According to
Retro Gamer, "the game was praised by the computing press -
Zzap!,
Amstrad Action, and
Sinclair User awarded it 81%, 90% and 5/5 respectively."
Crash gave it a score of 84%, with one reviewer declaring it "the best game-of-the-film to date," and the review by
Zzap!64 also opined it was "the best tie-in game to date, and a good game to boot."
Computer Gamer gave this "excellent game of a superb film" an overall score of 80%.
Commodore User gave it 8 out of 10 and
Your Sinclair gave it 9 out of 10. In 1993,
Commodore Force ranked the game at number 59 on its list of the top 100 Commodore 64 games. In a
Retro Gamer retrospective, Darren Jones opined that "despite being incredible basic to look at,
Aliens dripped with atmosphere and was quite unlike any movie conversion of the time, and not just because it was so bloody good. A first-person view used in the game perfectly matched the moment in the film when the pumped-up marines start exploring the deserted base and, as the game progressed, it managed to capture all the terror and confusion of the movie in a way few other titles have managed." The magazine also declared it "the scariest
8-bit game ever made." Stephen Kleckner of
GamesBeat wrote it "may lack the audio/visual punch of
Activision’s Aliens game, but the gameplay is more tightly defined and is forward-thinking for its time." He also recommended a
Windows fan remake of
Aliens titled
LV-426. ==See also==