Highlander is an arcadefighting game, in which the player controls one of two swordsmen. In the single-player mode the player plays as Connor MacLeod and must fight three opponents in one-on-one combat: his mentor Ramírez, then Fizir, before finally facing The Kurgen. In each fight the objective is to reduce the opponent's health to zero, at which point he is decapitated and the player wins the fight. A two-player mode is also available.
Reception
In addition to Sinclair User's "golden turkey" award, Crash gave it an overall score of 57%, with one reviewer describing it as "totally boring and quite unplayable", while ZZap!64 gave it an overall score of 30% and wrote "This is a real case of a film tie-in rip-off". The ZX Spectrum version of Highlander is featured in Stuart Ashen's 2015 book Terrible Old Games You've Probably Never Heard Of, noting that the graphics for the Spectrum release are the same as those used in the Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64 releases, which are designed for a lower screen resolution and in more colors than the Spectrum. Ashens expresses that "The Spectrum's monochrome rendering leaves them an incomprehensible mess." Ashens heavily criticises its gameplay and graphics, expressing that the combat "feels futile" and stating that "On starting the game, the first thing to hit you is how incredibly ugly the characters are... Astoundingly, it plays even worse than it looks. None of the sword fighting moves seem to do much... you can't really tell who is successfully hitting whom... Playing Highlander is one of the least entertaining ways you could possibly spend your time." Ashens calls Highlander's controls "horribly unresponsive" and moving the player character "clumsy", saying the single tactic to winning Highlander is to "mash the fire button and hope". Ashens criticizes the lack of music and 'lazy' sound effects; one of the only sound effects in Highlander is a popping noise if someone gets hit. Ashens calls the game design 'lazy' as well, stating that "despite there being three different opponents that you have to load separately, they all have identical moves. They just look different and ", furthermore stating that "I can only believe Highlander must have been written in an incredible hurry."