External Links


zenobi48k.zip *
in the subfolder "GI Games/​St Brides"
This game requires an interpreter program - refer to the game's documentation for details.
jgunness.zip *
solution
Play Online via archive.org
(Part 1 of 2)
Play this game in your Web browser.
Play Online via archive.org
(Part 2 of 2)
Play this game in your Web browser.
* Compressed with ZIP. Free Unzip tools are available for most systems at www.info-zip.org.

Have you played this game?

You can rate this game, record that you've played it, or put it on your wish list after you log in.

Playlists and Wishlists

RSS Feeds

New member reviews
Updates to external links
All updates to this page

Bugsy

by Priscilla Langridge

1986

Game Details

Off-Site Reviews

Crash

'Playing the game and reading the descriptions is pretty good fun as there's some real humour lurking at each locality. I tended to prefer the real zany stuff and there is much play on the fact that you are guiding this long-eared bunny around the Chicago streets of the 20's. Take this passage from the jailhouse area of town: '"Hey, you with the ears!" snarls one of the guards, barring my way. "This is the jailhouse"'. Then below it you read "Hey, you wit' the keyboard! Whaddaya tryin' ta get me in the jailhouse for?" And again with "I am standing outside a theatrical costumier's (betcha didn't know I could say words that long). To the north the road goes northwards while to the south it stretches in a southerly direction" (I like the zany bit at the end - more of which in a moment). Entering the shop gives you: "I am inside da thatsoomers... I mean da fatricoomiers... Aw heck, you already know I can say the words, so shaddup". Pure zaniness is this passage taken from the poster at the railway station: "Come to Chicago where lights are bright, where men are men and women are women. Where horses are horses and dogs are dogs and everything else is pretty much the way you'd expect it to be".'
See the full review

Your Sinclair

"Bugsy is obviously a send-up of Melbourne House's Mugsy, but we're not getting into the trading game stakes here, it's still mainly your predictably unpredictable adventure, set in and around Chicago in 1922. There are elements of trading and strategy in it, though, which shows how versatile The Quill can be. You take the role of the rabbit, Bugsy, who's as mouthy as his cartoon counterpart Mr Bunny. He'd better be quick on the hop, though, if he's going to go round calling Al Capone a wimp. Your aim in life is to become Public Enemy Number One by working your way up from the gutter, or wherever it is rabbits live in Chicago."
See the full review

Page Update History

  v.5: 29-Dec-2021 18:22 - Lance Campbell (Current Version) - Edit Page - Normal View
Changed download links
v.4: 21-May-2013 03:47 - Eq
Changed cover art
v.3: 18-Jan-2009 16:11 - Fredrik
Changed external review links
v.2: 13-Jan-2009 12:00 - Fredrik
Changed external review links
v.1: 29-Sep-2007 20:49 - IFDB
Created page