''Arnie II'', developed by
Zeppelin Games
Eutechnyx Limited (formerly Zeppelin Games Limited, until 1994, and Merit Studios (Europe) Limited, until 1997) is a British video game developer based in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Since 1997, the company has focused on racing games. They a ...
in 1993, is a
computer game and sequel to ''
Arnie
Arnie is a masculine given name, frequently a shortened version of Arnold. It may refer to:
People
* Arnie Arenz (1911–1985), American National Football League quarterback in 1934
* Arnie Beyeler (born 1964), American minor league baseball pl ...
''. It was written by David Sowerby with graphics by Neil Hislop. The music was created by Andrew Rodger. The game's manual says that "Arnie has been chosen to perform four missions that require stealth, skill and extreme violence."
The muscleman shoots and bombs his way through four enemy-infested territories:
#Shutting down a chemical plant by blowing up enough pipeline valves.
#Clearing an airfield of enemy soldiers, tanks and helicopters.
#Climbing from battleship to battleship in a hostile harbour.
#Rescuing as many prisoners as possible from a jungle POW camp.
There are enemies on every level, from simple infantry armed with rifles, mortars or
rocket launchers
A rocket launcher is a weapon that launches an unguided, rocket-propelled projectile.
History
The earliest rocket launchers documented in imperial China consisted of arrows modified by the attachment of a rocket motor to the shaft a few in ...
to machine team teams, missile batteries and tanks. Most of the opponents are stationary and stolidly fire in a single direction; however, foxholes release cannon-fodder at a constant rate.
To destroy such nests or to efficiently dispatch groups of soldiers, Arnie has a limited supply of grenades. Some dead foes drop more powerful weapons as well as invaluable first aid kits and extra lives.
Although the game's name alludes to
Arnold Schwarzenegger, ''Arnie II'' is not a licensed title and is not based on any movie.
Reception
Commodore Force thought this was a disappointing sequel, criticising the poorly implemented isometric perspective and weak enemy AI. It received a score of 57%.
References
1993 video games
Amiga games
DOS games
Shoot 'em ups
Commodore 64 games
Video games developed in the United Kingdom
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