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Amiga and Computing
Amiga Computing gave the game a score of 89 % and also praised the graphics.
Reviews for the Amiga version of the game were mostly very positive, including 97 % in Amiga Computing, 95 % in Amiga Format, 91 % in CU Amiga and 90 % in Amiga Power.
Nick Clarkson of Amiga Computing cited the game's graphics as " flawless ", noting that " the characters are superbly animated and the backdrops simply ooze atmosphere.
Incorporating Vic Computing in 1983 by publishers EMAP, the magazine's focus moved to the emerging Commodore 64, before introducing Amiga coverage in 1986, paving the way for Amiga's dominance and a title change to CU Amiga in 1990.
When the game was released, it received consistently high reviews for all versions, 95 % from Amiga Computing for the Amiga version, 96 % from Computer and Video Games for the PC version.
The Amiga versions of the game received generally high review scores, including 93 % in Amiga Format, 90 % in Amiga Computing, 86 % in Amiga Power and 76 % in CU Amiga.
When the game was released, it got quite positive reviews from some magazines ( 90 % from Amiga Action, 89 % from Amiga Computing ) while some reviewers did not like it at all ( 59 % from Amiga Format, 52 % from The One ).
Cannon Fodder 2 is a 1995 sequel featuring very similar gameplay and graphics to the point where an Amiga Computing review suggested it had more in common with a data disk than a true sequel.
Amiga Computing rated the game at 71 %.
As one of them — Simon Clays of Amiga Computing — put it, Space Hulk was " a very difficult strategy-cum-3D dungeon-esque title with plenty of action and gripping play.
Although the barbarian characters use the same basic blocky sprites, they impressed reviewers at Zzap! 64 and Amiga Computing with their smooth animation and lifelike movements.
* 90 % in Amiga Computing

Amiga and December
Jack Tramiel (, Trzmiel means " bumblebee "; December 13, 1928 – April 8, 2012 ) was a Polish-born American businessman, best known for founding Commodore International, the manufacturer of the Commodore PET, Commodore VIC-20, Commodore 64, Commodore 128, Amiga, and other Commodore models of home computers.
The Toaster was released as a commercial product in December 1990 for the Commodore Amiga 2000 computer system, taking advantage of the video-friendly aspects of that system's hardware to deliver the product at an unusually low cost.
* Review of the Amiga 3000UX system from UnixWorld's December 1991 issue.
On December 14, 1999, Hyperion Entertainment announced their acquisition of the license to port FreeSpace to the Amiga system.
In December, the " Prism Vectors " demo ranked third at the " Prime Party " on the Amiga.
* Review of Space Rogue from The Game Machine ( December 1989 ) on Amiga Magazine Rack website
* Amiga Basic by Paul Fellows, published by Dabs Press, December 1992, ISBN 978-1-870336-87-1
* Amiga Format Issue 91, December 1996, page 24
Dizzy Prince of the Yolkfolk is an adventure video game published in December 1991 by Codemasters for the Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, DOS, NES and Amiga.

Amiga and 96
* A courtroom drama in which the magazine is charged with murdering the Amiga ( Kick Off ' 96 )
Sensible World of Soccer 1995 / 96 received review scores of 96 % from both Amiga Power and Amiga Format, the joint highest mark given for any game by either magazine.
In 1996, Anco released Kick Off 96 for Amiga and Windows.
In 1987, it was followed by a sequel Super Hang-On for arcade, and later for a range of platforms including the Sega Mega Drive, ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, Commodore Amiga and Atari ST. A polygon based sequel, developed by Genki, was released for the Sega Saturn, named variously Hang-On GP ' 95 ( Japan ), Hang-On GP ( USA ) and Hang-On GP ' 96 ( Europe ).
UK magazine C & VG gave the ST and Amiga versions scores of 94 and 96 %, respectively, praising graphics, sound and gameplay and calling it " utterly superb ".

Amiga and issue
* Amiga User International, January 97 issue, rating of 95 %.
CU Amiga gave an 89 % rating and a " CU Screen Star " award in their November 1990 issue.
The Amiga version of Bombuzal was included as a fully working game on the cover disk of the first issue of Amiga Power.
It was a computer game written in 1991 by Sensible Software and included with Amiga Power issue 13.
This resulted in issue 44 of Amiga Power having the words " BOB IS A HAMSTER " printed down the spine.
It originally started in AP issue No. 0 ( a special " preview issue " of Amiga Power given away as an addition to an issue of Amiga Format ), and later appeared approximately in every issue whose number was divisible by 12, plus 1.
In 1994, a free minigame called Cannon Soccer ( or Cannon Fodder-Amiga Format Christmas Special ) was included on the coverdisk of the Amiga Format Christmas issue.
With the West German album a fait accompli, Amiga was forced to issue it domestically, as Tanzt keiner Boogie?
In July, TRSI & Locker House released " Insomnia " issue one, an Amiga disc magazine.
In his review for the April 1994 issue of Amiga Power, Stuart Campbell ridiculed the manual for its " creative " use of the English language.
The Amiga coverage became a fixed feature of the magazine in issue 43 ( November 1988 ), when the title was renamed to Zzap! 64 Amiga.
AMosaic was featured as the cover story in the March, 1995 issue of Amiga World magazine.
Prior to release, the game was sent by the publisher to Future Publishing's Amiga Power magazine, to be reviewed by Jonathan Nash in issue 51.
The One for Amiga Games, issue 32, May 1991

Amiga and rating
Alex Simmons, Doug Johns, and Andy Mitchell reviewed the Amiga version of Pool of Radiance for Amiga Action magazine in 1990, giving it a 79 % overall rating.
Amiga reviews were generally positive, ACE giving a 890 rating and Amiga Format giving an 89 %.
Amiga Format awarded the Amiga game their ' Gold ' award with a 92 % rating.
* German magazine Powerplay gave the game a rating of 70 % for the PC version and 69 % for the Amiga and Atari ST versions.
* The game received generally good reviews, with most game magazines giving it a rating of between 70 % and 90 %, though CU Amiga scored it at just 40 %.
Amiga Format awarded a ' Gold Award ' for a 93 % rating explaining that it " is a terrific game that is superbly playable and can definitely be recommended.
This made them dismiss the game as boring, rating it 65 % ( 75 % on the faster Amiga 1200 ).
The game received mixed reviews, the ZX Spectrum version received good reviews including an 83 % rating from Crash and Your Sinclair, while the Amiga version got very poor reviews, with Amiga Power calling it " one of the most primitive attempts at a platform game seen ".
Andy Smith of Amiga Format, in giving the game a rating of 72 %, stated that SSI succeeded in producing " a good game that is a distinct mix of two very different styles ", while Bob Guerra of COMPUTE!
Prehistorik received a rating of 85 % from Amiga Action in August 1991, with the review stating " after playing Prehistorik for a few minutes I was not disappointed.

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