ClockWerx
PC cover art featuring Alexey Pajitnov
DevelopersCallisto Corporation
Axes Art Amuse (Japanese ports)
PublishersSpectrum HoloByte (Macintosh, PC)
Tokuma Shoten (Super Famicom, PlayStation, Sega Saturn)
ComposersPeter Drescher (MAC, PC)
Nori Atsumi (Japanese ports)
PlatformsPC, Mac, Super Famicom, PlayStation, Saturn
Release1995 (1996 for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn versions)
GenrePuzzle
ModeSingle-player

ClockWerx is a puzzle video game created by Callisto Corporation that was released in 1995. The game was originally released by Callisto under the name Spin Doctor. Later, with some gameplay enhancements, it was published by Spectrum HoloByte as Clockwerx, which was endorsed by Alexey Pajitnov according to the manual.[1] A 3DO Interactive Multiplayer version was planned but never released.[2]

Gameplay

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The object of the game is to solve a series of increasingly difficult levels by swinging a rotating wand from dot to dot until the player reaches the "goal" dot. Enemy wands that kill the player if touched march in predetermined patterns around each level's grid. The design is such that, with careful timing, the player can swing through seemingly impassable groups of enemies. Players can also swing from the same dot as an enemy by staying on the opposite side of it, since most enemy wands rotate at the same speed. At higher levels, more enemies are introduced, such as doors that open and close when the player's wand passes over a switch, "hyperdots" that send players to a different dot, and drops of acid that follow the player around.

The player's wand is in continuous motion; the only control is to reverse its direction of rotation, or to swing to another dot. Players can also swing to another dot and reverse rotation at the same time. All player motion is controlled by just four keys (reverse direction immediately, "bounce" (reverse direction when your wand passes by another dot), move to another dot, and move and reverse direction simultaneously).

Japanese ports

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The game was released in Japan by Tokuma Shoten for the Super Famicom,[3][4][5] PlayStation,[6] and Sega Saturn[7] under the title クロックワークス. The title screen in all games features Alexey Pajitnov, who endorsed (but did not work on) the Spectrum Holobyte release.[1] Characters were introduced in the Japanese ports, and there are Clay animations in the PlayStation and Saturn games.

Reception

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Next Generation reviewed the Macintosh version of the game, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that "Using only four keys and two basic moves, ClockWerx will, nevertheless, keep you awake deep into the night."[10] The game received a largely positive review from Computer Game Review. The magazine's Tasos Kaiafas wrote, "Don't throw your Tetris away yet, just minimize it for a little while."[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Clockwerx manual (PDF). Spectrum Holobyte, Inc. March 1995.
  2. ^ "ClockWerx for 3DO". GameFAQs. CBS Interactive. 2019. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  3. ^ Japanese title at super-famicom.jp (in Japanese)
  4. ^ ClockWorks (Super Famicom) at GameFAQs
  5. ^ Japanese-English translation of title at Superfamicom.org
  6. ^ ClockWorks (PlayStation) at GameFAQs
  7. ^ ClockWorks (Sega Saturn) at GameFAQs
  8. ^ a b Perry, Kevin; Chapman, Ted; Kaiafas, Tasos (June 1995). "This Game Plays Like... Clockwork". Computer Game Review. Archived from the original on December 21, 1996.
  9. ^ LeVitus, Bob (November 1995). "The Game Room". MacUser. Archived from the original on February 17, 2001. Retrieved July 5, 2019.
  10. ^ a b "Finals". Next Generation. No. 7. Imagine Media. July 1995. p. 75.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Alexey Pajitnov

Tetris in the late 1980s. BreakThru!, video game endorsed by Pajitnov ClockWerx, video game endorsed by Pajitnov In this name that follows East Slavic

List of PlayStation (console) games (A–L)

Human Entertainment, Agetec March 12, 1998 Unreleased November 2, 1999 ClockWerx Axes Art Amuse Tokuma Shoten July 26, 1996 Unreleased Unreleased Cocktail

List of Super Nintendo Entertainment System games

Entertainment Human Entertainment September 14, 1995 Unreleased Unreleased ClockWerx Axes Art Amuse Tokuma Shoten December 8, 1995 Unreleased Unreleased Clue

Tokuma Shoten

TurboGrafx CD 1995 Eternal Filena Super NES 1995 Love Quest Super NES 1995 ClockWerx Super NES, PlayStation, Saturn 1996 Madō Monogatari: Hanamaru Daiyōchienji

List of Sega Saturn games

Cleopatra Fortune Taito Natsume Taito Unreleased Unreleased February 14, 1997 ClockWerx Axes Art Amuse Tokuma Shoten Unreleased Unreleased August 9, 1996 Clockwork

Mayim Mayim

Ball minigame. A 16 bit arrangement appears in the Super Famicom port of ClockWerx. A remixed version appears in Konami's Sexy Parodius. Israeli dance "Mayim

Clockwork (disambiguation)

(video game), 2016 video game from Gamesoft Clock Works, Japanese port of ClockWerx Clockwork universe theory A Clockwork Orange (disambiguation) C-ROCK WORK

List of Mac games

Aspyr Media 2002 First-person shooter Commercial 9.0–9.2.2/10.1–10.4.11 ClockWerx Callisto Corporation 1995 Puzzle Commercial Clonk Rage Close Combat Microsoft