102 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
102 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
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SEARCH FOR THE KING
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The registration card for Accolade's graphic adventure, SEARCH FOR THE KING,
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asks you to give the game a grade. I was able to assign it a "B+" without
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hesitation. Had there been space on the card, I would have taken out my red pen
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and added these comments: "Very good first effort, but concentrate on improving
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your logic, and try to avoid imitating others. Keep up the good work!" (This
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review is based on the IBM-PC version.)
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In SEARCH FOR THE KING, you play the part of Les Manley, a minor employee at TV
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station WILL. Les is the low man on the totem pole -- he spends his time
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rewinding videotapes by hand to save electricity. In a bid for higher ratings,
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the management of WILL decides to pay a million dollars to anyone with evidence
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that the King of Rock 'n' Roll is still alive. The management is positive that
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the King is dead, so they figure they'll never have to pay. Les, frustrated by
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his own lack of success, is determined to prove them wrong.
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Les sets out to find the King, armed only with his bag lunch. His amusing and
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improbable quest takes him to a circus, a luxury hotel in Las Vegas, and finally
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to the Kingdom, the King's southern home. Unlike most computer games that
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attempt to be humorous, SEARCH is actually funny the whole way through. The game
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features lots of wisecracks, a fan who believes that the King's sweat has
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healing powers, the world's worst trapeze artist, an unusual form of space
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travel, and a cameo appearance by Alfred Hitchcock. What more could you ask for?
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SEARCH FOR THE KING is Accolade's first animated graphics adventure. It was
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designed by Steve Cartwright, author of HACKER and HACKER II. A pleasant change
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from some recent adventures, even veteran gamers will find the puzzles in SEARCH
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challenging. Most of the puzzles are tough but fair, although there are a few
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that will try your patience. One of the puzzles involving Helmut, the World's
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Smallest Man, has such a bizarre solution that you'll laugh out loud when you
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discover it. It's not likely that you'll be able to solve the solution on your
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own, though. (I confess that I had to get the solution from a friend, who in
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turn got it from Accolade.) Other puzzles in the game, such as one involving a
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fan of the King, are just badly implemented. Only a handful of the puzzles in
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the game fall into the "very difficult" category, but those that do are very
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difficult indeed.
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SEARCH FOR THE KING is much like a Sierra graphics adventure in look and play.
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There's even a Sierra-like menu bar at the top of the screen. In fact, sometimes
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the program is _too_ much like a Sierra game. SEARCH FOR THE KING tries very
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hard to look like the LEISURE SUIT LARRY series. For example, there is a bunch
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of close-up shots of curvaceous women, for no other reason than there are
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similar shots in the LARRY games. The nerd-as-hero idea is also taken from the
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LARRY games (although Les is quiet and timid, where Larry is loud and sleazy).
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This attempt to mimic the competition just serves to divert the player's
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attention from SEARCH FOR THE KING's own virtues. It's also a little misleading:
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Although the back of the box hints at it, there's almost no sex in SEARCH FOR
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THE KING.
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SEARCH FOR THE KING establishes Accolade technically as a major new player in
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the graphic adventure field. Overall, Accolade has done a good job of creating a
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Sierra-like adventure game engine. The promotional material for the game touts
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the superiority of Accolade's new parser, but I found the parser in SEARCH to be
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just marginally better than Sierra's. The Accolade parser is more
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discriminating; for example, ASK FOR is interpreted differently from ASK ABOUT.
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Yet there were still plenty of times when the parser just didn't understand what
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I wanted to do; e.g., the parser refused to recognize LET GO OF XXXX, but
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accepted RELEASE XXXX.
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SEARCH has some nice little features not found in other graphics adventures.
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One is a command buffer that allows you to recall any of the last four lines
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you've typed. Another is the ability to drop things. In Sierra games, once you
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pick up an object, you're stuck with it. There's no real need to drop things in
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SEARCH, but the ability to do so if you want to is nice.
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The only bugs I found in SEARCH were isolated cases of Les vanishing, freezing,
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or "walking on air." In all cases, I was able to avoid the bug by restoring the
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game.
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The graphics in this game are as good as those in Sierra's recent 16-color
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games. The animation, however, is not as smooth as that found in Sierra or
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Lucasfilm efforts. The game supports CGA, EGA, MCGA/VGA, and Tandy graphics. For
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most users, the 16-color EGA mode will work best with their system. The game
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also supports an "enhanced 16-color mode" for those with MCGA or VGA. In this
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mode, 16 colors are still the maximum number used, but the colors are drawn from
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the larger VGA palette. This allows more subtle color combinations to appear.
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The only trouble with the enhanced 16-color mode is that it takes up an
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additional 32K of RAM. This means you may have to remove TSRs (along with mouse
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drivers and disk caches) to get the game to run properly in enhanced mode.
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The copy protection in SEARCH FOR THE KING is off-disk: At the beginning of
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each game, the player must enter a price from a list of VCR components provided
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with the documentation. The game supports the AdLib, CMS, Roland, and other
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sound cards. It requires 640K of RAM, and is distributed on five 5-1/4" and
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three 3-1/2" diskettes; both formats are included in the package. The mouse is
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supported, but a joystick is not.
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SEARCH FOR THE KING comes close to earning an "A," but I'm compelled to bring
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it down to a "B+," due to a couple of unreasonably tough puzzles, some very
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minor technical glitches, and its slavish emulation of the competition. However,
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it's still a very good game, and I recommend it to all adventurers looking for a
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challenge. If other Accolade adventures live up to the standards of SEARCH, then
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Accolade can look forward to scoring straight "A's" in the future at the School
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of Adventure Design!
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SEARCH FOR THE KING is published and distributed by Accolade.
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*****DOWNLOADED FROM P-80 SYSTEMS (304) 744-2253
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