Published On: Tue, Dec 3rd, 2024

The Spectrum review – A special machine and a must for retro gaming fans | Gaming | Entertainment


The Spectrum computer

The Spectrum retro gaming review (Image: RETRO GAMES LTD)

What we love

  • Working keyboard with authentic rubber keys
  • Great selection of built-in games
  • Can add your own games via USB
  • Menu screen music is next level
  • Useful save slots and rewind functions
  • Free copy of Crash Magazine with UK version

What we don’t

  • Would have liked more background info on each game
  • Controls can be inconsistent
  • Some games haven’t aged particularly well

The ZX Spectrum launched the same year I was born, which means it kind of passed me by. However, while my early gaming memories primarily revolve around SEGA and Nintendo, I’ve always had a distant fondness for Sir Clive Sinclair’s iconic creation, despite never actually owning one.

The garish, brightly coloured graphics mean you can always tell a Spectrum game just by looking at it, while its popularity in the UK resulted in the development of hundreds of games with a distinctly British sense of humour.

It goes without saying that I’ve been really excited to try newly released retro gaming console The Spectrum, which is available for £89.99 from retailers such as Argos.

The Spectrum certainly looks and feels the part, sporting a fully functioning keyboard with the classic ZX Spectrum design and iconic rubber keys.

Setting it up is as easy as plugging it into the mains and connecting the supplied HDMI cable to your TV. You’ll need to supply your own 5V plug (which is starting to become a bit of a problem with these kind of machines), but otherwise the start up process is as painless and uncomplicated as it gets.

Beyond the satisfying rubber keys, The Spectrum immediately impresses with menu music so catchy you’ll be humming it all day.

The home menu is also where you’ll access the system’s generous selection of 48 built-in games, which have more variety than a bag of Revels. You’ve got everything from arcade shooters, modern homebrew hits and football games, to beat-em-ups, platformers and text adventures set in Middle-earth.

You can organise the games by title, publisher, genre and favourites, pressing F on the keyboard or X on a controller to give each game a star rating to sort by rank. On a side note, I like the way the menu icons instantly change back and forth when switching between keyboard and controller.

Highlights so far include Manic Miner, El Stompo, Exolon, Trashman and Alien Girl, although there are still a few I’m yet to try.

Partly due to technical limitations and partly because games weren’t so homogenised when the ZX Spectrum was at its peak, but there’s a greater feeling of adventure with games like Exolon, Firelord, The Hobbit and Avalon, because you don’t automatically know how things work and what to expect.

Then there are games like Match Day II, which maybe haven’t aged the best, but can be appreciated for being ahead of their time.

While primitive by today’s standards, the ball physics for a football game released in 1987 are pretty impressive, although the less said about the goalkeeper AI the better. The result is an unpredictable game of footy that I was really starting to enjoy once I got the hang of it.

I had a similar experience with Army Moves, which despite initially feeling clunky and archaic, slowly morphed into something quite addictive after learning the controls.

Exolon for The Spectrum

Exolon for The Spectrum (Image: RETRO GAMES LTD)

The Spectrum games list

1. Alien Girl (Skirmish Edition)

2. Ant Attack

3. Army Moves

4. Auf Wiedersehen Monty

5. Avalon

6. Bobby Bearing

7. Cosmic Payback

8. Devwill Too ZX

9. Exolon

10. Fairlight

11. Firelord

12. Football Manager 2

13. Freddy Hardest

14. The Great Escape

15. Head Over Heels

16. Highway Encounter

17. The Hobbit

18. Horace Goes Skiing

19. Jack the Nipper

20. Knot in 3D

21. The Lords of Midnight

22. Manic Miner

23. Match Day II

24. Movie

25. Nodes of Yesod

26. Penetrator

27. Phantis (Game Over II)

28. Pheenix

29. Pyracurse

30. Quazatron

31. Robin of the Wood

32. Saboteur! Remastered

33. Shovel Adventure

34. Skool Daze

35. Snake Escape

36. Spellbound

37. Starquake

38. Starstrike II

39. El Stompo

40. Stonkers

41. Target: Renegade

42. TCQ

43. Technician Ted – The Megamix

44. Tenebra

45. Trashman

46. The Way of the Exploding Fist

47. Wheelie

48. Where Time Stood Still

Manic Miner for The Spectrum

Manic Miner for The Spectrum (Image: RETRO GAMES LTD)

The Hobbit for The Spectrum

The Hobbit for The Spectrum (Image: RETRO GAMES LTD)

Speaking of controls, while the keyboard itself feels great to use, the unusual placement of the Space bar and input inconsistencies between each game does take some getting used to.

Of course, you can also plug in and use a USB controller or Joystick, something that I would recommend for anything other than text adventures.

Some games do require occasional keyboard inputs, but you can quickly and easily access a useful virtual keyboard by pressing Start and Select simultaneously. It feels like the makers of the device have thought of everything.

This includes the addition of other modern conveniences like rewinds and save states. While I personally think rewinding games is a bit too much like cheating, the ability to save is something I’m massively in favour of. You can save up to four times per title, which includes any games you add to the machine via USB.

Indeed, the ability to add your own games is another thing I absolutely love about the device, and is sure to appeal to people who grew up with the ZX Spectrum and want to revisit old favourites.

Treasure Island Dizzy for ZX Spectrum

Treasure Island Dizzy can be added to The Spectrum via USB (Image: OLIVER TWINS)

As a big fan of arcade racing games and shooters, I was keen to try the likes of R-Type and Chase H.Q, just to see how the ZX Spectrum was able to handle such demanding games. (I was impressed with the results.)

Then there are iconic ZX Spectrum releases like Treasure Island Dizzy, not to mention Jet Set Willy (the sequel to Manic Miner), Knight Lore and Chuckie Egg. As a fan of the show when I was a kid, I also really wanted to try the Grange Hill game, as well as the Spectrum port of Bomb Jack, which is one of my favourite arcade games of all time.

(FYI, I was disappointed with Grange Hill, especially the lack of theme tune, but quite enjoyed Bomb Jack, even though the arcade version is miles better.)

If you’ve ever dabbled in video game emulation, then the process of adding games is pretty straightforward and shouldn’t take much longer than 20 minutes. You just need a USB stick between 4-32 GB in size, and access to a PC.

If you’re new to video game emulation, then it’s probably worth watching the video below for a step-by-step guide.

If you have any ZX Spectrum game recommendations, please scroll down and let us know in the comments.

If you’re a hardcore Speccy fan, then you’ll be pleased to hear that The Spectrum even includes programming functionality, although admittedly this isn’t something I’ve really sunk my teeth into at the time of writing.

The icing on the cake is the inclusion of a special edition of Crash Magazine, which provides some enthusiastic insight into the ZX Spectrum and many of the games included on the device. It also makes mention of the modern Speccy scene, and takes a look at influential releases like Knight Lore that can be added via USB.

In a perfect world I would have liked more background info, interviews and behind-the-scenes footage to accompany each game within the device itself, but that’s because I’ve been playing a lot of Digital Eclipse games over the past few months, specifically Tetris Forever and the recent Atari 50 DLC.

Still, when your biggest complaint is that you love something so much that you want to know everything about it, then chances are you’re onto something special. (I’m attempting to scratch this particular itch by purchasing Sinclair ZX Spectrum: A Visual Compendium from Bitmap Books, and have subscribed to Crash Magazine.)

While I wish these devices would come with a plug and not just a power cable, and some additional background info about the system and built-in games would have been great, I really don’t have a bad word to say about The Spectrum.

As a relative newcomer to the system, it feels like I’ve opened a chest full of retro gaming goodness, discovering brighly coloured treasures with each new game I try. I can’t recommend highly enough.

VERDICT – 5/5



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