shoot your
eye out.
RETRORATING: 11
RETRORATING: 12
OFFICIAL
- HOME
- YOUTUBE
- ARTICLES
- VIDEOS
- THEATER
- CLASSIFIEDS
- VHS COVERS
- CEREAL BOXES
- GAME BOX ART
- READ ALONGS
- PODCASTS
- FORUM
- FAQ
- POINTS STORE
Don't mess
with the bull.
JOIN!!!
The Jet Set Willy Saga
Meeting Willy
When I cast my mind back to the 8-bit era there is one
series of games that sticks out loud and proud to embody everything that is
single colour blocky sprite gameplay. The pythoneque tales of Miner Willy.
Written by the eventual wide eyed commune dwelling oddball,
Matthew Smith, the series kicked off with Manic Miner, a game inspired by the
lesser known Miner 2049er. Miner Willys task was to collect the keys in each
single screen before the air ran out. Not half as easy as it sounds and for
some reason the first room was harder than the next three or four almost to get
you by the scruff of the neck out of the gate. Whatever it did, it was
addictive, highly playable, likeably quirky and a huge hit released on multiple
platforms by Bug Byte. After Smith left Bug Byte, he took Manic Miner with him
due to a shoddy freelancing contract he had with them which allowed him to
release it through his own newly created
software company, Software Projects. Having played Manic Miner first on the
spectrum in the 80s and then years later on an emulated version, I can
certainly attest to its playability lasting and I dare say I wouldn’t mind
loading it up on one of our 64s here.
Jet Set Willy has
landed
With expectations high for the sequel, Smith delivered Jet
Set Willy, a now rich miner willy living in a mansion. Following a huge party,
Willy was unable to return to his bed by his housekeeper Maria until he
collects every bottle from the house. While the objective of the game was again
collecting bottles, there was no time limit, no requirement to clear a room of
collectables and with a serpentine multidirectional layout of over 60 rooms,
most, myself included, spent the majority of the time simply exploring. With
room names like, “We must perform a quirkafleeg” (a homage to The Fury Freek
Brothers) and the inventive layouts, the world that Smith had created had
genuine depth despite its bingo monitor look.
A sequel for the ages
I recall being told by my elder brother, an oracle of 8-bit
gaming, that the Jet Set Willy 2 game wasn’t written by Matthew Smith and that
the new rooms added were written by other writers to flesh out the mansion.
Years later I read that was actually a port to the Amstrad that a developer
added a bunch of screens onto that came to the attention of Software Projects
management. While I did appreciate that some of the added rooms were pointless
and lacked the flair of the original, it had double the amount of rooms at over
132 (Manic Miner had 20, Jet Set Willy 60) and for a good 30 of those, Miner
Willy was in a spacesuit. It became one of the 8-bit eras largest selling
titles and despite it being an odd sort of bastard son of Jet Set Willy, it was
the only official sequel and certainly worthy of its lofty status. Alas, it was
to be the last we saw of Miner Willy as the 16 bit era was ushering in deeper
gameplay, Software Projects were concentrating on different errrrrr projects,
including the atrocious Dragons Lair 8 bit games and Matthew Smith was smoking
weed somewhere in Europe.
It’s hard to even consider overlooking Manic Miner and Jet
Set Willy when looking at the 8 bit era as a whole and in particular, platform
games. The Monty Mole games from Gremlin Games came close and were just as
playable but weren’t quite the landmark and while Blagger turned some heads, it
came off as something of a clone as opposed to a fresh work of its own. Matthew
lit a small fuse in the gaming industry, showed many that games could actually
be amusing and probably deserves more recognition that he gets but disappearing
off the face of the earth is a fantastic way to make people forget you, I hear.
Still, I remember an interview he gave back in the 80s when he made the
shocking declaration that “One day, it won’t be just one person writing a game.
You will need a whole team and more”. That’s not verbatim and you’re welcome to
trawl youtube for the clip but the essence is there. Conversely, I imagine that
students studying game design in universities the world over will probably be
told to the sound of jaws dropping to the floor that in the early days, a game
could be written by one person on a machine with less than 1/1000th
the power of your current phone.
More of Willy?
Final thought, there was actually another Miner Willy game
released only to the Vic-20, The Perils of Willy. I only ever played one Vic-20
and it wasn’t that game. How could I have trusted it? A Miner Willy game that
wasn’t available on the spectrum on a computer that looked like a C64, but
wasn’t. It sounds like a strange parallel universe.
SegaFanatic Posted on Nov 10, 2013 at 10:04 PM
I'm a gamer, and I've NEVER heard of this series. Good work on your part. This was an interesting read.
RevJ Posted on Apr 14, 2013 at 01:12 PM
Cool! I still have the map I made for this game on the C64. In my memories I'm also recalling the Monty Mole games. Good times playing on the '64
AceNThaHole Posted on Jan 19, 2013 at 04:24 PM
Didnt have a C64 but we did have a Tandy and this game reminds me so much of some of the games we wore out on that old machine
The Ronin Identity Posted on Jan 17, 2013 at 02:36 PM
very interesting stuff, never heard of the game before this
Vaporman87 Posted on Jan 16, 2013 at 07:56 PM
This was a great read. I had absolutely no knowledge of this game and it's following until having read this.
Then I did a little research on it, discovering a devoted fan base (even online versions of the game). Just excellent.
Shortly after my wife and I had seen the last episode of the Star Wars Saga (The Rise of Skywalker) we found ourselves engrossed in conversations...
The genre of first person shooting games had very rarely catered to young kids during the 1990s. Sure there might be games like Chex Quest, or Super N...
It's time to shine a light on some long-forgotten cereals. Cereals forgotten by many... but not by us. Big Mixx (1990-1992) A...
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon series had kept its signature art style as well as its lighthearted humor for a whopping seven seasons, but a...
Of all the Nicktoons that aired on the Nickelodeon channel in the late 1990s there wasn't quite a gem in the lineup as Hey Arnold. A series that gave ...