Pages

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Game 11: Maniac Mansion - Introduction


These game developers really love their alliteration don't they

Game 11 is one that I really should have played before, but for some strange reason never did. I’ve come across the name Maniac Mansion many, many times when reading about classic adventure games, and have even played through the 1993 sequel Day of the Tentacle, so I’m really looking forward to checking out what was the first LucasArts adventure game to hit the PC (1986’s text parser driven Labyrinth was never released on PC). There’s actually a heck of a lot of info out there on the internetz regarding the origin, development of, and critical response to the game, so I’ll try to keep this pre-game introduction post to a short summary of events rather than a step by step trip back in time (trust me, it’s my tendency to go way overboard with the research). If you want more detail, then Wikipedia is your friend.


Video Game Legend Ron Gilbert

Maniac Mansion is the brainchild of Lucasfilm Games employees Ron Gilbert and Gary Winnick. The two of them met while working on separate games for the company (Gilbert on Koronis Rift, Winnick on Labyrinth) and immediately bonded due to their similar tastes in humour and movies. When they were asked to design an original game together, the duo began trying to come up with ideas based on their love of B grade horror films, and quickly decided a comedy-horror set in a haunted house would suit their interests and talents. Shortly after they began writing, Lucasfilm Games relocated to Stable House at Skywalker Ranch, and it was the Main House of the ranch that inspired the concept art and eventual look of the mansion. Gilbert had recently played Sierra’s King’s Quest, and thought the adventure game genre would be an ideal format for their ideas, but there were certain aspects about that game that frustrated him. In particular, he found the text parser the player is forced to use to interact with the world to be an inadequate and at times infuriating method. He figured the game should be controlled solely by mouse and set about creating an entirely point and click interface.


The Skywalker Ranch: Luke's intergalactic fame led to great popularity and financial success

Another significant change that they planned to implement was multiple playable characters. They felt that letting the player choose which characters they played with would result in multiple pathways through the game and a level of replayability that adventure games had previously not had. The player would choose two characters from a list of six to accompany the game’s protagonist Dave into the mansion. Each character would have unique skills and each were based on stereotypes and people they knew. For example, the main protagonist Dave was based on Gilbert, punk rocker Razor was based on Winnick’s girlfriend Ray, and writer Wendy was based on a fellow employee that went by the same name. Unfortunately, the pair underestimated how difficult it would be to give the player so many different ways of solving puzzles, and subsequently spent months working on the event combinations that could occur.  Avoiding dead ends was extremely difficult and the game’s development time was already well beyond any previous Lucasfilm game when the real programming got underway.


Dave, Sid, Michael, Wendy, Bernard, Razor and Jeff

Speaking of programming, Gilbert employed the assistance of fellow employee Chip Morningstar to help him build the new engine required to run his game, and David Fox to help with scripting.  He originally planned to have up to forty verbs on screen that the player could use to interact with game world items and characters, but the list was eventually dropped down to twelve that they thought were essential. These were integrated into the engine which took close to a year to complete, and was later named Script Creation Utility for Maniac Mansion (SCUMM). After close to two years of development, Maniac Mansion debuted at the 1987 Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago. While it was initially released only for Commodore 64, the SCUMM engine enabled easy porting to other platforms, so ports soon arrived for the Apple II, DOS, NES, Amiga and Atari ST. It quickly garnered rave reviews from critics and has gone on to be considered a seminal adventure title, simultaneously announcing Lucasfilm as a serious competitor to the already well-established Sierra. The SCUMM engine would become the backbone of the company for years to come, with classics such as The Secret of Monkey Island, Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, Sam and Max and of course Day of the Tentacle all making use of Gilbert’s creation.


The box artwork was created by Winnick's mate Ken Macklin

That completes the Overview of the Origin and Development of Maniac Mansion 101 course. I hope you enjoyed it, or at least learnt something interesting. Now it’s time for me to enter the mansion and experience the game for myself! I’ve been a little confused about which version of the game to play, as there seems to be a few around. It does not appear that the game is available to buy these days, but please let me know if I'm wrong. In the end, I think I’ve got the best version of the original game, being the enhanced DOS version 2…um…version. This will be my first experience of using the SCUMMVM emulator, and after quickly starting the game up, it seems to be very easy to use. I’ve also paid a visit to Replacement Docs and found a PDF copy of the manual. The backstory of the game is not entirely clear from the manual, but it seems the protagonist’s girlfriend Sandy is being held captive in the mansion, and it’s up to Dave and two other college students to go in and rescue her. The last time I entered a haunted mansion to save someone resulted in a week of Uninvited pain and frustration. I get the feeling this experience is going to be quite a different one. Hold on Sandy…I’m coming to get you!


The SCUMMVM Emulator: Looks clean and easy to use.

17 comments:

  1. This should run perfectly in SCUMMVM, given that the engine was made to run it. You could try DOSBOX through to see how they compare. Might be worth a post, so that people know about the differences.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I've only played a few games in ScummVM, but I really enjoy the interface. Good luck in good old MM! :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Have you locked in the characters yet? Looks like Wendy and Bernard at the moment.
    Glad to see you making such progress through the games, as I've just barely passed my first.

    After you finish, look at the walkthroughs on Gamefaqs; one of them has an interview with someone that worked on the NES port. It may have made it easier, but it doesn't sound like it was a walk in the park: the scripting engine was actually rebuilt for the NES.

    Good luck, and have fun. It's interesting to see an adventure game with anything extra to offer on subsequent plays. I wonder if this is the first game to do something like this, at least the first to do it to this extent (whole story lines & different endings possible with different characters).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It looks like I'll be playing Bernard and Wendy, although I have no idea why they were chosen above the others. I'll talk more about this in my net post.

      Delete
    2. Grumble, wanted the punk, stupid 3 votes.

      Delete
  4. I can't believe you never played this jewel of adventure gaming...

    If this game won't get a PISSED rating above 70 I will be pissed!
    :-)
    No, seriously enjoy this one!

    PS: one small request: It would be really cool if you could announce new polls in
    small posts. I read your blog entries in Google Reader and therefore I missed the two last polls...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know! This one fell in the cracks between my Amiga days and my PC days, and I just never got back to it for some reason. I hope you're right about the PISSED rating. I'd love to enjoy it that much! :)

      I never considered that polls would go unnoticed for people using Google Reader and the like. I'll make an effort to mention new polls in posts.

      Delete
  5. You never even tried the version included in the Day of the Tentacle?

    ReplyDelete
  6. To be honest Ilmari, I remember very little about Day of the Tentacle and am not even sure that I finished it. I remember thinking it was great, but perhaps I got stuck and moved onto something else. I was a restless teenager at the time!

    One thing's for sure. After playing a few minutes of Maniac Mansion, I'm certain I've never played it before.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good luck in the mansion! Are you sticking with the enhanced version for your review? If I recall correctly, DotT included the full original un-enhanced game in its own subfolder.

      Delete
  7. I've been following the blog for many weeks but I think this is my first comment here. I believe Maniac Mansion is a game with heavy historical importance as it introduced many innovations that came to be regarded as standard in the years to come. It is not one of my top favorite adventures nowadays but (especially if we correlate to its generation) it is surely one of my most highly regarded ones. And it's still incredibly fun to play, a proof to the timeless nature of good gameplay.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Yep, as Ilmari said, there is a full playable version of Maniac Mansion in Day of the Tentacle. You just have to use Ed's computer inside the game. But if I recall correctly there were some issues with that version (lacking some sounds I think) so it's certaintly better to play an stand-alone version.

    Btw, I've been following the blog for a while and just had to say that you are doing a great job :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It amuses me that the game is within the sequel instead of just bundled with it.

      Delete
  9. hah. I remember playing this when it was new. :).

    ReplyDelete
  10. I've also played Day of the Tentacle and not Maniac Mansion. I decided to play the version that's included as an easter egg in DotT. I didn't want to start DotT each time to play the game though, so I did a bit of research on how to make it standalone. It's simple, just copy the files from the "MANIAC" directory to the hard drive and rename MANIAC.OVL to MANIAC.EXE. Works fine in DOSBox with default settings.

    I however wasn't happy with the PC speaker music, and checked if the game has better sound in Tandy mode, just like Sierra's AGI games. It has, but apparently the DotT version is bugged and the text and cursor become garbled in Tandy mode, making the game unplayable. So I searched for a way to patch it, and hex-edited the executable according to these instructions I found. Now the game has Tandy sound AND is playable!

    Yes, I went through all that trouble to avoid simply downloading it or playing in ScummVM. I'm insane.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Are there any emulation glitches in the ScummVM version? I'd think this would be one of the most reliable games.

      Delete
  11. For those wanting to play along, you can stream both the original and enhanced editions from Archive.org:
    1987: https://archive.org/details/msdos_Maniac_Mansion_1987
    1988: https://archive.org/details/msdos_Maniac_Mansion_Enhanced_1988

    Note: You can't save, and it is running in DOXBOX.

    ReplyDelete

Note Regarding Spoilers and Companion Assist Points: There's a set of rules regarding spoilers and companion assist points. Please read it here before making any comments that could be considered a spoiler in any way. The short of it is that no points will be given for hints or spoilers given in advance of the reviewer requiring one. Please...try not to spoil any part of the game...unless they really obviously need the help...or they specifically request assistance.

If this is a game introduction post: This is your opportunity for readers to bet 10 CAPs (only if they already have them) that the reviewer won't be able to solve a puzzle without putting in an official Request for Assistance: remember to use ROT13 for betting. If you get it right, you will be rewarded with 50 CAPs in return.
It's also your chance to predict what the final rating will be for the game. Voters can predict whatever score they want, regardless of whether someone else has already chosen it. All score votes and puzzle bets must be placed before the next gameplay post appears. The winner will be awarded 10 CAPs.