🕹️ New release: Lunar Lander Beyond

Back Track

aka: Back-Track
Moby ID: 25077

Description

The protagonist of this game, who looks like one of those head-on-feet characters which three-year-olds tend to draw, is the subject of a cruel experiment. Level after level, he is locked inside a maze and must get out before his willpower reaches zero. This means that you will have to find all the necessary keys for locking up the exit, and these are spread all over the maze, of which only one room can be seen at a time. Try to find the map, it will facilitate easier navigation, but each time you look at it time will run much faster, giving you a lower score. The maze is filled with certain dangers, in the guise of snakes which will eat you alive if you startle them. Try to avoid their rooms, or cross them quickly when they turn away from your direction. Finding items such as keys, food or maps will keep your willpower up.

The game runs in medium resolution in four colours and features a 3D animation top view of your character as well as animated sequences between levels.

Screenshots

Credits (Dragon 32/64 version)

By
Cover by

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 60% (based on 1 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.9 out of 5 (based on 3 ratings with 1 reviews)

Much loved, hugely enjoyable and involving but not amazing maze game.

The Good
At the time this was made the Dragon was close to its zenith in terms of the quality of software being put out. The parent company, Dragon Data, were relatively recently bust, and Microdeal had started to put out some high quality American titles that used the machine's full capability. Incentive produced this offering and it was unlike anything on the market. It had some pedigree- Chris Andrew wrote the Dragon version of "Mined Out", and Incentive went on to produce the successful "Ket Trilogy" for the Dragon. With a lovely scrolling action, and pleasing graphics Back Track was a far cry from most games outside of adventures, generally lacking in bad guys to shoot unlike most maze games before or after, the game being essentially a test of patience and planning, with only snakes and less than lethal skeletons to avoid. The aim was simply to find keys, use a map as minimally as possible and escape five mazes, and like most people, I never finished it. The last maze was always beyond me. I was not alone- according to the Microdeal magazine "Cuthbert Chronicle", despite thousands of sales only 59 people managed to complete the game by March '85, a figure they came about because Incentive had a free competition for those who managed it with a substantial disk drive prize. The game took a while to get anywhere near completion, but the separate stages gave a fair sense of achievement, the complexity going up by just about the right amount give or take and to its credit it was hugely addictive, and made good use of the Dragon's graphical capabilities.

The Bad
Looking back on it the game was well received and in many respects a breath of fresh air, but its strength at the time- a lack of shooting of bad guys and general lack of variety in objects that impeded your progress - was also a weakness. I can switch on a Dragon (or Tandy Co-Co) and play the superb Phantom Slayer for ten minutes, moving around a maze shooting random bad guys from time to time, or I can switch on Back Track, move around what is basically a series of very similar mazes, for over an hour, never seeing more than a map, a few snakes and a couple of immobile skeletons. This was undoubtedly because they had maxed out pushing what the Dragon could do at the time, but more advanced games later in the era on the same platform- such as Microdeals' Airball or Wizards' Quest- had a lot more variety in their rooms with superior graphics. I would have happily traded the last maze for a couple of more interesting obstacles, which is why much as I love the game I don't often feel the need to go back to it.

The Bottom Line
A fine but sedate maze game that appeals more to the adventure player than the arcade enthusiast.

Dragon 32/64 · by drmarkb (105) · 2020

Analytics

MobyPro Early Access

Upgrade to MobyPro to view research rankings!

Related Games

Track Attack
Released 1996 on DOS
Track & Field
Released 1984 on Commodore 64, 1984 on Atari 2600, 1985 on NES...
ATV Track
Released 2002 on Arcade
Dirt Track Racing: Australia
Released 2000 on Windows
Track Attack!
Released 1982 on Apple II, Atari 8-bit
Foxx Fights Back
Released 1988 on Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum
Track & Field II
Released 1984 on MSX
Track Meet
Released 1991 on Game Boy
Death Track: Resurrection
Released 2008 on Windows, 2010 on PlayStation 3

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 25077
  • [ Please login / register to view all 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 Игги Друге.

Additional contributors: formercontrib.

Game added November 19, 2006. Last modified February 22, 2023.