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Excellent game with great musics, thank you. I also added it to my new "Gameplay of New C64 Games from August 2024" video.

Buen juego!!!

this is a pretty worked out and polished SEUCK game if i may say so, soundtrack's pretty booming too. so "scene" CAN make games huh :p

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The game is not polish, Richard is from the UK as far as i know.

( little joke that suggested itself, I couldn't resist ). :-)

i think the gods will forgive thy little transgression in this case lol someone should come up with an all-in-one SEUCK package that runs on loonix and dos10/11 , sadly thats above my braingrade. I see stuff here and there around, title screen makers, hiscoresavers, music-adders and what not all to be combined with the main program from back in the pleistocene when gaming was gud. And i bet in this case "additional code" means what it means, like captain ishtar and stuff - is pretty great to see so much new stuff release tho i think the spec is giving the 64 a run for the money when it comes to number of releases yearly - - - not sure but i think the order is ZX - C64 - Amiga (followed up by consoles megadrive, nes, snes, gb and gba even , the jag has 3 times more titles in addition to what it had before it was opensource , sadly the ST gets less love and the godcomputer probably doesnt even have enough docs for all but a few oddball geniuses to learn how to code it and the Falcon is probably even more obscure) but in short : for a seuck game this rocks ... the bayliss name might have given him away if he really pretend to be polish ...

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Yes, the "additional code" term in SEUCK games is something like a quality-seal, in the upmost cases, because only then, in my opinion, such construction-kit games, can be really good. When you look at the best SEUCK games so far, nearly all of them uses the enhanced engine and i really like, that these kind of games are getting better and better. The special-edition of "Zap Fight 2" still is my SEUCK number-1 game and a really good shooter on the C64.

About the number of releases for retro-systems. I think, C64 has the most ones, of all the older systems, because when you take a look at things like for example the C64 Scene-Database (CSDB), then really every day, new things for the C64 were released there. This can be pics, songs, demos, games or tools. Unbelievable, how many new and also often really good, new things come out, for the C64. It's really great, having such a computer at home since childhood and now to see, how much the system is coming back to life. I just wished, that for my other favourite retro-system, the Amiga-500, also more good new games would be released, but sadly that's not the case so far.

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:) i havent actually counted tho i check about all new releases on csdb myself since the c64 was my " first love " followed by an Atari ST and STe later (cant even remember if it was stfm or st first) but since the mister fpga i had the chance to discover so many stuff i never even heard about . That little box is like a computer museum where i can fiddle around instead of watch-the-box on display tho to most who have it its probably an arcade cabinet.

Its hard to count but look at places like https://zxart.ee/ ,  https://www.msxdev.org/ , https://www.indieretronews.com/ , or the forums (denial hall of light, Mister fpga, Atari ,, etc ...) even if you count those silly gamejam games or the onehour thing hokuto force likes to pop out im not quite sure the c64 has the most, certainly not the most finished games a year anymore. 


Not that it matters, every week stuff gets out for plenty of platforms the only thing thats sorry to me there is that the amiga-boom isnt countered with an Atari boom, the old rivalry seems to have lost fire and if you look at Atari forums its mostly engineering and tinkering, if games get released its almost all for the XL series , which i dont really have a past with


more = merrier tho its amazing how much life these things have after 40 + years

i cant say exactly when the c64 arrived to the kid but it certainly must have been early 80s so im probably around longer than a lot of present day csdb groups lol but im not too tribal about it. you never forget your first kiss so to speak and im still recovering from the culture shock of spending the first 48 hours trying to find the programming language on the Atari ST which for some reason when i turned it on showed nothing but a little green desktop ( that was a shock if ever i had one ...) broke fast got an STe  but after the jag flopped i played a game called warlords and panzer general at a friends house and its been pc - i just "recently" re-acquired a c64 b/c i couldnt figure out wether a sid tune sounded real or not as it sounds different in goattracker, sidplayer and vice (and indeed on real hw on a tv again as i found out again) but i kinda dont use it b/c im scared to break it , mostly for stuff the mister cant handle like easyflash games (briley for instance) and testing out personal dabbles like the game we'd like to present by 2150 in early beta access for only $99.99 

I like the smorgasbord the mister presents since i have it, even the consoles even if those leave little room for dabbling but the old machine that never die will always take first place 


(whew ... my fingers went on while my head was in some other places sorry for that)

the post-2020 era for 8bit computers is really something the kid would never even have dreamed of and im really curious to see what all they come up with, stuff like metal slug for the STe or proxima3 for the amiga and here run 'n gun and briley and all that and even this seuck game that pushes the concept of seuck-game

i devour it

so feed me more heheh

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Yes, talking about retro gaming is always fun, also for me. I've been into this topic for a long time too, actually, since I got my first Atari-2600 back in the year 1982 (before i had a Philips pong-machine, but it had no interchangeable game-modules), then the first Commodore-64 in 1984, some years later an Amiga-500 and so on.

In the last 10 years, at least 500 games have been released for the C64, if that's enough, so i am sure, no other retro-system will come anywhere close. If you take a look at the website "Lemon64", for example, where newer C64 games have been added since the beginning of this year and the archive has already grown from around 4700 games before, to over 7270 games now. It's crazy. Looks like, the C-64 will soon be mainstream again. :-) *lol*

I'm just afraid, that this big retro-theme is going a bit beyond the scope here, because this page is actually about the new C64-game "River Barrage". So, maybe we should get back to the topic.

A very nice game, smooth graphics and great music. Nice to have a high score table. Very enjoyable!

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Really nice for a SEUCKer. Graphics, music and gameplay, everything good. Found out, that it uses the enhanced engine of the construction-kit. I thought before it does, because it's better than the most other SEUCK games. Nice work.

TND is great! Very good graphics, but the best is the awesome music!

This is very good, here is my tribute and thank you for making this wonderful game.

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"River Raid" on the water 😉 The game is reminiscent of River Rescue 😁 

Great game ! Congrats Richard and Alf. A long gamplay in your honor.

Love the music and the gameplay. Really enjoyed this one. I would like to see a little bit more variety, but it's fun anyway!

Here’s my longplay from the covermount disk. Love the right-to-left SEUCK. Good game!

Nice game!