The Super NES version lacks the Quavers branding, and instead the aim is to recover bundles of cash dropped down the ant hill by Captain Rat.
The game consists of 100 levels of increasing complexity over nine different themed worlds.
By pausing the game once the time has run out, a small hint will be displayed, giving advice on how to complete the level.
A password system allows the player to continue an earlier game, without having to restart from the first level.
Creative differences between RedRat Software and Ocean Software around branding and graphical changes overshadowed this title and a breakdown between both parties occurred once legal action was taken by RedRat to regain creative control/claim a breach of contract.
[citation needed] The game was reviewed in 1993 in Dragon #193 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in the "Role of Computers" column.
[1] Entertainment Weekly gave the game a B− and wrote that "The theme of Pushover (Ocean of America, for Super NES) is ingenious — players have to line up 10 kinds of dominoes, then get them all to fall with a single push — but the static execution will have small kids dozing off way before their bedtime.