Zone Raiders is a futuristic vehicular combat video game for DOS and Macintosh focused around hovercars. Developed by Image Space Incorporated and published by Virgin Interactive, it was released in North America in 1995. The music in the game was created by the band CONTAGIAN, of which some of the Virgin Studios Audio Department were members.[1]

Zone Raiders
EU Cover art
Developer(s)Image Space Incorporated
Publisher(s)Virgin Interactive Entertainment
Platform(s)DOS, Macintosh
Release
  • NA: November 30, 1995
Genre(s)Vehicular combat
Mode(s)Single-player, network multiplayer

Production edit

Zone Raiders was developed by Image Space Incorporated and published by Virgin Interactive.[2][3] It was released in late 1995 on a CD-ROM format.[4] A demo was also made available via a free Software USA shareware disc

Digital re-release edit

The game was re-released digitally as a DRM-Free exclusive on ZOOM-Platform.com through a partnership between Image Space Incorporated and the Jordan Freeman Group.[5]

Reception edit

A reviewer for Next Generation applauded the game as "that rarest of animals – a first-person racer that truly conveys a sense of speed." He also praised the variety of weapons, innovative power-ups, secret passageways to discover, and four-player networked play. He scored it four out of five stars.[6] The game received a positive review from Computer Game Review, netting a "Golden Triad" score. The magazine called it "one of the best arcade style shoot 'em ups in years."[7] A reviewer for Joystick described the game as having "borrowed its 'straight to the point' aspect" from Terminal Velocity and noted that the quality of the graphics worsened in later levels when extra details appear on the screen.[8]

The game was listed as a "ZOOM DRM-Free Exclusive" among the Bestsellers.[5] Computer Gaming World's Martin E. Circulis gave Zone Raiders three stars out of five, describing the graphics as "a competent, if somewhat uninspired design" and that "the missions are fairly interesting, but most will find too few for their game-dollar."[2] Scott Wolf of PC Gamer called it "a high-tech post-apocalyptic road trip that goes right for the jugular with its mix of driving challenge and shoot-'em-up fun."[3]

References edit

  1. ^ ZoneRaiders README text file distributed with the game.
  2. ^ a b Circulis, Martin E. (March 1996). "Cardboard Car Wars". Computer Gaming World. Vol. 140. p. 152 – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ a b Wolf, Scott (April 1996). "Zone Raiders". PC Gamer. 3 (4): 130 – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ Wells, Jeremy (January 1996). "Zone Raiders". PC Zone (34): 30 – via Internet Archive.
  5. ^ a b "Zone Raiders – Zoom Platform". Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  6. ^ "Zone Raiders". Next Generation. No. 16. Imagine Media. April 1996. pp. 97–98.
  7. ^ Snyder, Frank; Chapman, Ted; Gehrs, Scott (February 1996). "I Can't Drive 55". Computer Game Review. Archived from the original on December 21, 1996.
  8. ^ "Zone Raiders". Joystick (in French) (74): 74. January 1996 – via Internet Archive.

External links edit