The story is based on the post-apocalypticscience fiction novel series La Compagnie des glaces by the French writerGeorges-Jean Arnaud. In the 21st century, mankind is being ravaged by the greenhouse effect. A last-ditch effort to counteract it is designed and executed. It works far too well. Centuries if not millennia later, the planet is entirely covered in a thick, opaque cloud layer. Giant wolf packs roam the frozen wastes, and the mammoth has re-emerged from the elephant stock. Mankind ekes out a living in a few handfuls of settlements, connected by a network of massive armored trains. The network in turn is in the hands of the gargantuan Viking Union, which is merciless towards threats to its power. A few radicals, though, are willing to attempt a change, and managing to hijack a train of the Union, the Transarctica, they set out in search of the "sun".
Gameplay
The game is divided into two modes; exploration and combat.
Exploration
The train roams Eurasia using its various facilities and tools, gatheringcoal for currency and fuel, visiting towns to trade and to enhance the train, and searching for clues for its quest. The dystopic setting is rather well integrated, and for instance the use of slave labor is necessary to complete the game. The interface is quite original but rather cumbersome. This part has been criticized for the under-efficiency of trading in comparison to mining.
Combat
The Viking Union is out for blood, and meeting with another train triggers a simple battle mode. Battles are real-time plus slow-paced and may be dull at first, but the amount of things to handle will multiply with time - though this hardly helps the common mop-up period at the end. The two sides are positioned on parallel tracks some distance away from each other. Maneuvering is limited to horizontal movement. Combat assets include cannons, machine guns, infantry and mammoth cavalry. All other wagons, save the locomotives, are dead weight. Combat is won when the enemy is disarmed, the train is then looted for intact wagons and materials and the contents of destroyed wagons are written off. The game is lost if the Transarctica loses a vital wagon. All engagements can be expected to take several minutes.
Reception
Computer Gaming World in May 1994 criticized the train controls as both too simple and "intentionally annoying", train combat as "painfully slow", and other "annoying, rough edges". The magazine concluded that the game's "blemishes derail an otherwise original and delightful premise".