Arcade In Japan,
Game Machine listed
Senjō no Ōkami as the most popular arcade game of May 1985. In the United States, it had topped the American
RePlay chart for upright
arcade cabinets by November 1985. In the United Kingdom, it became one of the top-grossing arcade games in
London West End test locations, leading to orders for thousands of units in the UK alone,
Commando similarly became a major hit across Europe. It had become the world's top arcade game at the time.
Commando sold more than 15,000 arcade
PCB units by June 1985.
Commando ended the year as the
highest-grossing arcade game of 1985 in the United Kingdom, while also outperforming
Track & Field, the UK's
highest-grossing arcade game of 1984. In the United States, it was one of the top three highest-grossing arcade video games of 1985, along with fellow Data East releases
Karate Champ and
Kung-Fu Master. Mike Roberts of
Computer Gamer called it "a very exciting game" and said "the quality of animation and graphics is superb."
Computer and Video Games praised the fast-paced gameplay, smooth movement, rousing music jingle, and cartoon-style graphics, while criticizing the lack of color in the graphics.
Cash Box magazine said it "is fierce and strategic, the graphics realistic and the fire power explosive" which makes it "an exciting and challenging play experience."
Ports The
home computer ports of
Commando topped the UK software sales charts in December 1985, becoming the
seventh best-selling game of 1985 in the UK. It topped the charts again in January 1986, and went on to become one of the top three
best-selling games of 1986 in the UK. In the United States, the home computer versions received two Gold Awards from the
Software Publishers Association in 1987 for more than 200,000 units sold in the region. The NES version released in 1986 sold copies worldwide.
New Straits Times reviewed the BBC Micro, Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum versions in January 1986, calling it a "must-have" war simulation "to end all war simulation games" with "fast and furious" action "bordering on the impossible."
TouchArcade reviewed the
iOS version in 2017 and gave it a score of 2.5 out of 5 stars.
NintendoLife wrote that "
Commando might be one of the few examples of the stripped-down ports actually being stronger than the original game. These later ports added powerups, better music and depth to the gameplay that are all sadly lacking in the arcade original."
Accolades Computer Gamer magazine's Game of the Year Awards gave the original arcade version of
Commando the award for best coin-op
game of the year, beating
Paperboy and
Marble Madness. After being ported to home computers,
Commando was voted best arcade-style game of the year at the 1986
Golden Joystick Awards, and won the award for best
shoot 'em up game of the year, according to readers of
Crash magazine. In 1996,
GamesMaster ranked the game 57th on its list of the "Top 100 Games of All Time." ==Legacy==