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{{Infobox video game
{{Infobox video game
|title = E-Motion
|title = E-Motion
|image = [[Image:Game of Harmony - Game Boy box.jpg]]
|image = Game of Harmony - Game Boy box.jpg
|caption = Cover art for the [[Game Boy]] version
|caption = Cover art for the [[Game Boy]] version
|developer = [[The Assembly Line]]<ref>[http://hol.abime.net/2693 The Game of Harmony on Hall of Light]</ref><br />[[The Code Monkeys]]
|developer = [[The Assembly Line]]<ref>[http://hol.abime.net/2693 The Game of Harmony on Hall of Light]</ref><br />[[The Code Monkeys]]

Revision as of 22:52, 27 February 2018

E-Motion
Cover art for the Game Boy version
Developer(s)The Assembly Line[1]
The Code Monkeys
Publisher(s)
Platform(s)Amiga
Amstrad CPC
Atari ST
Commodore 64
MS-DOS
ZX Spectrum
Game Boy
ReleaseTemplate:Vgy
Genre(s)Strategy, action, puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player

E-Motion (also known as Sphericule[2]) is a strategy, action, and puzzle video game developed by The Assembly Line in the late 1980s. It was published as The Game of Harmony in the United States by Accolade, and as E-Motion by U.S. Gold elsewhere. It was available for Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum, and Game Boy. The Spectrum and Game Boy versions were developed by The Code Monkeys.[3]

Gameplay

The player controls a round spacecraft, and must work to clear all globes from the screen within a time limit. The playing field wraps around at the edges, so a globe or the ship traveling off the left edge (for example) will re-appear on the right. Globes come in three different colors, and those of the same color will disappear when they collide, whereas differing-colored globes will produce small pods, of the third color. Pods can be collected for more energy, but if they are not picked up quickly, they will turn into globes.[3]

There are 50 levels of increasing difficulty. On some levels, elastic bands connect certain globes, or even attach the player's ship to one or more globes. Destroying a globe will remove any elastic band attached to it. In other areas, barriers block the movement of the player and the globes.[4] On difficulty settings above "easy", the globes are somewhat volatile. If they are not cleared within a certain time of their appearance, they will explode and damage the player's ship. If the ship loses enough energy, it is destroyed.

There are two kinds of bonus levels, both containing only pods, not full-sized spheres. One bonus level has yellow and blue pods, both of which can be collected, but only blue pods earn points. Collecting a blue pod causes a yellow pod to turn blue. Another bonus level has blue and red pods. Collecting a blue pod earns points, while collecting a red pod ends the bonus level immediately. There are also hidden bonuses available during the game; for example, completing a level by not rotating right earns extra bonus points.

The player's spaceship is operated by polar control, as in Spacewar! or Asteroids: moving the joystick left or right rotates the ship, and pressing the Fire button makes it thrust in whatever direction it is facing. The game's distinguishing feature is its realistic model of kinetics. Objects colliding with each other change their speed and direction in a realistic manner, and the elastic bands affect movement in a realistic fashion as well.

The "E" in E-Motion stands for Einstein, and he appears in cover art and advertisements. There is a sequel, Vaxine, a more complex 3D shooting game[5] which featured a similar ray traced graphical style to E-Motion.

The game was ranked the 30th best game of all time by Amiga Power.[6]

Screenshots

References

External links