #44 by Mark Herro. Herro said that his opinion of the game kept changing as he played it; he intended to evaluate the game negatively at first, but the more he played the more he found himself liking it despite its problems. As he was playing an early pre-production advance copy, he found a number of little bugs in the program. Krell Software told him they had taken care of the problems in later versions.[5]

Jon Mishcon reviewed Time Traveler in The Space Gamer No. 39.[6] Mishcon commented that "Overall I'd say this game has some great ideals but fails to give the player enough information so that you can just sit down and enjoy playing. Those who delight in delving into a long game may find this enjoyable. I'd recommend you wait for their next game."[6]

Terry Romine reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "I fear that, after a person develops a strategy, the game will quickly become a series of stale replays. There are no differences between eras other than the name of the era and its political factions."[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Time Traveler on VideoGameGeek
  2. ^ a b c d COMPUTE! October 1981, Issue #17 - page 37. - Ad by Krell Software Corp.
  3. ^ "Time Traveler". Atari Mania.
  4. ^ COMPUTE! December 1981, Issue #19 - PDF; page 15.- An ad by Krell Software Corp. proves the game title follows the American spelling.
  5. ^ a b Herro, Mark (December 1980). "The Electric Eye". The Dragon (44): 86–87.
  6. ^ a b Mishcon, Jon (May 1981). "Capsule Reviews". The Space Gamer (39). Steve Jackson Games: 36.
  7. ^ Romine, Terry (November–December 1981). "Micro - Reviews". Computer Gaming World. Vol. 1, no. 1. p. 32.

External links edit