Back to Belt itself is a tribute to the fortieth anniversary of the game Asteroids Plus and contains 64+ stages, three mini games and hard core fashion for the arcade masters. It was one of the industry’s original breakout successes, demonstrating that computer games had a tremendous promise. Generally, his idea was clear. You managed a little space ship floating around a flat airplane to fire rocks at you. The more you got, the harder it eventually becomes. It automatically throws you into the gameplay as you start Back to Belt first. You have a sense of how the ship controls straight away. It’s a central company of how to drive, spin, and fire. On that front, nothing has changed. Instead of the predecessor’s flat plane. Your boat is located on a vector sphere, and can be pushed everywhere. When you zoom in and zigzag through this sphere you have a fantastic sense of speed. After a big campaign, the arcade mode is tougher and leaderboard rankings are possible. Some short mini games are also scattered all over the place. The ship controls a very specific way and some experience is needed in order to get used to it, however control can be obtained. Soon you can fly over the bubble, blasting out whatever passes. This is an ideal spot to play an arcade-like game and it is completely clutched back to belt. You can go for one or twenty layers and still sound like you have a wonderful time. Any fan of retro gaming need to give this one a go as it’s price is easy on the wallet and a tight well put together arcade style title.
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The original Asteroids released in 1979 into arcades across the world and changed the face of video games forever. It was one of the original smash hits for the industry, proving that video games had the potential to become huge. Its premise was generally simple. You controlled a small spaceship that would fly around a flat plane, shooting rocks coming at you. It became progressively more difficult the further you got. Forty years later, Back to Belt hopes to revive the gameplay and stylings of Asteroids into a more modern package. Despite missing some marks, it mostly succeeds. Read Full Review
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