The Daedalus Encounter: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Interactive movie video games]] |
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[[Category:Puzzle video games]] |
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[[Category:Science fiction video games]] |
[[Category:Science fiction video games]] |
Revision as of 02:23, 20 November 2020
The Daedalus Encounter | |
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Developer(s) | Mechadeus (DOS) Lifelike Productions (3DO) |
Publisher(s) | Virgin Interactive Entertainment (DOS) Panasonic (3DO) |
Director(s) | Mark Giambruno Scott Ewers |
Producer(s) | Anne Sandkuhler |
Designer(s) | Scott Baker |
Programmer(s) | Britton Peddie Steve Goeckler Drew Vinciguerra |
Artist(s) | Laura Hainke Andrew Murdock Eric Chadwick |
Writer(s) | Mark Giambruno Ned Miller |
Composer(s) | Her House Productions |
Platform(s) | MS-DOS, 3DO, Mac |
Release | April 1995[1] |
Genre(s) | Interactive movie, puzzle adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
The Daedalus Encounter is a 1995 interactive movie puzzle adventure game developed by Mechadeus and published by Virgin Interactive for MS-DOS. The game was ported to the 3DO by Lifelike Productions and published by Panasonic. The premise of the game is that there are three space marines who have fought as part of an interstellar war. One of them, Casey, has been brought back to life by his partners after a space accident and he is now a brain grafted in a life-support system. In order to save themselves, the three characters and the player solve all sorts of puzzles.
Plot
The game follows a trio of space marines who fought in an interstellar war: Casey O'Bannon (the player character), Ariel Matheson (Tia Carrere) and Zack Smith (Christian Bocher). On a routine patrol, their ship is attacked by enemy fighters, and Casey is critically injured by a hunk of space debris. Casey's body is irreparably damaged, and by the time he wakes up from his comatose state, the war has ended, Ariel and Zack have embarked on a new career scavenging equipment from ships wrecked in the war, and he is now only a brain grafted in a life support system on their spaceship, the Artemis. So that Casey can take part in their ventures, Ariel and Zack have put him in control of a small flying probe. During a salvage mission, the trio crash into and are stranded on a derelict alien spacecraft, which is on a collision course with the star. It is up to Casey to help his partners and explore the mystery of the Daedalus spaceship.
During the exploration of the alien ship, Ari and Zack enter a Central Hub containing six doors in the shape of hexagons. They explore areas of the ship behind each door but do not find any navigational controls. However, Casey figures out how to manipulate a device in the room, activating an elevator which takes Ari, Zack and Casey up and out of the Central Hub.
The alien ship approaches the Sun and temperature inside starts to rapidly increase. The elevator brings Ari, Zack and Casey into a control room where the device (which the orbs were inserted into) vanishes, revealing a fish-shaped shell. Ari and Zack notice a live alien and Casey goes over to communicate with it.
Depending on the player's actions, the game proceeds to one of three endings:
- The alien ship reaches the Sun and the Artemis burns and explodes in the heat.
- The alien doesn't respond to Casey and Zack shoots it with his laser gun. The alien knocks Zack aside and attacks Ari. Ari kills the alien and the shell hatches into the Queen alien. Ari kills it and Casey changes the course of the ship, steering it away from the Sun. Ari assumes that Zack is dead and cries over his body, telling Casey that he was wrong about there being no such thing as a hopeless situation.
- The alien responds to Casey and as the alien ship reaches the star, a force field appears around the Artemis and protects it from the intense heat. The fish-shaped shell turns out to be an egg, which hatches into a giant red alien Queen. The live alien, Ari, Zack and Casey bow to it. In a voice over, Ari explains that the force field created by the creatures which called themselves "Seddy" protected them and the ship from the intense heat. The Krin either fled or were destroyed and the new Queen possessed "race memory" and being able to speak and know; she helped Casey's translation abilities, answered many of Ari's and Zack's questions and repaired the Artemis. Zack receives a transmission from the Daedalus, wishing them a safe voyage. Zack tells Casey that he was right about there being "no such thing as a hopeless situation" and tries to convince Ari to join him on the mattress in the station room. Ari says nothing, and Zack murmurs, "Or not," as the Artemis speeds off into outer space.
Gameplay
Casey can interact with the world through a small remote-controlled flying probe, which is launched from the ship shortly after the start of the game. In this new form, Casey possesses the limited ability to interact with his environment, his only way to communicate being through a yes/no interface and by emitting light pulses.
In order to save themselves, the trio must explore the huge alien ship and solve a large number of mind puzzles, such as connecting colored laser beams with mirrors, unlock a door with rotating shapes, playing an advanced form of connect the dots with a computer interface, and one combat sequence, battling aliens called Krin. The puzzles are mixed with acting sequences from Carrere and Bocher, whose interaction with the player creates some lighthearted comedy. Numerous alternate scenes and clips were filmed and edited into gameplay. The alternate scenes appear depending on the player's choice of gameplay.
Production and release
The Daedalus Encounter was developed by Mechadeus and published by Virgin Interactive. The live-action segments were filmed on location on Cinerent Stage A in San Francisco.[2] The game was released for MS-DOS and 3DO. In the MS-DOS version, the video is in a window inside of an organic interface, but the player can hit the spacebar to play the video in full-screen mode. In the 3DO version, the video is full-screen. The game was also part of the multimedia package that was included with the Macintosh Performa at the time.[3]
A special DVD-ROM version would be released for some early OEM DVD-ROM kits.[4]
Reception
Publication | Score |
---|---|
Next Generation | (PC, 3DO)[5][6] |
PC Gamer (UK) | 79% (PC)[7] |
Computer Game Review | 78/72/78[8] |
Electronic Entertainment | A-[9] |
MacUser | [10] |
Maximum | (3DO)[11] |
Reviewing the PC version, Scott Wolf of PC Gamer called it "a sincere attempt to make a program that works both as an interactive movie and game." Wolf praised it for its "smooth, beautiful video; variety of gameplay; and plenty of puzzles," but criticized "excessive sit 'n watch segments, and some really dumb dialog." He opined, "Ultimately, though, The Daedalus Encounter will still prove too shallow for hardcore gamers whose natural distrust of video may never dissipate, while casual gamers may appreciate the fine cinematics but find the puzzles too frustrating."[7] Entertainment Weekly gave the game a B+ and stated, "It seems that most CD-ROM producers still haven't figured out how to combine compelling interactive elements with slick movie-style visuals and storytelling.", citing a lengthy cinematic scene that culminates with an extremely short and basic gameplay sequence. However, they appended that "the game's high-tech scenery and foreboding scenario are engrossing enough to lead you through stretches during which you have nothing to do but watch." Like Wolf, they noted some "flubbed dialogue and inane plot developments", as well as awkward shifts in point of view.[12] Adrian Carmody of Quandary gave it 21⁄2 stars out of 5, and called it a big improvement over Critical Path, with better acting and "more intelligent gameplay." He recommended it to players who enjoyed Entombed, due to the similar gameplay element where every door is locked with a puzzle. He praised the hint system and ability to adjust the difficulty at any point, saying it lets the challenge accommodate each player. He described the graphics as "superb", praised the acting, and said the dialogue "is clear and neither tacky nor simplistic." One drawback he noted is how the save feature does not identify save points.[13] Next Generation stated, "Don't let the 'interactive movie' hype thrown you: The Daedalus Encounter is a keeper."[5]
Reviewing the 3DO version, Air Hendrix of GamePro called the game "a dazzling outer-space voyage fraught with puzzles, gorgeous graphics, more puzzles, a fascinating story line, and even more puzzles." He identified the high quality of the FMV, the compelling science fiction sounds and visuals, and the story line as high points, but opined that the interactivity is too infrequent to maintain most players' interest, particularly as the story sequences later become focused more on exploration than on plot development. He concluded the game to be "definitely worth a look."[14] Maximum commented that "As far as gameplay goes, Daedalus is nothing more than an exercise in following instructions from your compatriots and completing tasks in a set order. But mentions must go to the quality of the FMV footage, by far the most superior effort of any format, and some of the trickier puzzles."[11] A critic for Next Generation likewise considered the FMV footage to be the highlight for its high video quality, stereo surround sound, and strong production values, remarking that "think of 7th Guest with a solid story and decent acting and you get the idea." While he criticized that the interaction is too infrequent and the puzzles suffer from too wide a range of challenge, he concluded, "We almost hate to admit it, but here's an FMV title that works."[6]
The editors of MacUser named The Daedalus Encounter one of the top 50 CD-ROMs of 1995.[10]
References
- ^ Rigdon, Joan (June 18, 1995). "THE FUTURE IS LATE IN HIGH-TECH GAMES". Deseret News. Retrieved February 15, 2020.
- ^ "Game Credits for The Daedalus Encounter". MobyGames. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ "The Daedalus Encounter". Oldgames.sk. Retrieved 2010-02-10.
- ^ Brown, Michael (April 18, 1997). "Hi-Val introduces wireless DVD system". CNET Gamecenter. Archived from the original on December 16, 2000. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
- ^ a b "Finals". Next Generation. No. 8. Imagine Media. August 1995. p. 72.
- ^ a b "Moving". Next Generation. No. 11. Imagine Media. November 1995. p. 175.
- ^ a b "PC Gamer Online". Future plc. 2000-01-17. Archived from the original on January 17, 2000. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
- ^ Perry, Kevin; Chapman, Ted; Kaiafas, Tasos (May 1995). "Watch a Star Crash into a Sun". Computer Game Review. Archived from the original on December 21, 1996.
- ^ Meyer, Bill (July 1995). "The Daedalus Enconter". Electronic Entertainment. Archived from the original on October 18, 1996.
- ^ a b Echler, Nikki; Olson, Rebecca (October 1995). "Top Spins: 50 New CD-ROMs". MacUser. Archived from the original on July 26, 2001.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b "Maximum Reviews: Daedalus Encounter". Maximum: The Video Game Magazine. No. 1. Emap International Limited. October 1995. p. 159.
- ^ "CROSSED IN SPACE". Entertainment Weekly. 1995-04-21. Retrieved 2008-02-13.
- ^ Adrian Carmody (August 1995). "The Daedalus Encounter Review". Quandary. Archived from the original on June 12, 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ "ProReview: The Daedalus Encounter". GamePro. No. 86. IDG. November 1995. p. 98.
External links
- 1995 video games
- 3DO Interactive Multiplayer games
- Adventure games
- Brain transplantation in fiction
- Brain–computer interfacing in fiction
- DOS games
- Full motion video based games
- Interactive movie video games
- Macintosh games
- Puzzle video games
- Science fiction video games
- Single-player video games
- Video games developed in the United States
- Video games featuring female protagonists
- Video games featuring non-playable protagonists
- Virgin Interactive games