Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 June 2013

#3: The Lost Kingdom Of Zkul

Publisher: Talent Computer Systems
Developers: Jon Malone, Allan Black.
Released: 1985(?)

I couldn't find the box-art for the ST version, so here's the title screen.


Well, it had to come sooner or later. The Lost Kingdom Of Zkul is the very first text-only adventure I'll be covering on this blog, and I've spent quite a bit of time wondering how I was going to present it in a non-boring way. In the end, I decided to go with the most obvious choice of a screengrabby "Let's Play"-ish format documenting my attempt(or possibly failure) to play the game.

TLKOZ(as it will probably never be known) was published by the Glasgow-based Talent Computer Systems, and is another port from Sinclair's doomed QL. Talent themselves were probably better known for their "serious" titles such as QL Paint and Cartridge Doctor, the purpose of which was to rescue damaged files from Sinclair's notoriously troublesome microdrive.

I've put a question mark next to the release date because I believe the ST version came out towards the end of 1985, but I'm not 100% sure as of yet. Antic Magazine No. 9 from January 1986 carried a report from the previous year's PC World Show in London, focussing on the array of new and upcoming titles available for the ST. Zkul is listed under "FINAL", meaning the reviewer had seen a completed, marketed version of the game. Given that the PCW show took place in early November, this seems to indicate Zkul must've been available by the end of that year. I realise no-one probably cares about this but me, but accuracy is important, dammit!

Anyway, lets get started. When the game begins, you are confronted by this lengthy screen of backstory, which would seem to suggest the authors are more than slightly familiar with the works of the late Professor Tolkien:


tl/dr: The upshot of all this is basically you have decided to go into some caves and look for treasure.



There isn't a huge amount to explore in the area outside the cave. There's an apparently endless dirt track, one of those adventure game forests that causes you to get instantly lost upon entering, your mate Eldomir's hut, and that's pretty much it.


Here, after some initial stumbling about, I make my first attempt to force my way into the cavern, and am immediately stymied by the very first obstacle. How embarrassing. By the way, the "EXAMINE" command is completely useless in this game, as it always results in the same response: "The [examined item] is just what it seems."


This is one of the more novel aspects of the game - a built in hint system. Basically, when you get stuck in certain situations, you are offered the chance to trade off some of your final score in exchange for a clue as to what to do next. 


...but sometimes, it's just not worth it.


Many adventure games of this era suffered from a limited vocabulary, but the parser in Zkul seems particularly lacking in intelligence. I know I have to get the portcullis out of the way somehow, but finding the precise combination of words to do so is eluding me.


Having exhausted all my available options, I take the coward's way out via a headfirst plunge into the River Benethor...


...however, this proves to be fortuitous, as it turns out this is the only way you can reach the home of your good buddy Eldomir, who I'm sure has loads and loads of useful advice to help you out on your quest.


Or, then again, he could just be completely and utterly useless. You see, it turns out all Eldomir actually does is wait in his house for you to bring the treasure back. Something tells me this not exactly a 100% equal partnership.


Oh thanks a bunch Eldomir, you massive dick.


At this point I decide to take the Long Walk out into the wilderness, by following the dirt track at the start of the game to see whether it actually ends at any point. Spoiler: It doesn't.





You are allowed to be resurrected twice upon dying, but on the third attempt the game will throw a hissy fit and refuse to continue, forcing you to reload the whole game. What a bitch!.

Another "feature" I forgot to mention is food and water situation. In order to survive, you are required to eat and drink at certain times, effectively giving you a set number of moves to do what you have to do before you drop down dead. These kind of arbitrary time limits have always been a bit of a bugbear of mine when it comes to older games, it always feels like a needless extra element of frustration on top of everything else.

Unfortunately, I decided to call it a day on Lost Kingdom Of Zkul without even having got past the first puzzle. As I haven't really given the game a fair crack of the whip, I think I may come back to it once I figure out how to get past that wretched portcullis. It can't be that hard, can it...


Friday, 12 April 2013

1985 - An Overview Of Stuff


Let us go then, you and I, on a trip back in time. Twenty-eight years back in time, to be precise...



The home computer market as it was then was a very different place to what it is today. For one thing, there wasn't the same degree of blanket media coverage of new games and systems, no blogs or game sites to scrutinise every forthcoming release in obsessive detail. All of this makes the job of establishing when certain games were actually released extremely difficult. In the case of the ST, the details of what software was actually available to buy in the first six months of it's life are somewhat hazy.

In researching this blog, I've relied on contemporaneous magazine articles and reviews to fill in the gaps in my knowledge, and basically what I've learnt from this is that coverage of the ST and Amiga didn't really begin in earnest until the following year, which is obviously not terribly helpful. Confusing matters further is the fact that the information compiled on sites such as MobyGames and The Little Green Desktop is often highly unreliable, at least in terms of nailing things down to specific dates. They do, however, provide a place to start.

So working out what games did come out in '85 has essentially been a process of elimination, by establishing all the titles that didn't come out that year and crossing them off the list. After removing all the games that I've been able to ascertain with some certainty have been incorrectly dated on the aforementioned sites, here is the list as it stands:


GameRelease DatePublisherDeveloper
Cutthroats
ActivisionInfocom
Deadline
ActivisionInfocom
Enchanter
ActivisionInfocom
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy
ActivisionInfocom
Infidel
ActivisionInfocom
The Lands Of HavocJulyMicrodealSteve Bak
The Lost Kingdom Of Zkull
Talent Computer Systems
MudpiesDecemberMicrodeal(UK), Michtron(US)
Planetfall
ActivisionInfocom
Seastalker
ActivisionInfocom
Sorcerer
ActivisionInfocom
Starcross
ActivisionInfocom
Suspect
ActivisionInfocom
Suspended
ActivisionInfocom
The Witness
ActivisionInfocom
Zork: The Great Underground Empire
ActivisionInfocom
Zork II: The Wizard Of Frobozz
ActivisionInfocom
Zork III: The Dungeon Master
ActivisionInfocom


So it seems from this that if you were an early ST adopter, you would've been pretty much just playing Infocom text adventures for the first six months or so. This makes sense, as Infocom already had a large catalogue of games that all ran on the same interpreter, and thus would've been very easy to port over.

Other than that, there wasn't a whole lot else - most games companies were either hard at work developing software for the new systems, or biding their time before nailing their flag to either the ST or Amiga mast. As far as I've been able to tell, the only other games to emerge in the latter half of 1985 were Lost Kingdom Of Zkull(another text adventure), Mudpies(an arcade game inspired by Robotron) and Lands Of Havoc(a multi-screen arcade adventure game). The latter is what we shall be looking at first, as it happens to be the very first ST game actually released.