The game was critically and commercially successful in the UK. The Commodore 64 version was given a 90% overall rating by the reviewers of
Zzap!64, while
Crash magazine gave the Spectrum version an overall score of 94%. The game entered the Spectrum, Commodore and All-Format charts at number one. The game was voted second best platform game in the 1985
Computer Gamer Game of the Year Awards behind
Impossible Mission. In 1991,
Commodore Format listed the game as one of the 100 best Commodore 64 games. In 2007, the game was placed in 20th position in
Retro Gamer's readers poll of the Top 25 Platformers Of All Time. In 1989 the game was re-released on
U.S. Gold's Kixx budget label with
ACE calling it an "all-time platform classic" and
Crash describing the game as "still busting with playability" despite its age. In 1990, Patricia Hartley and Kirk Lesser attempted to review the game for the
Dragon role-playing game magazine when it was released as part of
Mastertronic's "MEGA Pack" of 10 games previously released in Europe. They stated that "it crashed every time we tried to play it" and awarded the game an "X" for "Not recommended" rather than a normal rating from 1 to 5 stars. ==References==