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otheradv.zip *
This game requires an interpreter program - refer to the game's documentation for details.
C64adv.zip *
This game requires an interpreter program - refer to the game's documentation for details.
Sols3.zip *
solution
jgunness.zip *
solution
* Compressed with ZIP. Free Unzip tools are available for most systems at www.info-zip.org.

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The Neverending Story

by Ian Weatherburn, Simon Butler, and Fred Gray

Screen, Fantasy
1985

About the Story

This is based on the 1984 film by Wolfgang Petersen, rather than Michael Ende's novel.

You take on the role of Atreyu who must save the world of Fantasia from the mysterious phenomenon known as The Nothing.


Game Details

Off-Site Reviews

Sinclair User

"The storyline follows that of the film, rather than Michael Ende's original tale. You play Atreyu, a young boy who must find the saviour of his land, Fantasia, threatened by the Nothing which consumes it. Various quaintly-named characters are there to help or hinder - Falkor the luckdragon, Morla the ancient tortoise, or the gnomes Engywook and Urgll. Gmork, the evil werewolf, will be hot on your tracks the whole time, so you have to move quickly."
See the full review

Page 6
Just as the book inspired a movie, so too the movie inspired a computer game. 'The Neverending Story' is a disk-based Adventure which was originally written by Ian Weatherburn and released by Ocean Software Ltd. for a variety of computers. The Atari version was advertised, but I'm not sure whether it actually made it to market. Distribution was later taken over in Australia by Intellicreations under the Datasoft label. This is the version I bought, so that's what I'll review here.

'The Neverending Story' is a traditional text Adventure, but does include some nice graphics in a most unusual screen layout. The top three-eighths of the screen has a 'Cinemascope' picture of the Ivory Tower. This never changes. As you move around the landscape, a smaller window is superimposed over the left hand side of the main picture. The smaller picture shows your current location or a character that you've just encountered.

In a similar manner, every time you pick up an object, a picture of it appears somewhere over the right hand side of the main picture. You can carry five objects and have one travelling companion at any one time, hence you can have up to six little pictures on the right hand side of the screen plus the picture of your current location on the left hand side all superimposed over the main picture.
See the full review

Page Update History

  v.4: 18-Jun-2022 12:28 - Garry Francis (Current Version) - Edit Page - Normal View
Changed description, external review links
v.3: 21-May-2013 05:29 - Eq
Changed cover art
v.2: 16-Jan-2009 06:17 - Fredrik
Changed external review links
v.1: 29-Sep-2007 20:50 - IFDB
Created page