Sanxion

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Sanxion
Sanxiontitle.gif
Game No. 221
Voting 7.44 points, 18 votes
Developer Stavros Fasoulas
Company Thalamus
Musician Rob Hubbard
HVSC-File MUSICIANS/H/Hubbard_Rob/Sanxion.sid
Release 1986
Platform C64, ZX Spectrum
Genre Shoot'em Up, H-Scrolling
Gamemode Single player
2 players (in turns)
Operation Icon Port2.pngJoystick Keyboard
Media Datassette Diskette
Language Language:english
Information Published in the USA by Electronic Arts.
Follower: Delta


Description[edit | edit source]

Wild shooting in appropriate surrounding.

With the horizontally scrolling shooter Sanxion the software house Thalamus delivered their first work for the C64 and ZX Spectrum in 1986. Together with Delta and Armalyte Sanxion forms a loosely connected trilogy around the "Project Damocles" and the fight against the H'siffian-Khanat.

Background story (long version)[edit | edit source]

As the rather extensive background story for a shooter game wants to make us believe, the world was brought to the border of an atom war by subtile manipulation of an intergalactic alien imperium. Only through the fortunate circumstance, that the alien technician stationed at the north pole pressed the wrong button when sending the success message and made for a planet-wide blackout by a massive electronic impulse, this threat was called to attention. East and west send their pointy-heads into the Arctic as fast as possible, where they find the remains of the crashed UFO and after a short inspection come to a horrible conclusion: the beer is empty! No, rubbish: Humanity is seen by aliens as a threat, which needs to be wiped out, before it conquers space and can become a danger. As the invasion fleet is already on its way, they delay the nuclear holocaust to later and agree, that the most modern technology of both superpowers and the remains of the UFO are united in one project named "Damocles". The aim of the project is to provide spaceships and pilots, with which ten sectors need to be passed and all infiltration efforts of the aliens have to be warded off.

Background story (short version)[edit | edit source]

Aliens! Invasion! Blajabbertwaddleapocalypserattlebangbangshootshoot!


Design[edit | edit source]

The game comes with a clean parallax scrolling and in each sector different backgrounds, e.g. desert, industrial areas or snow covered woods. The enemy sprites are animated flickering-free but designed rather simply. The metallic-look already known from games such as Paradroid and Uridium also finds itself in many graphics in Sanxion. It is noticable that the gravity was included into the controls of the own spaceship, which would sink without countersteering. A speciality is the split-up of the screen into two areas: a side-view as you are used to from horizontal shooters and where the actual action takes played and above that a kind of radar, which shows the happening from the top view. Here, approaching alien formations can be seen a few seconds earlier before they arrive at the actual game area. As this radar display takes up 33% of the screen, the main game field seems rather small and offers little space to manoeuvre.

Sanxion has two music pieces by Rob Hubbard:

  1. A lively loading tune which was thought to tide over the waiting time in the original version of the game while the title screen is built up stripe by stripe and
  2. in the starting screen an SID interpretation by Sergej Prokofjews "Dance of the Knights" (Video at YouTube ) from the ballet "Romeo and Juliet", a piece which also in the 8bit conversion sounds like dramatic grandiloquence.


The sound effects are for a shooter fitting and typically spacy, the crescending and descrescending buzz of the drive is omnipresent and is accompanied by the shooting and explosion noises.



Multicoloured attack formations were the dernier cri in 1986.
Already at that time very obnoxious: barriers whose position you need to know by heart.
A crash is ahead!



Hints[edit | edit source]

O.k., what buffon was that who pressed the LSD button?
  • 3 screen lives at the start of the game
  • extra life every 10.000 points
  • bonus points for the time left at the end of the level: time left ×10.
  • If all ten levels have been played through (haha!), the game goes on in the "Darkside": all levels are now darkened and there are additional obstacles.

Bonus sequence[edit | edit source]

After each level there is a bonus sequence in which, what else, you can collect extra points by behaving according to the type of approaching drones:

  • Drones with an "S" need to be shot
  • Drones with a "P" need to be collected
  • Drones with a "C" need to be rammed (these drones come towards you in formations as the UFOs in the main game)

Joystick controls[edit | edit source]

Full speed and permanent fire: always a good combination.

In all directions Joystick in all directions: steer ship
press fire button Fire button: Trigger energy impulse on the primary weapon of the spaceship in order to dematerialize the attacker, commonly: shooting. In the title screen: start of the game.

In all directions and press fire button Joystick in all directions + fire: steer ship AND shoot at the same time.
Joystick left Joystick left: at the left border of the screen: slow down
Joystick right Joystick right: at the right border of the screen: speed up!

Keyboard controls[edit | edit source]

  • = : up
  • Shift : down
  • Z : left
  • X : the other left
  • F1 : set number of players (1 or 2)
  • F3 : choose joystick or keyboard controls
  • F5 : choose sounds (yeah!) or silence (boo!)
  • RUN/STOP : pause
  • RUN/STOP  + T : end game prematurely (title screen)


Solution[edit | edit source]

Practice! Practice! Practice!

The 4 barriers in a row at the end of the 2nd level are mastered as follows:

After reaching the town hold the glider at the upper border and after passing the first barrier pull down instantly. Then, after flying under the second barrier pull up again. After flying over the third barrier just let go of the joystick. Gravitation should get you directly through the gap of the fourth barrier.

Cheats[edit | edit source]

The version by Lucid and Tricycle has both trainer options and a subsequently built-in highscore saver and is therefore the first choice.

Voting[edit | edit source]

Voting of the C64-Wiki users (10=the best vote):
7.44 points at 18 votes (rank 289).
You need to be logged in to cast a vote.
C64Games 9 23rd February 2012 - "very good" - 3781 downs
Lemon64 6,8 23rd February 2012 - 72 votes
Kultboy.com 6,44 23rd February 2012 - 9 votes
ASM 80% Issue 01/87
Happy Computer 85% Issue 01/87
ZZap64 93% Issue 11/86


Reviews[edit | edit source]

Test in the Happy Computer Games Special 2 (1/87)

Robotron2084: "Clean scrolling and good sound meet sedate controls, and due to the limited game area also oversized sprites. The introduction of the radar display can easily be seen as a crazy idea, because you do not have much use of it during the game - in the contrary, due to the wasted space you have too little space to manoeuvre and constantly bang against something. The fun of the game also suffers further setbacks by a much too high number of indestructible enemies or obstacles, of which many also come speeding out of the left field - preferrably from behind - so that even with the "great" radar you have only a fraction of seconds time to be able the react, which of course then fails. Even more than with its successor Delta you have to quasi learn every level by heart - only to rely on your reaction does simply not work. Very regrettable, as seen from the technical side, Sanxion is really well-done for 1986, but unfortunately the many unfair situations leave a bad taste in one's mouth. The high evalutaions that the game received at that time in almost all computer game magazines, I cannot comprehend. For me it is only a laboriously played mirror finish shooter that forgives not a single mistake. 6 out of 10 points."


Miscellaneous[edit | edit source]

Award[edit | edit source]

  • The game was awarded the British Golden Joystick Award in the category Best Soundtrack of the Year in 1986.

Screenshot comparison with version for the ZX Spectrum[edit | edit source]


High resolution in loud pink...also "nice"...ugh!
Absolute overview by the use of fullyfour(!) different colours.



Video[edit | edit source]

Longplay for the game.

Cover[edit | edit source]


Sanxioncovertape.jpg



Front side of the US disk version sold by Electronic Arts.
Back side.



Cassette[edit | edit source]


Sanxiontape.jpg



[edit | edit source]


Sanxionadvert.jpg



Highscore[edit | edit source]

Topscore of Equinoxe
  1. Equinoxe - 56.830 (25.03.2012)
  2. Robotron2084 - 37.870 (23.02.2012)
  3. Blubarju - 31.790 (30.09.2013)
  4. Werner - 24.280 (27.02.2012)


#2 Robotron2084 #3 Blubarju
#2 Robotron2084 #3 Blubarju


Links[edit | edit source]

WP-W11.png Wikipedia: Sanxion