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| 5 AUG 2010 at 12:49am | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | I just started playing Discworld 1. It looks great so far, however, I have a question about the inventory. I picked up the satchel of coins in the wardrobe, and now it's stuck on the mouse cursor. Everytime I try to use something else in the game it thinks I'm trying to use the satchel on it and says "I don't think that will work". When I move the cursor to the borders of the screen no inventory appears like in most adventure games. So how do I control the inventory in this game and get the satchel off the mouse pointer? |
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| 5 AUG 2010 at 1:36am | |
Jenny100Guild Master![]() Posts : 3510 Joined: 12 OCT 2002 Status : Offline | Try to either click on the luggage, or on Rincewind's pocket (on Rincewind). |
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| 5 AUG 2010 at 1:54am | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | Thanks Jenny, that worked. What threw me off is you have to left click on Rincewind, and there's also a second delay, so I would left click and then click again and the second click would cancel it out. These games seem awesome, I can't believe I've never played them before. Too bad the third one, Discworld Noir, is lame CG style instead of this awesome animation. |
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| 18 AUG 2010 at 3:33am | |
GonchiSorcerer Apprentice![]() ![]() Posts : 337 Joined: 24 SEP 2007 Status : Online | I feel somewhat similarly, namely in regards to the characters, but I still like Discworld Noir most out of the trio. But I'm not so complicated as to flee, &&or stand here in silence. &&But I'm not so simple as to not caution, &&that there aren't three minutes, or a hundred words, that could define me.&&&&[url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlR-6Tw-5bE]Brief description of my person[/url] - Cuarteto de Nos |
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| 18 AUG 2010 at 5:07pm | |
CrisGerSchattenjger![]() ![]() Posts : 2539 Joined: 28 APR 2007 Location: US Status : Offline | i like the first one the best...it is so much fun and such a totally differnt experinece from so many games. Very english humor..as is the dialogue. Admin 3D Worlds and Game Developers http://3dworldandgamedevelopers.blogspot.com |
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| 18 AUG 2010 at 7:59pm | |
loobilooPrivate Detective![]() Posts : 598 Joined: 3 APR 2008 Location: UK Status : Offline | I love all the Discworld games but liked Discworld Noir the best, which I played 1st, as it seemed the most 'logical' of the three. I loved the humour of the first two but found the 1st one very difficult to get through without A LOT of nudges here & there! |
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| 19 AUG 2010 at 8:03am | |
CrisGerSchattenjger![]() ![]() Posts : 2539 Joined: 28 APR 2007 Location: US Status : Offline | Yes the puzzles are hard and some of them may depend on a lot of knowledge of UK humor....which is very particular It is a guess as i am so used to it from living over there that i am not sure but i tend to think so. Admin 3D Worlds and Game Developers http://3dworldandgamedevelopers.blogspot.com |
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| 21 AUG 2010 at 6:25am | |
Lurker01Private Detective![]() Posts : 411 Joined: 23 JUN 2004 Location: US Status : Offline | It's not so much UK humour as it is the Discworld books. If you've read them then the puzzles are easier, although still not easy. "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." Albert Einstein |
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| 21 AUG 2010 at 10:57am | |
AndromusGuild Master![]() ![]() Posts : 5537 Joined: 6 NOV 2002 Status : Offline | Originally Posted By DL (21 AUG 2010 6:25am) Indeed. Reading the books gave me a few nudges as to what to do, but didn't really do much for most of the hard puzzles. Which was over half the game. Discworld 1 was one of the hardest adventure games I've played.
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| 5 OCT 2012 at 3:17am | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | Which game do you think is harder, Discworld 1 or Tony Tough and the Night of the Roasted Moths? |
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| 5 OCT 2012 at 5:37pm | |
AndromusGuild Master![]() ![]() Posts : 5537 Joined: 6 NOV 2002 Status : Offline | Both had very frustrating sections, but I found Discworld to be quite a bit harder. Some of that was due to how heavily pixelated it was (making objects harder to see), and how small some of those hot spots were. But mostly it was due to the amount of puzzles that just weren't clued very well.
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| 5 OCT 2012 at 6:21pm | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | The Discworld series of books were written by the whimsical humorous English author Terry Pratchett . He is now 64 but unfortunately 5 years ago he started to develop the symptoms of premature Alzheimer's' disease Since then he has been seriously investigating the possibilities of assisted 'suicide' which is available in Switzerland but is illegal in UK (and probably many other countries). We saw a harrowing TV program only a week ago in which he interviews sufferers who were about to carry out their assisted deaths and he went to the clinic in Switzerland researching all the safeguards and processes etc. ----------------------------------------------------
The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, |
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| 6 OCT 2012 at 4:33am | |
ValGuild Master![]() ![]() Posts : 3467 Joined: 2 OCT 2002 Location: US Status : Offline | Originally Posted By Len Green (5 OCT 2012 6:21pm) Ack, that is sad indeed. Terry Pratchett games, books, and TV movies are some of my all time favs. My kids love his books as well. The Discworld games are fantastic. Some of the strongest gaming memories I have.
We can be heroes, just for one day. Last edited by Val : 6 OCT 2012 4:34am |
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| 6 OCT 2012 at 8:34am | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | As far as I know, he still 'writes' books, at least until recently, despite the relatively slow deterioration due to his Alzheimer's starting 5 years ago !!!
But I don't think he can actually write - but dictates them to his assistant/companion.
If his disease becomes insufferable, I understand that he wishes to die with dignity !!! ----------------------------------------------------
The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, Last edited by Len Green : 6 OCT 2012 8:38am |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 12:32am | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | I actually like the harder games. Even if they're insanely hard, I think with enoug patience (it sometimes may even take years) you can eventually stumble on the solution. Far better to be too hard than the trend I see in a lot of modern games where they're too easy.
Originally Posted By Len Green (5 OCT 2012 6:21pm)
That is sad, and terrible.
In the past, I've looked into taking my own life as well. I even got that book "Final Exit" that gives detailed information on how to take your own life. I can say this, even with the most humane way of doing it, a human suicide is a VERY disturbing and unpleasant business. But then too, so is dying of disease.
What an horrible world we live in. Sometimes I actually think this is hell, and part of the hell is not knowing we're in it. |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 6:01am | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | Originally Posted By Pygmy_Marmoset (7 OCT 2012 12:32am) On the one hand I agree with you ! Despite the fact that there are very many wonderful people inhabiting this planet of ours, there is so much graft, deliberate deceit, lying, venal behaviour, and particularly CORRUPTION & HYPOCRISY (at ALL levels and places) that is really sickening or often VERY much worse than just that! On the other hand, this is the only world we exist in (AFAIK) and we have no alternative but to make the very best we can of it !!
~~~ I believe that the GENERAL ban against all forms of suicide has been created by various religions (not necessarily all I think ??). But this leaves me completely cold (I don't want to get caught up with the subject of religion – .illegal' here!!!). ~~~ I DO however feel that if one is a parent or is attached to other loved ones, it may engender guilt feelings &/or unnecessary fears which should be avoided if one is not being selfish and egotistical. ~~~ However, I believe that if one is in constant and insufferable PHYSICAL pain, needing constant demeaning medical (& financial) assistance and one is a terrible burden on others close to one, then suicide is certainly justifiable.- IMHO, ANY form of suicide, whether assisted by a loved one or an institution makes little difference to me personally although preferably an 'aesthetic' exit using pills or poison or gas, etc. (More than one friend or acquaintance of ours has shot themselves spattering the walls with blood &/or gats)
But cheer up everybody and have a nice day !
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The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 2:50pm | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | Originally Posted By Len Green (7 OCT 2012 6:01am)
The corruption and hypocrisy is nothing compared to the ravages of disease and death. Let's take Cholera as just one example. It's a bacteria that alters the cells in the lining of the intenstines, thus turning the intenstines into an organ that sucks out water and electrolytes from the body. People with Cholera lose up to 40 pounds of water weight per day through diahrea, they become so dyhydrated that their blood becomes black tarry goo, and then the bacteria transfer from their feces into rivers and infects more people. Left untreated 50% of people who contract Cholera die, often within 24 hours, and hundreds of millions of people have died this way throughout human history. During a Cholera outbreak in Toyko alone, 200,000 died during the course of a year, and this was back when there weren't many people living in Toyko, so it was like 1 in 4 people in the city died.
And let's not even get into the Bubonic plague..
This is why I say we live in hell. Yes there are good things, but are the good things worth the horrific things like this happening? I don't think so. Far better if this world had never existed.
Last edited by Pygmy_Marmoset : 7 OCT 2012 2:51pm |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 5:39pm | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | Originally Posted By Pygmy_Marmoset (7 OCT 2012 2:50pm) Wow!!! OMG - Your graphic description of cholera made my blood run cold – as you said reminds one of the bubonic plague (Black death of the middle ages)Sounds as though you may be a doctor or a nurse or something ?!? I was thinking more of HUMAN failings (wars, revolutions, massacres, hypocritical politics & religions etc!):9 Some of the horrible diseases and epidemics are caused by or magnified by human failings &/or the lack of human beings to put all their energies to wiping out these things rather than killing and maiming each other !!
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The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 6:37pm | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | Originally Posted By Len Green (7 OCT 2012 5:39pm)
Did you know that the bacteria that caused the Bubonic Plague kills not just humans, but also kills the fleas it uses to transmit itself?
This bacteria (Yersina Pestis) infects the flea, and then it produces a biofilm on the flea's proventriculus. This is the feeding tube of the flea, and the biofilm secreted by the bacteria creates a blockage there that causes a few things to happen. First the flea is no longer able to eat properly and every time it tries to take a blood meal it regurgitates the blood along with some of this bacteria-laden biofilm. Second, because the flea becomes so hungry (it is literally starving to death) it starts to ravenously bite any warm blooded mammals it can find. This is how Yersinia Pestis transforms fleas into machinary to spread itself.
And this is what killed off 1/3 the population of Europe during the 14th century.
I ask you, what kind of world is it that has organisms like Yersinia Pestis? Having fleas alone is bad enough, but then to have another parasite which turns the fleas into death machines that kill off a third of the world's population? Surely, a creature like this can only exist in hell.
Last edited by Pygmy_Marmoset : 7 OCT 2012 6:56pm |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 7:49pm | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | Hi pygmy, You haven't answered if you belong in some way to the medi9calprofession or its other scientific offshoots.
But you don't have to define hell by thes parasites who tranmit ghastly diseases. Illnesses like cancer Alzheimers, strokes, etc. are also terrible and they are mainly (but not inevitably) hereditory and generally not caused by external sources.
But my point is :- If mankiind (also womankind) didn't waste most of their efforts and finances on hatreds & wars & the like, we could probably eliminate all or at least most of these deadly worldwide scourges. Much HAS been done since the 14th century - but much much more could be done if we only knew how to "Live & let live"
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The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, |
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| 7 OCT 2012 at 9:07pm | |
Pygmy_MarmosetIntergalactic Janitor![]() Posts : 81 Joined: 18 JUL 2010 Status : Offline | Hi pygmy, I am not a professional doctor or scientist, I just read a lot of books. But you don't have to define hell by thes parasites who tranmit ghastly diseases. True, there's a multitude of health horrors people can get on this hell we call Earth. There are millions of diseases and they lie in wait for people, eventually everyone gets something. But my point is :- I think that you've got it backwards. History shows that there's a correaltion between pandemics and social instability. Revolutions and conflicts often follow these outbreaks. Thus they are not caused by human hatred and wars, instead THEY cause the hatred and wars. If you have seen the movie Cabin Fever, for example, the story is of a group of college kids who take a vacation in a rural mountain town. They become stranded and begin falling victim one by one to a flesh eating disease. This has a tremendously negative effect on their mental states, they become scared and suspicious, they begin to turn on each other. This is how people become when they're having to watch everyone around them die, the horror is so much that they go insane. Durng the Bubonic Plague they blamed it on the Jews and begin killing them, many times societies have blamed the outbreaks on poor people, or cats, and killed them off. So you can see how these outbreaks engender human hatred instead of the other way around.
I submit to you that it would be easier to "Live and Let Live" if the natural world wasn't such a hellish place. If people didn't have to get diseases, and watch their parents and pets die, perhaps then they would be happier and not feel so much hatred. Last edited by Pygmy_Marmoset : 7 OCT 2012 9:11pm |
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| 8 OCT 2012 at 5:34am | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | Hi Pygmy, However, if I DID iunderstand you more or less correctly, I still disagree with your opinions, but like mine, it is only an OPINION and not a fact – and EVERYONE is fully entitled to their opinions, even if they are contradictory. ~~~ I am not a historian so I cannot factually refute your contention – although it seems very feasible that in times of pandemics as during other crises people blame & hence persecute minorities such as religious minorities and frequently the Jews. ~~~ I agree that any form of national extreme crisis brings out the very worst in mankind's behaviour and general hatreds – but these are frequently intra-national an not necessary external wars – take the rise of Hitler in post WW-I Germany. But, although one swallow does not make a summer, take the single example of the post WW-I fatal widespread flu-epidemic. It is estimated that the number of deaths during about 3 years from 1918 thro' 1920 from this Spanish-flu amounted to anything between 20 to 50 MILLION worldwide – compare this with the approx. 16 million deaths (and 20 million wounded) during the world's most horrible war until 1914/18 (When I was growing up in the early 1930's it was known as the "Great War" & the "War to end wars" ??!@#$%^&*!!??
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| 8 OCT 2012 at 7:39am | |
Len GreenJourneyman![]() Posts : 830 Joined: 31 JAN 2012 Location: IL Status : Offline | I didn't really complete my above example.
Although I don't think it was the CAUSE, I guess (no proof) that the devastation caused by WW-I and 4 years of food shortages &, rationing or worse, greatly weakened people creating widespread severe malnutrition leading to an astronomical number of deaths. I don't think things would have been so devastaing had that ghastly war been avoided - and all the money, and effort, and scientific weapons research & development been used instead for medical research & hospitalization etc.
i.e a case of an unnecesary war leading to severe illness - and not the other way around !! ----------------------------------------------------
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