By Ilmari
Diary of Jed Clampett 2: “Weeelll, doggies! We were havin’ a mite hoedown, ‘n it was finer’n frog hair, when ever’thang went catawampus and somethang harble and turble happened. Som rullick took granny! I ain’t bein’ prung down by all these common people in this town. I am fixing to bo’ahl a drank that ort to save her.”After an excruciating road trip, I had finally found the Clampett mansion. I still couldn’t get inside the house, since the front door was locked. Checking the premises, I could go to the backyard, with a nice pool. Continuing around the pool, I arrived at the house of Milburn Drysdale, the manager of the bank holding the Clampett fortune.
The “humour” is killing me |
A cutscene started. Jed Clampett was taken to the bank and given the keys to the mansion. Mr. Drysdale suggested that the Clampetts should hold a cocktail party, or as the Clampetts referred to it, a hoedown.
The quality of the dialogue just keeps surprising me |
I’ll stop here to mention how cumbersome the interface is, when you are trying to pick items. The room graphics are full of all kinds of stuff, and there’s really no indication what’s just scenery and what’s something you can interact with. I expected no hotspots, but there’s also no “look”-function to help, so I really have no other option, but to click pretty much everything, whether it can be moved or not.
Despite the difficulty, I managed to pick up a number of items within the Clampett mansion:
- A banana peel
- Granny’s recipe book with instructions on how to make tonic
- A Spanish dictionary
- Scissors
- A remote control
- Corn
Jethro had seen a masked figure exiting the mansion with a big bag. Checking the driveway, I saw that the kidnapper had dropped a bowtie. Going through my screenshots, I noticed Mr. Drysdale’s assistant, Mr. Tyler, wore one. Tyler appears to be a character not from the original show, and checking his Beverly Hillbillies Wiki entry, I noticed he was described as the second villain of the BH movie. Dagnabit, I had it!
I had met Tyler for the first time at the bank during one of the cutscenes. The problem was to find the bank, since it clearly wasn’t in the immediate neighbourhood. Indeed, looking back at the whole trip to the bank, I noticed that Jed Clampett had been taken there by a car. It was time to go back driving.
I obviously hadn’t checked the whole Beverly Hills map, when searching for the Clampett mansion, as I had no idea where to look for the bank. While scouting the roads, I tried visiting some of the mansions again, and Jed asked their residents if they had heard of granny. No luck there.
I finally arrived at a shopping street I hadn’t visited earlier. I couldn’t get anything useful from the stores, but on one screen of the street I found the entrance to the bank. Tyler was standing in it, but had nothing helpful to say about the kidnapping. I tried various items on him, and the banana peel did the trick - Tyler fell to the floor and dropped his keys.With the keys I could slip to an office. In there, I heard granny’s voice in the vault. The vault was shut tight, but granny told me her tonic might help me get inside. Hey, I just happen to have the recipe for it…
Shopping list for the next post |
This game's got a weird look to it. With all the aggressive dithering going on, at times it looks almost Japanese. It'd almost be your typical amateur AGS game otherwise, right down to the not quite right look of the suits.
ReplyDeleteThat said, I get the distinct feeling that this game is really short based on the events so far.
The "humour" is clearly a bunch of jokes they tried very hard to crowbar into the conversation and plot. It's clearly not a natural evolution of the conversation and I don't see anything better than "dumb hillbilly doesn't understand the word in context".
ReplyDeleteEven though I wasn't in the audience of the original show (the target audience for this game was almost definitely older gamers who enjoyed the show when they were younger), I can appreciate this more than perhaps the other commenters. There's nothing wrong with self-deprecating humor, and we were laughing at an exaggerated version of the"country bumkin".
ReplyDeleteThe graphics are quite acceptable, the writing fits the TV show it is based on, and the interface doesn't feel like too bad of a train wreck. Perhaps the puzzle seem a little easy for us veterans, but this certainly doesn't seem as bad as the previous games from this outfit