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[[Category:1989 computer and video games]]
[[Category:1989 computer and video games]]
[[Category:Amiga games]]
[[Category:Amiga games]]
[[Category:DOS games]]
[[Category:DOS games|Space Quest 3]]

Revision as of 21:20, 1 August 2006

Space Quest III: The Pirates of Pestulon
File:Sq3 boxart.jpg
Developer(s)Sierra
Publisher(s)Sierra
Designer(s)Mark Crowe and Scott Murphy
EngineSCI
Platform(s)DOS, Macintosh, Amiga, Atari ST
Release1989
Genre(s)Adventure
Mode(s)Single player


Space Quest III: The Pirates of Pestulon was released on March 24th, 1989, and was developed using an early version of Sierra's SCI engine.

Plot

Roger Wilco's escape pod from the end of SQ2 is floating in space until captured by an automated garbage freighter. Roger's first task is to repair an old ship found there, the Aluminum Mallard (a play on the Millennium Falcon) and leave the scow. However he will meet some difficulties, as the Arnoid the Annihilator (an Arnold Schwarzenegger-like android terminator) hunts him for not paying for a whistle in SQII. He eventually discovers the sinister activities of a video game company known as ScumSoft (a parody of Microsoft and Sunsoft) run by the "Pirates of Pestulon".

Pestulon, a small moon of the volcanic planet Ortega, is covered in soft, moss-like vegetation, and dotted with twisted tree-like growths throughout. Elmo Pug, the CEO of ScumSoft, has abducted the Two Guys from Andromeda and is forcing them to design their awful games. Roger somehow gets inside the supposedly impregnable ScumSoft offices and rescues the two programmers. In the process, Roger must fight the Bill Gates-like Elmo in a game that combines giant Mecha-style combat with Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots.

Technical details

SQ3 featured music composed by Supertramp drummer Bob Siebenberg, and was one of the first games to support the new SoundBlaster sound card. PC versions of the game now supported mouse movement and a new, heavily improved text parser. The title of the game is an obvious pun on The Pirates of Penzance.

SQ III also featured a mini-game called Astro Chicken, which was not necessary to complete the game, but getting a high score revealed a hidden distress message that the Two Guys had programmed in.

Preceded by Space Quest III: The Pirates of Pestulon
1989
Succeeded by