Putting the 'role' back in role-playing games since 2002.
Donate to Codex
Good Old Games
  • Welcome to rpgcodex.net, a site dedicated to discussing computer based role-playing games in a free and open fashion. We're less strict than other forums, but please refer to the rules.

    "This message is awaiting moderator approval": All new users must pass through our moderation queue before they will be able to post normally. Until your account has "passed" your posts will only be visible to yourself (and moderators) until they are approved. Give us a week to get around to approving / deleting / ignoring your mundane opinion on crap before hassling us about it. Once you have passed the moderation period (think of it as a test), you will be able to post normally, just like all the other retards.

The Random Adventure Game News Thread

toro

Arcane
Vatnik
Joined
Apr 14, 2009
Messages
14,805
This just got released:


Anyone tried it?
 

Unkillable Cat

LEST WE FORGET
Patron
Joined
May 13, 2009
Messages
28,573
Codex 2014 Make the Codex Great Again! Grab the Codex by the pussy
Just a small heads-up - ScummVM has been updated and now has full support for two of the most cantankerous adventure game of the 90s - Blade Runner and Quest for Glory 4.
 

Martyr

Arcane
Joined
Jan 28, 2018
Messages
1,180
Location
Bavaria
seems like this game is not only getting ignored on steam (11 reviews) and gog (0 reviews), but also on the Codex :argh: released on September, 19.





https://af.gog.com/game/jenny_leclue_detectivu?as=1649904300


Jenny LeClue is a thrilling story of mystery, adventure and growing up. Set in the sleepy town of Arthurton, the game is filled with memorable, complex characters and rendered in a unique aesthetic.

Embrace the choosiness and shape the metanarrative. You are not the only guiding hand shaping Jenny’s destiny, but your choices will help her unravel the tangled mystery and become the detective she was born to be.

Jenny gets more than she bargains for when her mother is accused of murder, and begins an unexpected journey to find the truth.

She soon discovers the idyllic town of Arthurton is not what it seems, and unseen forces will stop at nothing to keep Jenny from the truth. She will need all her skills of deduction to find the real killer and clear her mother’s name.

A pocket-sized heroine on a big quest for justice:
Jenny is a brilliant young detective, sharp eyed, intuitive and a ruthless pursuer of the truth. She is able to look around during dialogue scenes, observing the subject for visible clues that might reveal their guilt or innocence that would otherwise go undetected.

A beautiful handmade world, packed with secrets:
A sleek, gorgeous hand drawn world with vintage mid-20th century aesthetics and mystery squished into every corner. There’s so much to interact with, and players who poke and prod at every last thing are rewarded with insight, secrets, and humor.
ss_6f3986ba37cc97e2658170b22aeb9d49c2d4c2b8.1920x1080.jpg

A story within a story, where your choosiness matters:
Jenny LeClue weaves a rich metanarrative around a rich story exploring themes of family, loss, and identity. The "author" of Jenny's adventures, Arthur K Finklestein, acts as narrator and guide, but his presence also allows you to make choices that change the way Jenny's story is written. These choices may even affect Finklestein’s own story.
ss_9aad40cb797a31391fa13f5eeadf4218f68130c3.1920x1080.jpg

A Diverse Cast Of Characters & Locations:
Explore Arthurton’s expansive world including the abandoned mines, the forgotten graveyard, Lake Noware, and Gumboldt's Library. Jenny will meet an array of intriguing and suspicious characters who could help or hinder her on her quest for the truth.
ss_9bf9ed705cc493b3e95fa0beb7ac8bcdb84c3cf2.1920x1080.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Martyr

Arcane
Joined
Jan 28, 2018
Messages
1,180
Location
Bavaria
seems like [Jenny LeClue] is getting ignored
Another side scrolling adventure game with quirky, comical graphics? And this one with a $20 price tag? I mean ... sell me dude.

I can't, since I haven't played it yet. I'll probably buy it on sale and play it over the christmas holidays :D I just found it fascinating, that 2 seeminly similar games get released at ~ the same time and one of them (Misfortune) gets a thread, lots of reviews and dozens of let's plays and the other one (Jenny) gets largely ignored, for no reason whatsoever.
 

Durq

Educated
Joined
Jul 20, 2019
Messages
73
I can't, since I haven't played it yet. I'll probably buy it on sale and play it over the christmas holidays :D I just found it fascinating, that 2 seeminly similar games get released at ~ the same time and one of them (Misfortune) gets a thread, lots of reviews and dozens of let's plays and the other one (Jenny) gets largely ignored, for no reason whatsoever.

The Little Misfortune developers already had a big following because of the success of Fran Bow.
 

WallaceChambers

Learned
Joined
Jul 29, 2019
Messages
311
I played through Jenny LeClue and It was fantastic. Loved the writing, the visuals and the music. It's one of my favorite games this year for sure. There are a lot of puzzles and a sizable variety of them. They're all fairly easy, although some are more involved than others for sure. The difficulty ramps up a knotch or two in the last 3 hours or so but nothing that would pose an issue for seasoned adventure game fans. My favorite ones were still pretty easy but also unique. So they kinda stumped you for a little bit until you figured out the "trick" to it.

The gameplay is definitely leagues beyond Little Misfortune. In addition to the main deduction mechanic, there's contextual puzzles, environmental puzzles, riddles, etc. There's actually good exploration that isn't always strictly linear. At least some of the choices do matter. Again, the challenge is mild for the most part but there's far more to do than in Little Misfortune. Also it's just better overall the story is good, cool characters, it's fucking gorgeous and they make super good use of zooms and parallax to get a fantastic sense of scale.

Edit:

Anyone who's gonna try it should probably know the game ends on a massive cliffhanger. Apparently it's one of three planned Jenny LeClue games which, despite me really enjoying this, doesn't bode well considering this game took like 5 years to make.
 
Last edited:

LESS T_T

Arcane
Joined
Oct 5, 2012
Messages
13,582
Codex 2014


ss_976a77b1cd7dfa33cb34f16094649d8bfe0da44f.600x338.jpg
ss_5abbbb909a719247d43b28f5ef41d68672886806.600x338.jpg




Cursed Roots is a point and click adventure game where a trip to your foster parents quickly transforms into a nightmare. You will soon find out that things are not as they seem, your uncle mysteriously passed away and you will end up trapped in a haunted house full of terrible creatures!

In Cursed Roots you will need to use your wits and imagination to combine everyday items and survive the aberrations of the house… but be quick! As you will always be under pressure from wandering horrors.

Discover the past of your ancestors and escape your Cursed Roots!

Features
  • Use and combine more than 70 different items
  • 20+ locations you can explore
  • Dark, impressive horror story with numerous twists
  • Difficult logical puzzles
  • Beautiful, retro-inspired 2D graphics
  • Random chases and encounters
  • Soundtrack created by Nicolas Gasparini (“Myuu”)
  • You can befriend a rat
 

Infinitron

I post news
Patron
Staff Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
99,636
Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
Blackthorne update: https://www.kickstarter.com/project...e-and-roehm-to-ruin-by-infamous/posts/2630833

Roehm To Ruin Update

Roehm to Ruin and Fortress of Fire are still in production.

Roehm to Ruin is almost complete - we just need to record the voices for the game. With a limited budget and limited time, as we're only able to work on this part time, it's been a while. We hope to complete that in the next few months and roll Roehm to Ruin out the door.

If anyone here is interested in either testing the beta, or even playing it without voices, send an email to info@infamous-quests.com and we can hook you up. I know there's some people just chomping at the bit for this, so if this slakes your thirst, let us know.

3715d9e45baa7022febc47b5d8babd7e_original.jpg


Fortress of Fire is in production, but there's a ways to go on that. We have most backgrounds done, and about 60% of the animations. Music is all done. It will probably be a year before that is completed at this pace.

We don't often use the kickstarter platform to do updates or communicate any more, so if you'd like a quicker response to things, please email at info@infamous-quests.com

Infamous Quests is now a hobby project for those involved - many of the folks originally involved aren't actively working on the projects and have gone on to other jobs. Many of them have completed their work - such as artwork or animations, and gone on to other projects. We all have different full time jobs now. This causes production to be slower than we'd like. But Roehm to Ruin and Fortress of Fire will be completed eventually. Thank you for your patience.
 

Infinitron

I post news
Patron
Staff Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
99,636
Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2019-09-29-the-making-of-discworld-noir

The making of Discworld Noir
We'll always have Ankh-Morpork.

I was still at school when the first Terry Pratchett Discworld story appeared. My friends and I were all fans of fantasy and science fiction, whether it be video games, movies, trading cards, table-top RPGs or, of course, books. To us, these were no stranger things, yet this odd little novel, bracketed within a colourfully chaotic wraparound cover instantly became a favourite in the classroom. It was called The Colour Of Magic, and it began the saga of incompetent wizard, Rincewind, resident of Ankh-Morpork, the largest city upon the Discworld, a round circle astride four elephants and the Great A'Tuin, a giant sea turtle. Yes, it still sounds bonkers, and despite the gentle ribbing (ok, not always so gentle) of our favoured genres, The Colour Of Magic became an instant hit.

As a ZX Spectrum owner, I naturally made a beeline for the 1986 Piranha/Delta 4 graphic text adventure based on this book. But further episodes were not forthcoming, and I had to wait until 1995's DOS, PlayStation and Saturn Discworld game to scratch that Ankh-Morpork itch once more. Discworld 2: Missing Presumed...!? followed a year later, but it wasn't until 1999 and Perfect Entertainment's third Pratchett adventure that interactive Pratchett finally clicked for me. Maybe it's the combination of the author's vivid world and a cinematic genre I love, a bizarre amalgamation that proves a fertile bed for comedy; or maybe it's because everyone involved was at the peak of their powers, at one with both material and technology.

jpg

Inside the Café Ankh, an establishment clearly modelled on Rick's Café from Casablanca.

One such participant was Chris Bateman, lead writer and designer on Discworld Noir. "That was an astonishing opportunity to give to someone so early in their career!" he exclaims, before adding a surprising admission. "But I confess that I had only read The Colour Of Magic when I joined Perfect, and I was a bit disappointed by it. I loved the first part, inspired by Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, but otherwise it seemed a little random." However, having begun work on Discworld 2 shortly after joining the developer, Bateman soon fell in love with the series. "I know a lot of fans love the Rincewind stories the best, but the City Watch for me is the heart and soul of Terry's world." Unsurprisingly, this band of dishevelled urban guardians would go on to have a key part to play in the next game, Discworld Noir.

As with the previous Discworld games, development was overseen by industry veteran Gregg Barnett, and it was Barnett who pitched the idea to the author after the pair mutually agreed that the Rincewind stories had run their course. "Terry was thrilled at the concept of a hardboiled detective in Ankh-Morpork," remembers Bateman, "and the plotting began with me coming up with a synopsis based around the assassin character, Teppic, from Pyramids. But Gregg shot that down in flames and sent me off to read Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett."

Having consumed every relevant book he could get his hands on, Bateman begun watching their cinematic adaptations as well. "It ended up becoming a Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall marathon - not exactly the toughest research job I've ever had to do! And that's how you get nods to movies such as Casablanca, because movies like The Big Sleep and To Have And Have Not had Bogey and Bacall in, so it made sense to work through them all."

But perhaps most memorably for Discworld Noir fans, it's not the Chandler/Hammett influence that most lingers, but that of another, altogether different author. "There are loads of sideways nods to HP Lovecraft in Terry's books," notes Bateman, "and in particular, in Moving Pictures. So it wasn't like I was adding something that wasn't already there, I just picked up everything dark that Terry had already put to work in the Discworld, and made good use of it for my own story." The main thrust of Lovecraftian (and indeed classic) horror is the lycanthropic transformation that its protagonist suffers from act three onwards. "I think I must have floated the idea of a werewolf plotline with Gregg, and somehow he and Terry let me get away with it," laughs Bateman. As the hirsute beast, detective Lewton is able to divine fresh clues utilising his hyper-sensitive nose and an accompanying scent inventory. Explains Bateman, "I was looking for ways to use object inventories, which were a staple element of adventure games, in new and unusual ways. And smelling your way through crime solving is certainly unusual!"

jpg

Discworld Noir begins, appropriately, with a femme fatale appearing in the detective's office.
Unlike the previous Discworld games, Discworld Noir features totally new and original material, mixed in with themes and characters from the novels such as Commander Vimes and the City Watch. In the finest tradition of film noir, the hero begins the story at its end, reciting the details having met his untimely demise at the hands of an unknown attacker. The labyrinthine tale involves a series of ritualistic murders, for which Lewton himself is initially accused of, and a beautiful femme fatale named Carlotta, who asks Lewton to track someone down, the whole thing wrapped up into a point and click adventure. In 1999. "Yes, we were quietly terrified about the market giving way under our feet, especially near the end," winces Bateman. "Games like Tomb Raider and Resident Evil had hit in 1996, and there was a definite sense that the writing was on the wall for adventure games." The team's ambition also displayed in the game's engine, a significant upgrade from the sprite-based Tinsel engine of the previous Discworld games. "We needed a whole new system to demonstrate the world in 3D polygons," explains Bateman. "Part of it was the same code that we'd used before, but a lot of hard work was done in the transition [from 2D to 3D]."

Plot, characters and graphics is one thing. Or rather three. But the inclusion of humour was the primary focus of Discworld Noir. Having read two dozen of Pratchett's books at the start of development, Bateman felt he had a grasp on the way the humour worked, at least broadly. Fortunately, the one man who knew the way that Discworld ticked far more than anyone else modestly offered his services to Perfect Entertainment. "I met Terry on several occasions," beams Bateman, "and while he didn't come to the offices much, he always came to the launch parties, and I got to know him and his agent, Colin Smythe, quite well. By far the most time I spent with him was during the promotion of the game, as they put the press in front of Terry, and there was me, lurking in the background as a complete unknown!" In practical terms, Pratchett made an editing pass on the entire 12,000 line script of Discworld Noir, fixing up anything he felt was off kilter. "He didn't change much," adds Bateman proudly, "but every change he made was golden."

Yet despite its convoluted storyline, mournful music, comical asides and exquisite graphics, there are two facets of Discworld Noir that stand out for me today, and hopefully for other fans of the game too. "Oh the voice cast, that was a lot of fun!" grins Bateman. How about this for a roster of talent: Rob Brydon, Robert Llewellyn, Nigel Planer, Kate Robbins. "Kate was just phenomenal, and she came in on the day, having already read the sheet music for our musical number, and delivered it one take - amazing!" But with comedian Rob Brydon handling the bulk of the work, a multitude of hard-boiled monologues, and Planer impressing Bateman with his work ethic ("It took him a while to get the booth how he wanted...then he rolled through his lines with hardly any need for retakes"), it was left to Red Dwarf actor Robert Llewellyn, at the time commencing a successful writing career, to provide the levity. "I had the most fun with Robert, I'd love to work with him again," admits the designer. "Throughout the recording sessions, I was quietly keeping score of whose jokes were getting the most laughs, mine or Terry's. Robert was far and away the one cracking up the most at both our jokes." With voice talent fundamental in a story-driven game such as Discworld Noir, Bateman has the magnanimity to admit that its stellar cast transformed his script into something far more than it could ever have been otherwise.

jpg

The wonderful notebook, assisting Lewton in his enquiries.

For all that, it's with Discworld Noir's notebook that lies its greatest mechanic and noir sensibility. In a game where discovering clues, discerning their relevance and acting upon them is key, this was something that Bateman and his colleagues felt they absolutely had to nail. "The moment it was confirmed to be a detective story I knew that we couldn't just rely on just an object inventory," he notes. "Adventure games up to that point had mostly either had conversation topics that were isolated from everything else or objects that you could talk to people about." To Bateman, it seemed obvious that they should combine the inventory and dialogue engine into one system, the notebook.

This series of pages seeks to help the player combine their thoughts, and make deductions based on the entries held within. The result is a tremendous (and realistic) device that manages to actually make the player feel like a real detective, quizzing suspects on both relevant and seemingly irrelevant subjects, narrowing down the field of enquiry as any good gumshoe would. "It involved quite a bit of graft from me and one of the programmers, Mark Judge," adds Bateman. "I designed a scripting language that organised the dialogue into topics, each of which was an object inside the engine; and then I specified scripts for each character that gave them responses to every topic that was relevant for them."

There were two more concepts that worked invisibly within the notebook to help the player. Firstly, a useful error system is employed that causes interrogatees to helpfully guide the player in the right direction of enquiry, rather than respond with a standard rebuttal; and secondly, there's the concept of hyperclues. "That was inspired by my experiences of the new-fangled internet in the early Nineties. To the player, clues appeared as text in the notebook, and were collected onto pages with a common theme. But also, some clues appeared on multiple pages, and those were hyperclues which you could double-click on to go to the other page the clue was on. It was terribly useful, but I'm not sure every player discovered it!"

20 years ago this year, the Windows version of this forgotten classic was released to praiseworthy reviews and a handful of adventure-of-the-year awards. But sales were poor. "The point and click genre had had its day by 1999," recounts Bateman sadly. "All the big publishers were foaming at the mouth about first-person shooter games and other high-octane polygonal fancies. If we'd had more marketing support, we could certainly have sold more...but how much more is hard to say."

The situation was not helped by background strife at both Perfect and publisher GT Interactive Europe. With the former involved in a costly dispute with Psygnosis, the latter's woes appeared largely self-inflicted. "GT Europe were insane," tells Bateman. "They were given a huge war chest by the parent company, but they spent it extravagantly, in ways that were not sensible. At the trade show ECTS in London, for instance, they made a perfect duplicate of their offices inside Kensington Olympia. But, of course, nobody except GT employees had ever been to their offices, so it was a complete grand folly."

jpg

Throughout the many conversations, Lewton can begin to decipher the clues he discovers.

Yet Discworld Noir remains an outstanding game, chock full of ideas and atmosphere, that didn't so much as slip under the radar as barely take off in the first place. While some commented cruelly on the foolhardiness of releasing a point and click adventure in the late 90s, there is no doubting the ambition and bravery behind it. "There's a thin line between brave and foolhardy!" snorts Bateman. "If anyone on the project was courageous, it was Gregg and Angela [Sutherland] for taking such a chance on a young game designer with wild ideas and no experience. I still can't believe how fortunate I was - I had Terry Pratchett as script editor and a voice cast the envy of anyone else in games at the time."

If, like me, you remember Discworld Noir with unalloyed fondness, you may be interested in a - ahem - bribe that co-creator Chris Bateman has in mind. His latest game, Silk, while sharing little technically with Discworld Noir, save its concept of a bespoke machine-processed scripting language, involves puzzle-solving of an altogether different kind. "I've worked on more than 50 games, but three in particular have a special place in my heart," he reveals. "Discworld Noir, Ghost Master and Silk, with Silk being the underdog because it had to fight every step of the way just for to exist. And while we're talking Silk, let me say this: Noir fans should support it every way they can, because it's the only way they'll get a Discworld Noir spiritual successor." Chris's latest design, Requia Noir, acutely evinces the themes that make Discworld Noir such a fantastic experience. "Call it bribery if you like," he smiles. "But I prefer to think of it as a creative deployment of persuasion." Now that sounds like something even the City Watch would approve of.

Dedicated to the memory of Sir Terry Pratchett, OBE, still missed dearly four years since, and still blamed by my old form tutor for disrupting her class.
 

Rahdulan

Omnibus
Patron
Joined
Oct 26, 2012
Messages
5,320
Where did that come from? Nice.

The situation was not helped by background strife at both Perfect and publisher GT Interactive Europe. With the former involved in a costly dispute with Psygnosis, the latter's woes appeared largely self-inflicted. "GT Europe were insane," tells Bateman. "They were given a huge war chest by the parent company, but they spent it extravagantly, in ways that were not sensible. At the trade show ECTS in London, for instance, they made a perfect duplicate of their offices inside Kensington Olympia. But, of course, nobody except GT employees had ever been to their offices, so it was a complete grand folly."
 

LESS T_T

Arcane
Joined
Oct 5, 2012
Messages
13,582
Codex 2014




https://joelmayer.itch.io/purgatory

One peaceful night in the Swiss Alps, four students of a prestigious international school are on their way home from a wild night out partying. Among them is Alex, a recent arrival, as well as her new boyfriend Dennis.

shot_3_preview_indiedevhour.gif


Then it happens: a moment of inattention, a car that goes off the road, four lives that will change forever.

Alex awakens from unconsciousness in the middle of the night with nothing but a deep forest ahead of her. Her friends: gone.

The farther Alex wanders into the woods the more she realizes that something is terribly wrong. After finding an old, seemingly abandoned mansion and discovering the whereabouts of her friends, it becomes clear that this night will decide each of their fates. But the former inhabitants of the house are not the only ones with an unsettling past, and Alex must face not only the demons ahead but also the ones she left behind…

ezgif-4-f8ab76b110d8.gif


Purgatory features a rich low-res aesthetic reminiscent of classic SNES and Game Boy titles combined with an Adventure Game focus on storytelling.

You’ll be uncovering the dark secrets of agonizing souls, with danger as your constant companion.

To save your friends, you’ll have to act quickly, using the fully keyboard-based control scheme or your Gamepad. You’ll be able to walk and run at will in a fast-moving, side-scrolling adventure.

Throughout the night, you’ll meet a cast of interesting and sometimes dangerous characters, all with animated portraits.

Your trusty mobile phone’s flashlight will be a guiding light when moving through the shadows, if you dare to see what’s hiding there.

There’s no room for flagpoles in your pocket. Alex can’t carry more than three inventory items, which can be dropped and picked up again at will. Choose your items wisely.

Fully illustrated cut scenes advance the story and let you take a breather from attempts to escape the flames of the afterlife.

alex_steam.png


Features
  • Unique aesthetics based on Italian Horror Movies of the 70s mixed with a classic Game Boy look and enriched with modern Engine Effects
  • A fresh take on Teenage Horror Movie storylines
  • Illustrated Cutscenes
  • Original Soundtrack
  • Gamepad Support
  • German and English Localization
  • Initial Target Platforms: macOS and Windows
 

jfrisby

Cipher
Patron
Joined
Mar 21, 2013
Messages
491
Grab the Codex by the pussy Strap Yourselves In Codex Year of the Donut Shadorwun: Hong Kong
http://ninezyme.com/#games



lbw3-office-full.jpg

LAURA IS BACK!
IN AN ALL NEW ADVENTURE.

After a mysterious package arrives at the offices of The New York Daily News Tribune, an unlikely chain of events sends Laura Bow off on the biggest story that the little newspaper has ever seen.

A long journey, an elaborate event, a life changing invention, and many dangerous motives for murder...

lbw3-pier-full.jpg

ABOUT US
NineZyme Entertainment is an independent game developer with a passion for story telling and deeply interactive experiences. We are an entirely remote team of talented individuals, spread across 3 continents and 7 countries - each with our own unique visions and skills to contribute to the projects we create. We believe that this diversity and freedom helps us see the development process in a new light and design products using a more concise and forward thinking approach - leading to overall better experiences.

More artwork: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/oOoYEq
 
Last edited:

Modron

Arcane
Joined
May 5, 2012
Messages
11,124
There was a free point and click adventure game released on steam today, art looks like something a 14 year old might have drawn but hey free is free frens.
 

As an Amazon Associate, rpgcodex.net earns from qualifying purchases.
Back
Top Bottom