While LucasArts are known as the kings of Point ‘n’ Click, another studio in the 90’s was producing some of the best and most gripping adventure games of all time — and they were British. Revolution Software, based in York, were behind one of the biggest franchises in adventure game history — Broken Sword. The 1001 book touches on the first game in the series, as well as another point and click classic, Beneath a Steel Sky.
1001 No.55: ‘Broken Sword’ (1996)
Playing Broken Sword is one of my fondest childhood memories, and is one of those games where seeing the opening cutscene and first screen of the game just brings back waves of nostalgia.
It’s an amazing story, an adventure that starts so simply but ends up in locations around the world. You are George Stobbart, a simple American tourist, caught up in an explosion at a Parisian Café. Everything and everyone is of course not as they seem, and the plot descends into a complex conspiracy, involving murder, deception and the Knights Templar.
It’s a brilliant plot, one that twists and turns all over the place as more mysteries are uncovered. The voice acting, sound and music are all top notch, and the controls are so refined compared to the earlier LucasArts adventures. Despite being set mostly in France and starring an American, it’s full of very British humour — and the puzzles are clever but not so abstract that it requires a walkthrough at every step.
I’m a huge fan of this whole series, which is still going today, but the original game is undoubtedly the best. Play it, and the sequel ‘The Smoking Mirror’, and if you like them try the others — they went 3D for the 3rd game onwards, so it’s a bit of an acquired taste. Never feels quite the same as the good old original…
1001 No.56: ‘Beneath a Steel Sky’ (1994)
One of the earliest adventure classics from Revolution Software, Beneath a Steel Sky is set in a dystopian future, where the world has been ravaged by conflict and pollution. There’s a great atmosphere throughout, and it’s awesome. You can see how Revolution honed their craft, going on to produce the Broken Sword series — and if you’re a sci-fi fan like me, you’ll love it.
It’s short but sweet, with some excellent humour, but also a real sense of danger — you can die in these games, not like in those cutesy LucasArts adventures! Like Broken Sword, your character is thrown into a mystery, and you have to uncover the truth about the city that you’re lost in. It was a huge commercial success at the time, and won numerous awards — and is still called by some the best adventure game of all time.
Get some free games
One of the best things about this game though is that it is now freeware — either sign up with www.gog.com (an essential resource for your classic gaming needs) and download it from them, or get it straight from www.scummvm.org — which I hope you’ve visited already to get your old awesome LucasArts games working. You can also grab Lure of the Temptress while you’re there — the first game that Revolution produced.
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