by Michael
So, how to start off this post? How about a shocking thought: this game is nowhere near as bad as I expected.
I'm not saying it's great. I'm not even saying that it's good. But there's actually a few things in here so far that are actually an improvement over the last game I played for the blog. A LucasArts game, remember.
For example, some commenters on that last review were distressed by the lack of tool tips or mouse-over item descriptions. This game has both. It has icons that function very similarly to that of old-school LucasFilm games, where you can select an action, and then whip around the screen, the names of items showing at the bottom of the screen. Not only do most items have a description when you look at them, but often, different descriptions when either Wayne or Garth is looking at the item.
Wayne has control... |
...and now Garth does. |
The icons on the bottom of the screen are mostly obvious, the first one swapping which character you are in control of. I never really noticed any puzzle yet where my choice of player mattered, but after the first few, I gave up and just let Wayne do most of the talking. There was one puzzle in particular that I restored and tried with Garth, just to test, and the game took over and had Wayne handle it. I’ll mention it when I get there.
At the end of the last post, I mentioned the list that Wayne and Garth were brainstorming. It’s an inventory item in Wayne’s collection, and if you look at it, he commends himself on his organizational skills. But there’s another icon choice, the “extreme close-up”, which is a reference to something in the skit and movie where the camera rapidly zooms in and then back out on a subject. In the game, it’s used to closely examine an item. It’s only been available to me a few times in this session, the other times Wayne dismisses me. But we can read the list. As we complete some items, they’ll get crossed off the list.
So, we have a clear-cut list of puzzles to solve, but no real hint on how to start. So, I’ll start by looking around the room, and there’s a laundry basket, a guitar, and a hockey stick I can take, so I do.
Flashback to PQ3’s tracking device |
It really DOES suck. |
I nabbed that, and then looked around at the robot (“I don’t think he bought that at Kmart”) and the, um, creature next to it (labeled “?????”), and the computer screens and even the mice cages. The file cabinets are locked, and I can’t use the computers. There’s an electrical outlet, too (Wayne: “That’s where the electricity comes from.” Garth: “I got my tongue stuck in one of those once.”) Looking at the projector screen, Garth reminisces back to his tween years: “I wonder if he has that school classic ‘You and your Body’”).
At this point, I should have explored further, but I didn’t. Because I discovered one of the great flaws in the game. See, there’s a menu button on the bottom of the screen, click that, and you have options such as turning sound on/off, saving a game, and even quitting back to DOS. If you do that, it asks you the standard, “Are you sure?” message with a Yes or No prompt.
But... if you accidentally brush against the letter Q on the keyboard during game play, it rush-quits you to DOS. No prompt, no warning.
I have many four-letter words in mind right now. I didn’t have a recent save, so I had to start over. And I did things in a different order. So, for the rest of this post, I’ve moved stuff around to tell the story better, even though I did some of it in a different order.
Why does this game have to be so complicated? |
In my new travels, I find a convenience store. The clerk behind the counter looks just like 2002’s Avril Lavigne. There’s some candy for sale, some 2-day old hot dogs, and scratch-off lottery tickets. Wayne has $5, and I don’t know if I should spend this money now (or if it will put me in a dead man-walking situation) but I take the gamble.
Actually, that was a nice touch. |
It seems Capstone really likes their restaurant scenes. |
Inside, there’s a biker gang, a couple of cute girls at a table, and a waitress. (This is 1993. We weren’t calling them servers yet.) Looking around, there are many different seating areas, set up almost like cliques in high school. (Here’s where the newbies sit, here’s where the regulars dine, this is the Twilight Zone, or geek territory. Garth says some of his friends like to sit there).
Talking to the biker gang gets us nowhere, they laugh off everything we try to say, wanting to get them to volunteer for the pizza-thon. I suspect we’ll need to win them over somehow. The boys dismiss the idea of talking to the girls, because they have more important business to handle.
At the counter is Irma, who has worked there “forever”, here at the home of the day-old ‘rawhide’ donuts. She tries to get us to buy a fresh donut for $1, but Wayne balks at the price. “I never pay more than a quarter for a donut.”
It’s been a while since a quarter was a reasonable price for a donut. |
What is it with Aurora businesses offering stale, day-old treats for sale?
The Blues Brothers did this scene better. |
When there’s only one candidate, there’s only one choice. |
In his bathrobe? Hmmm. I wonder if we’ll be blackmailing him somehow later.
Synchronize swatches. |
He’s not quite ready for prime time. |
Looking around the room, we see different sections of videos, like the comedy section or the “Freddy Kills Everyone Except the Babe” section. Behind the counter, we talked to the clerk about lending us video equipment. No go, he won’t even take promotional time on the pizza-thon because he gets all the advertising he needs. But for $20/hour, we can rent the stuff.
There’s another dialog choice, for a puzzle I didn’t know I needed to solve yet. Bad game design. Ugh.
“Will you consider letting Cassandra out of her contract?” where he responds the same, asking what he gets out of it. This is the first I’ve heard of Cassandra or a contract in this game, and at first I thought it was a throwback to the movie, but I later found out there are plot considerations.
So, let’s look around some more.
I found Gilligan’s Groceries, and when I try to go in, I’m told “I think we should stay out here” but with no reason given. So I look around back and find an entrance to the warehouse in so far the only screen that scrolls, if only just a little. “That must be where he keeps the spare munchies.”
In the warehouse are some shelves of munchies that I cannot use or take (Wayne isn’t into shoplifting), some locked lockers, and a clock on the wall that is basically nailed down, so I can’t take it. So, nothing I can do here right now.
There’s a board game that could help. |
He needs to go prepare for his television show (which we’ll learn about later) where he’ll be introducing his newest invention, a robotic handyman.
Roomba’s great-grandmother. |
Another Indiana Jones-esque puzzle? I have Wayne talk to Garth, and he agrees to distract the good doctor, by showing off some tricks he can do with his tongue. The game moves Wayne back over by the cages and the lever. So, while the doctor is distracted by the linguistically-gifted Garth, I yank the lever, which releases the mice all over the place.
The doctor is really pissed off, and leaves to go to the store to get some cheese. I just left there, but I don’t feel like following him yet. There’s more to explore. Like, say, behind that projector screen. I pull the cord, and it retracts up. There’s a safe behind it, that opens right up and gives me a remote control.
He’s a stand-up philosopher. |
Wow, does this seem like someone I might POSSIBLY need to befriend to win this game. You think?
His style of comedy? Dan Quayle impersonator. Really, these games are becoming a history lesson for our younger and overseas readers. He says there’s not much demand for what he does anymore.
So, we’ll come back later when we have something for him. I suspect we’ll be needing him for something contract-related.
Protesters: “TWO, FOUR, SIX, EIGHT! SUBMIT! CONFORM! IT’S NOT TOO LATE!” |
I think I know who that is and what that invention is. The only question is how to negotiate with him for it.
Nothing else urgent I can see in the office at this time, so let’s explore some more.
They did write her to match the movie personality. |
Talking with her, we find out that she would love to be our musical act, but she’s locked into a contract with Eugene.
Wait, I knew that. Because Eugene already told me. Without context. Thanks, Capstone. But at least I think I know how to handle this.
Also, this was the scene I said I tried as both Wayne and Garth, but when I entered the room with Garth in control, the game ignored that and had Wayne take over.
But enough of that, let's go a few blocks away to the ad agency. Why? Because it’s somewhere I haven’t been yet.
It’s an ad that speaks for itself. |
They refuse to talk to me, but the boss hands me a stack of business cards. I suspect I need to find that rodent in order to get advertising. Maybe there’s a chance the lab rats are related? Damn, I should have caught one of them somehow.
Right now, I’m getting hungry. For something with cheese.
It’s-a me, Mario |
For attention to detail, if Wayne looks at one of the candles on the table, “It kind of reminds me of Madonna... HOT!” What the hot musician is doing on those tablecloths, though, I don’t know. “The fake plastic tablecloth is coated with pizza grease.” Looking at the exit door, we find it “stained from millions of greasy fingers.”
But away we go, to a television station. Not our own, I guess, but another one.
Protesters: “Television has got to go. Why? Because we told you so.” |
Who knew reviewer Alex was a star of this game? (Just kidding. Please don’t sue me.) |
Huh. I think I solved another puzzle, but let’s just finish exploring the studio first, shall we?
The door in the back is locked, so I leave back out the window and then use the front door of the studio to go inside. I find a very large waiting room, complete with an attractive receptionist who won’t give us the time of day, and a shelf of trophies filled with “more shiny plastic than in Madonna’s bra.”
Are you noticing a theme with Wayne yet? (Don’t worry, he was like that on SNL and the movie too.)
There’s a schedule of TV show tapings on one of those letterboard signs, marked as open or closed, which I suppose is about the doors to the audience. Two are open, a game show Name That Babe hosted by Bink Nightingale, and Professor Von Ludwig’s Build it Yourself show. Is that what the mad doctor was referring to, or the closed Science World show? Or somewhere else, because Wayne asks the receptionist about where Dr. Gadget is going to film his show, but she doesn’t recognize the name.
For those outside the US, there’s a reason games like Larry 2 and this one, among others, parody the names of the hosts in this way. There was a famous game show host named Wink Martindale who hosted many prolific shows over his 40+ year career.
Around the room are a few doors. On the left is the locked-up prop room, and on the right are a couple of studios. The rear door is locked, but I can access the one closest to me.
That’s something new for a game show. |
“Let’s give a warm welcome to our other contestant, who has his own TV show on Public Access, say hello to WAYNE CAMPBELL!! Good luck, Wayne!”
In case you’ve forgotten, this gimmick has been used in Larry 2, Larry 6, Les Manley 2, and how many other games starting with “L”?
Answer: The Judds. |
Predictably, the other two contestants get the question wrong. “Which American music artist had a video which featured a dancer with an unusually peculiar ‘unit’”
I wonder which one is correct? |
Yeah, I think I know EXACTLY what do do with that.
Back to Pepe, and we give him the ticket. He is grateful, and asks us to watch over the store while he goes on vacation, and even gives us his lucky sausage as a thank you, and also because “Da manager musta smell like-a pizza.”
Yes, he has a very thick accent.
Now that we have our location, I think I can nail down our magician next.
The cape makes the man. |
I didn’t actually realize that one of the dialog choices with Slobotski before was a hint of sorts. I could ask him to “pull a rabbit out of your... ear” and the hesitation there was because he didn’t have a hat. Now, since he has a hat, the dialog choice has changed.
I didn’t say it was a great hint, but again, I’m mildly impressed with some of the choices in this game. It’s not at the Sierra/LucasArts level, but so far, certainly above the Accolade (Les Manley) level.
He now has loads of confidence. “Sure, easy... or I can pull a donkey out of your ear, or monkeys out of your butt. I can do anything. I am... THE GREAT SLOBOTSKI!”
I walk over and talk to Eugene again, and ask about the loan of equipment. He says he;ll show up and do it himself if I do two things. First, get Cassandra’s contracts rewritten to clear up the problems, and second, get the magician hanging out in his store signed up. Well, I already took care of the second, so I think I know how to handle the first.
I go back to the unemployment office, and ask the lawyer to help. He has two demands. First, some paper to write on, but those business cards do the trick. Second, he wants to be in the pizza-thon.
Well done, Garth. |
Livin’ on a prayer |
Session Time: 1 hour 30 Minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 40 minutes
Wayne’s Inventory: $4, hockey stick, final contract, lucky sausage, guitar, to-do list, laundry basket, Suck Cut™, candy bar, remote control
Garth’s Inventory: Drumstick
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 me requiring one. Please...try not to spoil any part of the game for me...unless I really obviously need the help...or I specifically request assistance. In this instance, I've not made any requests for assistance. Thanks!
Enjoying this playthrough so far since I never played the game. The interface seems very similar or reminds me of Flight of the amazon queen, and the graphic style too. Not even sure if they were made by the same company.
ReplyDeleteDon't miss my comments on that Monkey Island "Movie" from the last post, since it uses graphics from this game and I managed to find it on youtube.
Not trying to spoil the future posts, but while it's a flawed game, I enjoyed the experience more than I expected. But it's kind of a downhill slope as we go into the game. (I've already finished it, but we're getting caught up with posts here.)
DeleteAs for that movie, I liked looking at it, but my brain wasn't working well enough to translate enough of it at the time. I have to find a few moments to watch it properly. But a near find anyways. Also had backgrounds stolen from other games as well, I think I saw.
I know Dan Quayle exclusively from MAD magazine articles, I initially thought it was a joke name they had come up but eventually I was able to figure out who he was and why he was all over the magazine. The fact that they referenced him into the mid nineties means he must have had some impact on the American culture.
ReplyDeleteDan Quayle was the vice president right up until the January of 1993, and was the butt of jokes because he was plainspoken and came across at times as though he was uneducated.
DeleteThe big incident was when he was at school spelling bee and mis-corrected a kid who had properly spelled "potato" by saying there should have been an E at the end.
We'd probably still be making Dan Quayle jokes to this day except that George W. Bush consumed that ecological niche in the pop culture comedy landscape.
DeleteQuayle gets too much flak for the potato thing though; he was doing exactly what a spelling bee moderator is supposed to do, and following what it said on the card rather than his own opinion.
One might suggest that our representatives being reduced to following instructions (such as reading obediently from whatever card/autocue is place in front of them) in place of engaging their own faculties / acting on their own convictions could be emblematic of a wider problem. It's probably an over-generalisation, though.
DeleteThe Madonna/candles link is most like a reference to the film Body of Evidence, in which Madonna famously dripped hot candle wax in the bedroom scene.
ReplyDeleteBased on this post, the game definitely doesn't seem as bad as its reputation! It's also staying quite true to the tone of the movies.
Yes, no matter what you say about the game itself, they wrote the dialog well to the characters. Impressive for the developer in question.
DeleteNew super accurate Roland SC-55 emulator (requires ROMs):
ReplyDeletehttps://github.com/nukeykt/Nuked-SC55
https://github.com/nukeykt/Nuked-SC55/releases
https://www.vogons.org/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=99447
The Roland SC-55 is the synthesizer most 1990s General MIDI game soundtracks were composed on. The default Windows MIDI device (Microsoft GS Wavetable Synth) is also based on it, although heavily stripped down.
That's promising. I'm so glad I picked up an actual MT-32 nearly 15 years ago for just $40 on eBay, because at that time emulation was just starting and it was awful. (MUNT still isn't great, but it used to be worse)
Delete