| Format | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| PlayStation | Psygnosis | Psygnosis | N/A |
| PC | Psygnosis | Psygnosis | N/A |
Reviews[]
| Format | Reviews | Average Score | First Review |
|---|---|---|---|
| PlayStation | 3 | 70% | 1995/11 |
| PC | 1 | 50% | 1996/05 |
| Image | Magazine | Published | Review Type | Format | Region | Reviewer | Page No(s) | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Official PlayStation Magazine Issue 2 | Original | 1995/11 | PlayStation | Uncredited | 84-85 | 70% (7/10) | |
|
Play Issue 3 | Original | 1995/12/14 | PlayStation | 81% | |||
|
PC PowerPlay Issue 1 | Original | 1996/05 | PC | David Wildgoose | 61 | 50% (5/10) | |
|
PlayStation Power Issue 1 | Special | 1996/05/16 | PlayStation | Uncredited | 50 | 60% (6/10) |
Comments
| Image | Magazine | Format | Reviewer | Rating | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
PC PowerPlay Issue 1 | PC | David Wildgoose | 50% (5/10) |
Beyond all that though, is the plain fact that Assault Rigs is simply a fairly sedate and, frankly, boring game. For a shoot em up it does little to get the heart racing and the puzzle elements (such as they are) aren't terribly taxing. I also feel that Psygnosis erred with either their choice of vehicle or their terrain designs - the tanks are uniformly useless at negotiating the levels, meaning you frequently get stuck or overturn completely. |



