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MausBack - Review: Sundog: Frozen Legacy

MAUS MERRYJEST THAWS THE LEGACY

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1984 was an interesting year for gaming. In May of that year we saw the release of the first King's Quest game by Roberta and Ken Williams, which was essentially the birth of the graphic adventure genre. In June Donkey Kong 3 slid down the vine to grab Nintendo some more revenue, but even more momentous was Pajintov's creation of Tetris- though the U.S. would not see it for two more years. Paperboy and Gauntlet appeared and dominated the arcade scene, and Apple started the tradition of high-end super-advertisements in the Superbowl with its iconic “1984” commercial which drew on Orwell's book.

It was also a year after the infamous 'Video Game Industry Crash' in the United States- a crash caused by a glut of poor titles from hastily financed start-up companies that quickly saturated the market. The crash explains why there were so few offerings in the video game market worthy of notice in 1984. All the crash did, however, was to clear away most of the chaff and leave the strong contenders standing for the second Renaissance of the industry. Nintendo would revitalize the industry with the release of its Nintendo Entertainment System in 1985, and Sierra would inject some serious life into the PC gaming scene with their King's Quest series alongside their Space Quest, Quest For Glory, Police Quest and Gabriel Knight series- which in turn encouraged Lucasarts to enter the market with Maniac Mansion, Loom, the Monkey Island and Indiana Jones adventure series...  There were giants in the earth in those days.

Standing among the giants, however, was a company that would make its own mark on gaming history: FTL Games (comprised of Bruce Webster, Nancy Holder and Wayne Holder). During FTL's all-too-short 14 year career, its games were consistently number-one sellers and received the highest critical acclaim and industry awards. The company would create the grandpappy of all realtime 3d roleplaying games: Dungeon Master, in 1987. Dungeon Master changed the industry and became the Atari ST's best-selling game of all time... but three years before that, FTL released its first offering for the Apple ][  into the still-turbulent market. This game was known as Sundog: Frozen Legacy.

Read more: MausBack - Review: Sundog: Frozen Legacy
Posted: 21 Aug 2012 02:31 by enigma530 #5453
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Looks like this game did a lot for it's day. Shame that so few games ever really strive to be so good.
Posted: 25 Aug 2012 21:06 by Acharky #5565
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Very well said.
Posted: 26 Aug 2012 00:09 by Tatsuya_Satoshi #5567
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I really like how you wrote the review, assessing it for it's time instead of how it'd fare nowadays.
A lot of reviewers actually do that.
It's really awkward.

MausBack: Inherit the Earth

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PART ONE: INTRODUCTION

If you were a furry in the early nineties, you probably remember that Avatar and VCL were the largest repositories of furry art on the web, you talked to most of your furry friends through FurryMUCK, Furtoonia and IRC channels. And if you were a gamer as well as a furry in the nineties, you might remember that outside of the  customary cutesy platformer mascots such as Bubsy, Sonic and Aero, there was a general dearth of games with anthropomorphic characters. Well, at least ones that weren't aimed at children. There was no Ironclaw, and any fictional furry world had to be experienced online through text-based role playing in MUCKs and chat rooms.

Then, one day you bought your monthly issue of Computer Gaming World (mostly for Scorpia's reviews, admit it!) and, whilst perusing reviews and previews of upcoming games, you came face to face with this advertisement:

 

Read more: MausBack: Inherit the Earth
Posted: 14 Aug 2012 22:31 by Tatsuya_Satoshi #5096
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It looks cute, but has depth.
Hmm....
At least it isn't Mass Effect 3
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 01:05 by enigma530 #5108
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Come on, ME3's story sucked, but it was a good game. It had good combat and gameplay imo.

But that certainly does sound like an interesting game.
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 03:02 by Tatsuya_Satoshi #5119
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enigma530 wrote:
Come on, ME3's story sucked, but it was a good game. It had good combat and gameplay imo.

But that certainly does sound like an interesting game.
I guess you're right... What's your skype?
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 04:32 by merryjest #5126
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If a game has a terrible story when it's supposed to be story-driven, I'd say the game has failed at the "game" part (not so in games that have no pretense of story, but this was not the case for the ME franchise)-- otherwise I just call them good tech demos.
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 08:21 by Tatsuya_Satoshi #5130
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merryjest wrote:
If a game has a terrible story when it's supposed to be story-driven, I'd say the game has failed at the "game" part (not so in games that have no pretense of story, but this was not the case for the ME franchise)-- otherwise I just call them good tech demos.
I call them James Cameron's Avatar.
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 12:02 by enigma530 #5135
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Tatsuya_Satoshi wrote:
enigma530 wrote:
Come on, ME3's story sucked, but it was a good game. It had good combat and gameplay imo.

But that certainly does sound like an interesting game.
I guess you're right... What's your skype?

It's "newdarkcloud" .
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 15:46 by merryjest #5138
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merryjest wrote:
If a game has a terrible story when it's supposed to be story-driven, I'd say the game has failed at the "game" part (not so in games that have no pretense of story, but this was not the case for the ME franchise)-- otherwise I just call them good tech demos.

Goooood burn.
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 17:50 by Tatsuya_Satoshi #5143
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merryjest wrote:
merryjest wrote:
If a game has a terrible story when it's supposed to be story-driven, I'd say the game has failed at the "game" part (not so in games that have no pretense of story, but this was not the case for the ME franchise)-- otherwise I just call them good tech demos.

Goooood burn.

o.o I hope you were replying to me, not yourself.
Posted: 15 Aug 2012 23:02 by merryjest #5157
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I did, i just hit the wrong 'quote' button.
Posted: 16 Aug 2012 19:35 by Tatsuya_Satoshi #5183
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merryjest wrote:
I did, i just hit the wrong 'quote' button.
It's also called the remake of Total Recall.
Anyways, I still like reading this review.
Good that it has readability, my reviews don't. XD