Final Chapter E3

Final Chapter E3


By Ray Ivey

Yo-ho, Yo-ho, a Pirate’s Life for Me

Now, I’m not that into pirates in real life. Except for the fact that
Treasure Island is one of my all-time favorite books. And I love
Peter Pan in all its incarnations. Oh, well, maybe I like pirates
better than I admit. One thing I think is easy to agree upon, and that
is the idea that pirates and pirate stuff are great fodder for computer
games.

Surprise, surprise, Escape from Monkey Island wasn’t the only
cool pirate game I saw at E3. Randy and I stumbled into Bethesda Softworks
(I think we were trying to avoid Pauly Shore or Bill Shatner, two of the
convention’s on-hand Dingle Celebrities) and lo and behold, there was
Sea Dogs.

Bethesda’s Sea
Dogs
was originally titled Corsairs, but unfortunately it turns
out Microids already had a game coming out with that name. Unlike Corsairs,
which is a straight strategy title, Sea Dogs is being touted
as a rich RPG-style epic.

The game begins with a small ship and a small crew in the Caribbean.
You then choose whether to become pirates, to fight pirates, which country
to ally with, etc. The details and depth of the game just astounded me,
everything from chasing rumors that there may be some mercenaries on a
small island looking for work, to customizing your ship’s outfitting and
weapons, to the remarkable sea battle sequences. Realism abounds, from
the different lighting in different types of weather while at sea, to
the height your ship sits in the water depending on the weight of your
payload.

Sea Dogs is scheduled to be released for PC in Q3 2000.

The All-New Drew Revue

We had a delightful meeting with Her
Interactive’s
President Megan Gaiser, Carolyn Bickford (VP of Sales
Marketing), and Lori Stacy, PR Goddess. They showed us some gorgeous art
and screenshots from the upcoming third installment in their Nancy Drew
series, Message in the Haunted Mansion. The game looks atmospheric
and appealing, and we had a terrific conversation about games, girls and
games, marketing, and cold fusion (not really, just seeing if you were
paying attention). This and our love fest at DreamCatcher were our happiest
meetings at E3.

Do I smell a segue … ?

Catch that Dream

In a 72-hour period filled with amazing things to look at, I don’t think
any sight filled my heart with gladness like DreamCatcher’s
Wall of Adventure Games.
In an era where our genre is constantly being touted as dead or dying,
they proudly displayed Traitor’s Gate, Nightlong: Union City Conspiracy,
The Sacred Amulet, Beyond Atlantis, Riddle of the Sphinx,
and Dracula
Resurrection.
These folks love adventures every bit as much as we
do.

The short demo of Riddle
of the Sphinx
was full of lovely images, but it was Dracula
Resurrection
that really got my blood percolating. Here was a
game so gorgeous, so enticing, I wanted to just fall into it. The visuals
reminded me of the lovely Faust from last year, and who can resist
a good vampire story? Here is a game to get excited about.

Cryo Me a River

DreamCatcher’s Gallic other half, is, of course, Cryo, and they too had
a raft of intriguing titles.

The one I’m most eagerly anticipating is Pompeii,
the first in a new series of games by the much-admired Arxel Tribe
(the crazy Germans responsible for Pilgrim, Ring, and Faust).
It’s the story of a Scottish geologist in 1904 whose wife falls under
an ancient curse of the goddess Ishtar. Her soul has been transported
to Pompeii, and Blake has to go try to rescue her! Set in the four days
preceding the fateful explosion of Vesuvius in AD 79, Pompeii is designed
with excruciating historical accuracy. After Faust, I’m eager to
play anything built by the talented Arxel Tribe, and I have high hopes
for Pompeii.

The graphics will be done with full 360-degree panning.

Pompeii is due on PC CD any time now, with PlayStation, DVD, and
Mac versions coming soon.

Another series from Cryo is the upcoming Legends collection. The first
is The New Adventures of the Time Machine, which is a riff on the
famous H.G. Wells novel. An action/adventure, it takes your character
on a wild and mystical trip to the far future and beyond.

Next in the Legends series is The Odyssey, an action/adventure
based on the Homeric legend. It follows the adventures of Heritias, sent
by Penelope to search for the lost Ulysses.

Following Cryo’s excellent Aztec in their historical series (which
includes the titles Egypt, Versailles, and China), it will
be releasing Egypt II: The Heliopolis Prophesy. It concerns a young
priestess on an investigation into a strange plague afflicting her city.

Egypt II is due for PC in September.

Another appealing-looking action/adventure from Cryo is Casanova:
The Duel of the Black Rose,
a gorgeous-looking swashbuckler now in
development. This game seems to have shades of RPG qualities in that you
have to develop and evolve the swordsmanship and gallantry of the character
as the game progresses.

Also, there’s Tales of Chivalry I: The Sword of Justice, an Arthurian
action/adventure, which looks promising.

I only have one question for Cryo. What’s with the Satan connection?
So many of their recent games–Faust, The Devil Inside, Gift, Hellboy–seem
to deal with some manifestation of His Satanic Majesty. Why, if I were
the Church Lady, I might be wondering …

Conclusion

After being saturated in games for three days, here are my picks for
the games I’m most looking forward to:

  • Stupid Invaders from Ubi Soft.
  • Dracula Resurrection from DreamCatcher.
  • Arcatera from Ubi Soft.
  • In Cold Blood from Ubi Soft.
  • Myst III: Exile from Presto Studios.
  • Pompeii from Arxel Tribe/Cryo.
  • Sea Dogs from Bethesda Softworks.
  • Escape from Monkey Island from LucasArts.

Ray Ivey

Ray Ivey

A gaming freakazoid, Ray enjoys games on all platforms. Also loves board games, mind games, and all puzzles. Co-wrote the Entertainment Tonight trivia game and designed puzzles for two Law & Order PC games. Also a movie freak, bookworm, and travel bug. Thinks games of all kinds are a highly underappreciated force for social good, not to mention mental and psychological health.   Ray's favorite adventures include the "Broken Sword" and "Journeyman Project" franchises, "The Dark Eye," "The Feeble Files," "Sanitarium," "Limbo," "Machinarium," "Riven," "The Neverhood," and "Azrael's Tear." His favorite non-adventures include the "Thief," "Uncharted," and "Ratchet & Clank" franchises, all of the Bioware RPGs, Skyrim, and Final Fantasy XII.   Ray writes about the movies for the Bryan/College Station Daily Eagle, which is the old-fashioned thing called a "newspaper." He's been on eight game shows. He's taught in seven countries and has visited twenty-one. His favorite classic movie star is Barbara Stanwyck and his favorite novel is "The Hotel New Hampshire" by John Irving.