Hover Bovver
Description official descriptions
Your lawn needs mowing and your mower doesn't work. Now what? You look next door and see your neighbor's lawnmower. When he's not looking, you grab his lawnmower and start mowing your lawn. Try to avoid being caught as you mow up to 16 lawns while avoiding your flower beds. If you mow a flower bed then the gardener will arrive to try and take away the mower. Your dog can help you keep that pesky neighbor away while you finish your work. However, the dog's tolerance of the mower noise decreases over time and he may eventually end up attacking the mower.
Groups +
Screenshots
Credits (Commodore 64 version)
Musical Arrangements by | |
Game Programmed by | |
Game Design by |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 87% (based on 5 ratings)
Players
Average score: 2.7 out of 5 (based on 10 ratings with 1 reviews)
I rather shoot aliens than mow my lawn
The Good
Hovver Bovver is a nice game from Llamasoft. It is unusual for programmer Jeff Minter to create a game that doesn’t involve shooting aliens, given that his previous games were shoot-em-ups, but then again he didn’t develop it with someone else.
I like the challenge the game offers. You have to watch out for the flower beds with your lawnmower, and make sure it doesn’t overheat. You can also sick your dog onto your neighbor, but it will get fed up if you overdo it, and will even bite your mower also causing it to overheat.
Aside from the gameplay, what sets the game apart from other Minter titles is the inclusion of cinematics and dialogue, and the nice rendition of “A Country Garden” that serves as its background music. You are also given the option before the game to start from the first eight gardens, a godsend to anyone like me who can’t even complete the first two.
The Bad
The cinematics themselves get a little boring. They show the same house complete with similar color scheme and green garage door, and there is no way to skip them.
The Bottom Line
When it comes to Minter titles, I don’t like Hovver Bovver as much as his shoot-em-ups. The title does not even make sense, and do you know how silly “Llamasoft Software” is? But enough complaints from me. Minter’s lawnmower game is good, but much difficult than his previous offerings. You have to keep an eye on three indicators during the game, making sure that they don’t run low. Features that make it stand out include the use of dialogue and background music that blends in with the overall theme. Keep mowing those lawns!
Commodore 64 · by Katakis | ă‚«ă‚żă‚ă‚ą (43085) · 2020
Trivia
Cancelled Spectrum version
Issue 7 of Your Spectrum magazine claimed that "A lot less 'bovver' than writing completely new programs is to convert existing ones to run on different machines", going on to announce a forthcoming Spectrum conversion of the game, which was never released. Perhaps a case of "I fought the lawn, but the lawn won".
Analytics
Related Sites +
-
Hover Bovver History
Written by author Jeff Minter himself, this describes the "making of" of this great game. Unfortunately, the download links don't seem to work (as per April 2007).
Identifiers +
Contribute
Are you familiar with this game? Help document and preserve this entry in video game history! If your contribution is approved, you will earn points and be credited as a contributor.
Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Riamus.
Antstream added by firefang9212. Atari 8-bit added by Kabushi.
Additional contributors: Martin Smith, General Error, Patrick Bregger.
Game added October 14, 2003. Last modified March 15, 2025.