Sanxion


Sanxion is a 1986 scrolling shooter by Thalamus Ltd, developed by Stavros Fasoulas. It was the first game released by Thalamus. Fasoulas also wrote Delta and Quedex.

Gameplay

Sanxion is a horizontally-scrolling shooter. The goal to traverse each level from left to right avoiding or destroying any enemies and obstacles. The side-scroller speed is controllable, increasing the closer the player is to the center of the screen. The screen is divided in two sections, the upper one with an overhead view, and the lower one, taking up two-thirds of the screen, shows a typical side view. Enemies can come from both sides of the screen in close formations that the player must avoid colliding with.
While the scrolling is automatic for the most part, the player can control the speed of the engines, and the pitch of the noise alters accordingly, while sounding vaguely like a didgeridoo. This "adjustable rate autoscroll" is uncommon in the genre. There are a few exceptions, though. Several levels end with sections where the ship is forced to fly at maximum speed, where the player must be quick to avoid oncoming barriers.
There are two main types of levels in Sanxion, based on the enemies. In some, such as the first, the enemies are constant throughout the level. In some others, such as the second, reaching a certain point will cause all enemies on screen to self-destruct, and a different type of enemy will appear. There are exceptions to these patterns.
At the end of each level, there are non-lethal bonus stages which award points to the player for shooting, crashing or avoiding floating letters at great speed. The background in these stages is a rainbow, and the "radar" does not show your ship.

Music

The SID music by Rob Hubbard called "Thalamusik" was played in the Commodore 64 tape loading screen, during several minutes of slow tape load. The piece was inspired by Zoolook by Jean Michel Jarre, a piece that Hubbard also reproduced in SID form for some public domain demos. It was very popular and later spawned several fan-made remixes.
The menu plays a SID version of Sergei Prokofiev's Dance of the Knights piece from the ballet Romeo and Juliet.

Ports

Sinclair ZX Spectrum

Sanxion was ported externally to the Sinclair ZX Spectrum by Sofstorm Developments in 1989 with the subtitle the Spectrum Remix in both 48k and 128k versions. This port has noticeable gameplay differences, e.g. the scrolling speed is fixed. The music score features renditions of the two main themes composed by Wally Beben.

Game Boy Advance

A port was planned by Thalamus Interactive in 2001 for the Game Boy Advance, with updated graphics and new features, like two-player mode and end-of-level bosses. A prototype without a split screen was developed, but the game was perceived too financially risky and ultimately canceled.

Development

Sanxion was the first Thalamus game to use the Cyberload loader by John Twiddy, famous for containing the string "hackers fuck off and die". Computer Gaming World noted the presence of the fastloader and was very thankful for its inclusion.

Reception

The game was reviewed in 1988 in Dragon #130 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 4 out of 5 stars.
Commodore Users Mike Pattenden considered the game to be a clone of Uridium which was well executed but not really worth purchasing as an alternative to the cheaper rival Warhawk.
It was voted Best Soundtrack of the Year at the Golden Joystick Awards.
In a retrospective review Kristan Reed of
Eurogamer gave the game a 7/10 rating and said "Although Sanxion doesn't stand up nearly as well as Uridium'' does these days, it was still a real highlight of the C64's growing love-affair with shooters. If you're a twitch shooter junkie, this is a game you have to play at some stage."