Necronomicon:
The Dawning of Darkness
Developer/Publisher: Wanadoo Publications,
France Telecom Multimedia, and Index+
Projected Release Date: TBD
Platform:
DVD-ROM
Download
Necronomicon Movie (42 MB)
(Save to a temporary directory, unzip to a temporary
directory, then run file Necronomicon.exe)
The
original Necronomicon (“Book of Dead Names”) by Alhazred is not,
as believed by many, a sorcerer’s spell-book. It was conceived as a history and
therefore “a book of things now dead and gone.” An alternative definition
is “the book of the customs of the dead.” This Necronomicon was
written in 730 A.D. in seven volumes and runs to over 700 pages in its Latin edition.
Now, move ahead in time to the 1900s and to one of horror fiction’s greats,
H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937), whose work is regarded as the precursor to science
fiction. His stories explore mysteries of the occult sciences and travel through
the imagination into the core of the soul. The first modern reference to the Necronomicon
occurred when Lovecraft’s The Hound appeared in the February 1924 issue
of Weird Tales. “There are many Lovecraft fans who believe that his
Necronomicon is an archetype of occult books. That is, that the book somehow
exists in some Platonic sense, like a ‘perfect’ circle. They are of the opinion
that Lovecraft somehow tapped into some higher plane of consciousness and drew
upon it for his creations. And they bolster their argument by pointing out his
frequent references to his fantastic dreams.” Whatever the Necronomicon
is or wherever it originated is superfluous for the purpose of this preview.
But it is the perfect foil for those among us who aspire to flights of fantasy
in a world totally unlike our own where even the slightest whisper can make the
hair on the back of the neck stand at attention.
You will begin Necronomicon,
the game, in 1927 in Pawtuxet, on the east coast of the United States. It
is a hot summer night. And the life of your character, William H. Stanton, suddenly
takes a terrifying turn. What secret is haunting his childhood friend Edgar, whose
personality has recently undergone a radical change? Your task will be to determine
the cause of the alarming transformation. Could it be linked to mysterious occult
experiments performed by Edgar’s uncle, Gregor Phillipus Herschell, who was an
alchemist? You would like not to believe that as you are in modern times, 1927,
and Herschell died in 1771. Pawtuxet villagers tell of the alchemists’ attempts
to bring back the dead from their quiet(?) resting places. What fiendish secrets
still lurk in his subterranean laboratory? And what do the formulas of the Necronomicon
mean? And for heaven’s sake, what is happening to Edgar? Perhaps Heaven is
not the place to look for that answer.
The player’s adventure will be punctuated
with traps and puzzles. As you continue on your quest, you will be immersed into
sumptuous 3D scenery that supports 360-degree navigation (Warp-type 360-degree
vision). Your mission will begin with exploration of the different locations in
Pawtuxet village. You will question inhabitants of the village, communicate with
the dead, discover Gregor’s motive for bringing the dead back to life, study the
Necronomicon, and finally penetrate the world of the Ancient Ones to prevent
their return to earth.
When you play this game, you will find:
- Approximately
30 hours of gameplay - Four game levels
- Twenty characters
- Forty
sets - Two inventories
- A map of the area
- Ten possible causes
of “game over” - An original stereo soundtrack
Lovecraft
may be gone, but he is certainly not forgotten. His books live on, just as vibrant
as they were when he wrote them, and his fans are loyal and legion. His posthumous
influence is considerable, and this game may be just one more star in his literary
career. I sincerely hope that is the case.
