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Alice: An Interactive Museum | |
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Developer(s) | Toshiba EMI Ltd |
Publisher(s) | Synergy Interactive Crop. |
Designer(s) | Haruhiko Shono |
Artist(s) | Kuniyoshi Kaneko, Kusakabe Minoru[1] |
Composer(s) | Kazuhiko Katō |
Platform(s) | Windows 3.x, Macintosh |
Release | 1991[1] |
Genre(s) | Adventure Visual novel |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
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- 1951 LEO I 'Lyons Electronic Office' was the commercial development of EDSAC computing platform, supported by British firm J. Lyons and Co.; 1955 MIT's Tape Director operating system made for UNIVAC 1103; 1955 General Motors Operating System made for IBM 701; 1956 GM-NAA I/O for IBM 704, based on General Motors Operating System; 1957 Atlas Supervisor (Manchester University) (Atlas.
Alice: Interactive Museum is a 1991 visual novel/click-and-goadventure game, developed by Toshiba-EMI Ltd and directed by Haruhiko Shono. It uses elements and ideas inspired by Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and uses pre-rendered3D computer graphics (like 1993's Myst). It was designed for Windows 3.x and later released for the Windows 95 platform. In 1991, Shono won the Minister of International Trade and Industry's AVA Multimedia Grand Prix Award (AVAマルチメディアグランプリ 通産大臣賞を受賞) for the game, and in 1995, Newsweek coined the term 'cybergame' to describe games such as Alice and Shono's second game, L-Zone.[2] They were followed by Shono's third title, Gadget: Invention, Travel, & Adventure, in 1993.
Plot[edit]
The player wanders through a mansion of twelve rooms including a gallery, an atelier, a wine cellar and a photo studio. Each room is interconnected via halls, doors, and secret passages - one of which leads to the outside world. The player must collect all of the cards missing from a 53-card set of playing cards and then decipher the associated clues that appear on the cards. Correctly solving the puzzle will lead to The Last Room and the end game. The artwork on the walls is very interactive resulting in clues or surprises.[3]Computer not picking up external hard drive.
Production[edit]
Alice was developed with MacroMind Director.[4] With music by Kazuhiko Katō, and artwork by Kuniyoshi Kaneko, the game has been noted as an ambitiously artistic piece of software.[5]Lets make... sports mac os.
Reception[edit]
Computer Gaming World in 1993 called Alice 'like some kind of charmingly weird and elusive scavenger hunt where one is never really quite sure where they may be going or what they are looking for'. Spin to win real cash. The magazine praised the art as 'a very elegant and richly rendered environment that makes it a browser's paradise', comparing it to the René Magritte's surrealism. It recommended Alice to those interested in a 'surreal 'electronic toy', not a CD-ROM game.[4]
Shono was heralded as a pioneer by America's Newsweek and Japan's Ministry of International Trade and Industry.[6] Following the sleeper success of Shono's third title Gadget: Invention, Travel, & Adventure (1993), Alice and L-Zone were re-released in America.[7]
References[edit]
- ^ ab庄野晴彦 Haruhiko SHONO. Synergy, Inc. 14 April 1997.
- ^Glowka, Wayne, et al. Among the New Words. American Speech 74.3. The American Dialect Society. pp.298-323. 1999.
- ^Alice: An Interactive Museum, MobyGames
- ^ abReveaux, Tony (April 1993). 'A Trip Into The Odd Land of Multi-Media'. Computer Gaming World. p. 40. Retrieved 6 July 2014.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Nygren, Scott. Time Frames: Japanese cinema and the unfolding of history. U of Minnesota Press. ISBN0-8166-4708-9. p.238. 2007.
- ^http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/gadget/gadget.htm
- ^https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=0QkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA80
External links[edit]
- Alice: An Interactive Museum at MobyGames