LOADING A PROGRAM





The procedure for loading a program is described in chapter 20 of the 

Spectrum manual. The steps are summarised below.



1. Connect the ear socket on your Spectrum to the ear socket on your 

   cassette recorder.



2. Position the tape before the beginning of the program that you wish to

   load.



3. Turn the volume control to 3/4 of maximum or to a level which you have

   found to be reliable on your recorder.



4. Type LOAD "PROGRAM NAME" and press the ENTER key. The program name is

   printed on the cassette.



5. Start the cassette recorder playing.



6. Press any key.



Psion cassettes for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum are designed to load over a

very wide range of volume and tone settings on your tape recorder. If you 

have any difficulty, ensure that the head and pinch-roller of your tape

recorder are quite clean. Cleaning kits for this purpose are widely 

available.





(c) Beam Software, 1982.



Made in U.K.





PSION software cassettes are manufactured by a fully automated process 

under the strictest quality control. Other Psion cassettes for the Sinclair 

Spectrum include:



CHESS - a remarkable machine code program of the highest standard with 10 

levels of play. Features include full graphic pieces and board, all legal

moves allowed and advice on your move if requested.



VU-CALC - constructs, generates and calculates large tables for diverse

applications including financial analysis, budget sheets and projections.

Turns the Spectrum into an immensely powerful analysis chart.



VU-FILE - a general purpose information-retrieval program for lists, names

and addresses, society memberships, catalogues and files of all kinds.

Features include user-definable records, packed fields for maximum storage,

list by any field, string search and many others.



FLIGHT SIMULATION - a real-time machine code program which simulates the

piloting, motion and navigation of an aeroplane. Includes cockpit display

with detailed instruments, a changing 3 dimensional view of the world 

through the cockpit windows and full runway features with take-off and

landing.



SPACE RAIDERS - Defend the earth with your gun base from attack of 

successive waves of aliens - a full feature, high-resolution, reactive

machine-code game in colour.



PLANETOIDS - An exciting, real-time, reactive machine-code game in which 

you must destroy and avoid the passing planetoids. Beware of the lurking

alien space ship which can destroy you with its cluster bombs.





Sinclair

Spectrum

16K or 48K RAM



HUNGRY HORACE

from PSION

with MELBOURNE HOUSE



Load and run by typing LOAD "HORACE"



Hungry Horace is a machine language game for the Spectrum. You are Hungry

Horace, intent on devouring everything in your path. Horace will move along

the paths, bridges and tunnels of the park by presing the following keys:-



UP:"Q" key

DOWN:"Z" key

LEFT:"I" key

RIGHT:"P" key



Each flower in the park that Horace eats scores 10 points. But beware of 

the park guards who are out to catch Horace and throw him out of the park.

If Horace is caught 3 times he will not be allowed back in the park and the

game will end.



There are several alarm bells in the park. If Horace can ring one of the 

alarms, the guards will panic and Horace can catch them and throw them out

of the park.



Look out for when one of the guards drops his lunch of cherries or 

strawberries. You will score 100 points if Horace eats the guards' lunch.



The park is divided into several sections and in each part there is an exit

leading to the next section. Horace does not need to eat all the flowers or

reach the alarm before entering the next section. Each section of the park

is harder than the one before.





Hungry Horace includes sound effects. To amplify the sound from the 

Spectrum, insert the lead between the microphone sockets of the Spectrum 

and tape recorder. Ensure that there is no cassette in your recorder. Try 

setting your recorder to record, or play, and in many cases the sound from

the Spectrum will be amplified through the loudspeaker of the recorder.





Made in U.K.

