WaterWorks
Download
Release Year
Description
Waterworks is a game the like of which has never been seen before - let alone on the SAM.
A cross between arcade, strategy and puzzle. WaterWorks provides you with a unique experience - combining speed, addictiveness, the need for forward planning and lateral thinking.
You must take control of the hundreds of water particles which can be moved individually to open doors, flood rooms, kill aliens, and lots more.
You have the full use of various plumbing utensils: pipes, pumps, taps, nozzles, switches, water collectors and drains to name a few. You can either progress steadily through all 20 levels - or you can just have fun flooding rooms and killing aliens!Any person caught pirating this game will be given concrete boots and free bunjee jumping lessons from the London Tower Bridge (elastic not supplied).
Screenshots
Packaging
Instructions
In each of the WaterWorks levels you must escape through the exit - naturally, it is locked so a key must be found. In case you were ready for an easy game, you might be surprised to hear that numerous puzzles must be solved before completing each level - generally involving the use of pipes and the transfer of water!
The water in the game flows pretty much like normal water so common sense is fairly important.
There are numerous ways that you can die in the game: being crushed under a door, drowning or touching an alien or spike. If you get stuck, pressing ESC lets you start the level again.
Whenever you complete a level, you are given the password to the next level so that when you lose all your lives, you don’t have to play through dozens of levels.
Items in the game
Blue pipes: Allows water to flow though them. Cannot be moved.
Red pipes: Same as blue pipes except they can be moved. To pick one (or any other item) up, press fire over it. Fire again will drop it. If you are holding something while picking up/dropping an item, the two will be swapped. You should note that if water flows through a pipe, there is a good chance that there will be water left in the pipe (see Water Level indicator on right of screen). the pipe, with water, can then be moved.
Nozzles: Water will not flow out of a normal pipe into the level area. However, if a Nozzle is attached to a water supply, then the water will flow out. Water in the level area acts like any liquid - falls due to gravity and settles flat on a surface.
Water Collectors: These funnel water from the bottom of a reservoir (possibly supplied by a nozzle) into a pipe network.
Switches: Pressing a switch activates one of three devices: taps, doors or spikes.
Water Switches: Same as normal Switches except that instead of the player triggering them, the flow of water triggers them.
Taps: Can be opened or closed by both switches. When closed, they stop the flow of water through a pipe.
Doors: Are operated by both switches. Nothing can pass through a closed door and nothing can be placed directly under an open door.
Spikes: Triggered by switches, these shoot downwards killing either you or any aliens in their way.
Keys: Needed to complete a level. Can be found lying around in some levels or by killing aliens.
Drains: A good way of disposing of water.
Pumps: Water flowing into the side of a pump is forced up through to the top. Can be turned on and off by both switches.
Timers: When a timer reaches zero something is triggered.
Aliens: Aliens follow various paths and will kill you on contact. Aliens can be drowned or killed by a spike - provided a key can be placed where they die, it will be.
Helicopter: You! Can only be half submerged in water.
Submarine: You can transfer to the submarine on levels that it appears. it must be at least half submerged in water. To transfer between the helicopter and submarine press fire while both occupy the same space - which must be half filled with water to accommodate both vehicles.
Obviously, this being a puzzle game, the instructions aren’t overly helpful - but it shouldn’t take you too long to figure out how to pass the first few levels, then you’ll be laughing (or crying…).
You can either use QAOP and SPACE, Joystick or the Joystick keys: 6789 and 0.
We hope you enjoy the game.
Reviews
Review by Graham Goring from the Sam Coupé Scrapbook
WATERWORKS is a bit of an old chestnut at the time of writing, but, if you’ve got a couple fivers burning a hole in your pocket then you’d be an absolute berk not to snap up Waterworks, for it is one of the most original and corkingly playable games I’ve ever had the pleasure of slotting into my drive (oo-er!).
Now, the problem with original games is that they are a bum and a half to explain. If you’ve seen the demos on Fred you’ll know how it plays, but if you ain’t. Well… Take a splash of FLOOD, a hefty dose of Pipe Mania, a honking great splodge of a jigsaw and big ol’ final dollop of originality.
And you get WATERWORKS.
Basically you have to connect up pipes so that water can flow from one place to another, maybe spilling out of a special outlet attachment or maybe activating a switch that does something, open/close a door, open/close a tap, send sharp spikes hurtling out to kill an enemy or any number of things.
You have to decide what switch activates what device, when the device should be activated and how the hell you’re going to get water over there thankyou-very- much!
Fortunately it’s not all click and guess, the problems are laid out so that lateral thinking will see you alright in the end, and the learning curve is fairly steep, but not to the point of being unfair (except on the last levels). So, if you stick at it, you will reap the rewards of seeing your tightly timed, precision built machine executing perfectly. And when that happens all seems right with the world, it’s really, genuinely, satisfying. Especially if the device culminates in the destruction of one or more of the bad guys.
Oh, I haven’t really mentioned how to complete a level have I? Well, you have to find a key, then put it in the door to escape. Be warned though, the door could be hidden behind a sliding door, and the key could be being held by and enemy.
Overall these are the marks I’d give it in these categories…
Area | Score | Comment |
---|---|---|
Graphics | 56% | Not really that fantastic, but that’s the only let-down. |
Addictivity | 89% | Amazing, keeps you coming back till the final level. |
Instant Appeal | 95 | Grabs you by the neck and shoves itself in your face. |
Sound | 76% | Some nice Andy Monk pieces (Neverending Story?). Crud FX. |
Overall | 88% | Very good, buy it now (from Fred publishing). |
Your Sinclair review, (Recovered) courtesy of the YS Rock 'n' Roll Years YS88
Waterworks (SAM) FRED £9.99 Apr 1993
Isn't it amazing to think that underneath the cities, towns and villages of this sceptic isle there are so many things happening? There are underground caverns and pools, secret passages that only the government knows about, a smattering of nuclear bunkers, gas pipes, sewerage pipes, electric cables, water pipes and even the odd disused aquarium. All this activity goes on throughout the day and night while we, for the large part, remain completely oblivious to it. Amazing, eh? Nothing to do with SAM Waterworks but, I hope you agree, very interesting.
Waterworks, which is what l should be telling you about, is a bit like Backgammon in the sense that it's one of those games that you have to play to understand. If somebody tries to explain it to you, you just end up bemused, bothered and bewildered. The thing to do is jump straight in at the deep end and, erm, ask somebody who's played before what you should do when you get stuck! Okay, let's load it up...
Right... it wants a password, I haven't got any passwords. Aagh! Jonathan! It wants a password and I don't know any. What shall I do? (Just press RETURN and you'll be okay, after that it'll tell you the level password whenever you start a new level. If you write them down, you can go straight to any level when you start another game. Jonathan) Ah, I see. Right, RETURN it is then!
Now it all looks a bit complicated so maybe I should read the instructions... Okay, as far as I can tell, the idea is to get through lots of screens opening doors, drowning aliens and, this is the tough bit, adjusting the water level. Y'see, some bits of the screen and particular doors only become accessible when the water level has risen, or dropped, to a certain height. To adjust the water level you have to open different nozzles and turn switches on and off and also lay some pipes. Oh, and there are spikes and a submarine as well. That's the theory bit over, let's get back to the game and try out this new-found knowledge.
The first level is quite easy, as all you have to do is move the pieces of pipe around to form one long connecting pipeline. This is a common occurence throughout Waterworks and will probably mean lots of comparisons with Pipemania. Ah, the second level... Blimey, what am I meant to do here? Jonathan! What's happening here? (You're going to have to pick up that key, to open that door up there. Now, by turning switches on and off you open other doors which let the water come flowing through. This could be a good thing or a bad thing. At the moment you don't want any water coming in and you've got a choice of three switches. Click on one of them... Ah, that was the wrong one to click on. You've drowned the whole screen. Start again. Jonathan) Oh well, at least I'll know which one not to switch on next time.
Playing Waterworks involves logical thinking, the process of elimination and a lot of trial and error. I know I've probably made it all sound horrendously difficult, but it isn't everything's that bad. The graphics are nice and big and everything is cunningly, and usefully, colour-coded. So the bits of pipes you can move are red and the ones that stay put are blue, likewise all the different switches and taps are easily recognisable (unless you've got a black and white telly, when it does get a tad more confusing). Another thing in its favour is the fact that it's so easy to control, even if you don't know what nozzle to open! According to FRED Publishing, this isn't a puzzle game but a kind of three in one puzzle-arcade-strategy game. Hmmm, I think Waterworks can go on the 'puzzlies' shelf myself. The aliens do seem to be a desperate attempt to include an arcade element but, seeing as they move in set patterns, you've just got to try and remember those patterns, which sounds a bit like an IQ puzzle to me! Now I like puzzle games and I'm sure another one won't do much harm. (But we've got loads of blimmin' puzzle games! We want shoot-'em-ups, we want blood, we want violence! A multitude of SAM owners) Okay, if you've had enough of SAM puzzlers then this could be the last straw, which would be a shame cos it's a nice little game. I'd buy it. If I had ten quid.
Uppers: I'm a big puzzle fan, so that's a good start. It's slick, it's playable, it's chocka with, erm, puzzles, and it's actually rather original. (Sort of.)
Downers: It's yet another SAM puzzle game. Is there something wrong with the machine that you can only do puzzle games? Or what?
I really enjoyed playing it, but I can see why people wouldn't like it. Non-puzzle fanatics should knock 25% off the score.
Verdict: 80%
Tips
Passwords:
2. Kangar
3. Climba
4. Openth
5. Stayal
6. Steals
7. Heaven
8. Garden
9. Redwin
10. Pencil
11. Hellan
12. Divean
13. Shirtc
14. Sevxto
15. Tennfi
16. Forfor
17. sevnte
18. tonine
19. tennin
20. twoten