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Games in a real world setting?
From what I know of it, Samaritan Paradox is an excellent suggestion!
There are parts of the game where the main character reads a fantasy books, and you get to enact this part, as a fictional character in a fantasy world. So if I’m correctly understanding your thread, this is kind of cheating.
Same goes for Edith Finch, which uses metaphores and memories as a way to introduce new gameplay.
On the other hand The Cat Lady, which has admitedly supernatural elements, feels to me totally set in the real world, because of the settings, of the issues it raises, and I guess of the “ordinary person” quality of the main character.
ok, seriously, Larry might fit perfectly or police quest.
Yes, I’d count the Larry games. They get pretty improbable but I get the feeling they’re basically set in a realish world.
I think DIY liposuction device and stuff like that goes a bit beyond improbable, not to mention that in one Larry game you actually get to visit Sierra studios where they have sets for Sierra games which really shatters even the slightest doubt about Larry taking place in the real world.
Of course the Larry character was inspired by an employee who was always bragging about his female conquests, so it indeed is more reality-based than your average adventure game.
I think we could mention games like Capri Connection, which don’t really qualify as such as the story is very much made up… “A mysterious vortex casts you into the body of Nick Freuds in a Parallel Universe through a Space-Time Rip.”
But having said that, their slogan actually says:
“The only adventure games set in real places with real characters interpreting themselves.”
Fair enough on the Larry games - I haven’t played them myself so wasn’t sure how silly they got. Maybe some would qualify and not others.
I think we could mention games like Capri Connection, which don’t really qualify as such as the story is very much made up… “A mysterious vortex casts you into the body of Nick Freuds in a Parallel Universe through a Space-Time Rip.”
We could, but we’ve already said that a fantastical story set in a real-life location isn’t what we’re after here. There are some similar games that would count, though - The Sydney Mystery (I think) or the Carol Reed games, for instance.
I think we could mention games like Capri Connection, which don’t really qualify as such as the story is very much made up… “A mysterious vortex casts you into the body of Nick Freuds in a Parallel Universe through a Space-Time Rip.”
We could, but we’ve already said that a fantastical story set in a real-life location isn’t what we’re after here. There are some similar games that would count, though - The Sydney Mystery (I think) or the Carol Reed games, for instance.
It’s been a while since I played it, but I think Anacapri: The Dream was perfectly explainable in real-life terms although it involves dream settings and dream logic and so forth. So it’s no different from The Cat Lady, but not really what this thread is about.
As for the Larry games, does anyone think their depictions of relationships and sexuality are the slightest bit realistic?
Developer bias here, but A Golden Wake is set in the real world, specifically 1920s Miami, and features a plot that doesn’t involve a mystery or anything fantastical.
OK guys, how about Mainlining?
http://rebelephant.itch.io/mainlining
Not having played the game and not having (much) hacking experience, that seems like a relatively real world kind of game by its description.
I think there’s a reason why nobody mentions Cryo’s numerous historical games (Egypt, China, Aztec, Pompei) or Hal Barwood’s and Noah Falstein’s Mata Hari. They were realistic, but so boring that nobody remembers them these days. IMHO Broken Sword and Gabriel Knight developed a perfect formula to keep people glued to the sreen by introducing supernatural elements in small amounts, to the point it is not always clear whether we are dealing with supernatural or not. I don’t really see a point in ultra-realistic settings, even in spy/detective genres there’s always a place for fictional sects, gadgets, rituals, some unexplained events.
PC means personal computer
i think this strict real-life games you looking for is kinda absurd, bc if we wanted them to resemble everything but realistic settings then any media production from Games to movies and books couldn’t be but mundane releases or products, stories with their settings need to take the player on an imaginative journey because the most reason people attracted to these kinds of fantasy games is to escape reality.
Let’s take i.e the Knights Templars storyline, the holy blood, and the holy grail, outta of broken Sword and see how real-life-settings alone can give after all to the story and to how it would be entertaining us.
Let’s take the Hoodoo and the Voodoo outta Gabriel knight and see what game would it be.
anyone might not ve noticed but i crave for games with Realistic Setting, and how is it to me is to have basic really output, People not creatures, streets and buildings not villages and huts, road and cars not forest and carts, a real time of events not some imaginary ‘once upon a time’ stories.
Whether these setting were cartoony or real, in the past or at the future were all what i mentioned in the past paragraph is apparent (and what should be isn’t) with reasonable and believable look of my expectations of how life would be, still falls under the realistic settings, bc at the end settings imo is the cover of the book, the frame of the picture, the surroundings and the make-believe reality which and where our hero interact with/at.
anyone might not ve noticed but i crave for games with Realistic Setting, and how is it to me is to have basic really output, People not creatures, streets and buildings not villages and huts, road and cars not forest and carts, a real time of events not some imaginary ‘once upon a time’ stories.
Villages and huts don’t make stories unrealistic or fantasy. People have lived in forests and huts much longer than in cities - and some people still do.
Even in very developed countries some people choose to do so, like Amish people, so I think cars and cities are not a very good measure for realism, it’s just your personal preference.
Also I am not sure what you mean by “real time” exactly, I assume you mean present day, not “real-time” as in a way to handle time within a game? That is your preference too, as you can have very realistic historical settings - just because the game doesn’t take place in our time, it doesn’t make it “once upon a time” thing automatically either.
By going back in time far enough you can even come to a situation where creatures are the real thing, and people are not. The age of dinosaurs. I am not sure how good an adventure game that would make though (and we are not talking about Jurassic Park now… )
i didnt mean to say real-time really, it was real-life is what i wanted to typo tho i was too thinking of your assumption (amazing) really of understanding it, maybe that why i typed it wrong, so to explain more what was i thinking of real-time; it would include past events like i did mention at another paragraph, but it needs some kind of date? within true events of those past times, like i.e Django Unchanged for example, you build a story about some real past time events and then ad something, the people could consider fictional, that of a Black Cowboy, but it shouldn’t bother anyone cs i consider this outta the story, not the settings!, cs the setting are all real as what people learnt of those times and where story is taking place, with the settings of Black Slaves, cotton field, fanatic red necks, mayhap.
when some say ‘once upon time’ the story usually break the groud to accept anything that is about to be told, it prepares your expectation for any time of these events and open your mind to accept any settings, where the story can have all that the imaginative teller can include/tell, from dragon the Spitfire and animal the talk.
Apologies if someone has already mentioned these (I have only scanned the thread) but what about the Police Quest games?
Also where do the Sherlock Holmes games stand? There is out and out Supernatural like in Awakening, and then the magic deduction modes in the last couple of games. Do Sherlock’s powers of observation and deduction come under the same heading?
3.5 time winner of the “Really Annoying Caption Contest Saboteur” Award!
Speaking of Sierra there’s also Urban Runner.
Continuing this old discussion, because I just saw a new (to me, at least) video about modelling a real location into an adventure game location.
The game under development is The Safe Place, and the video shows a bridge somewhere in Russia being recreated by computer software.
I don’t have much information about the game itself, but at least the modelling process is very interesting to watch.
It’s a forthcoming game from Anate Studio, the makers of Little Kite:
The Safe Place
hmmm can we add freeware ones too or only commercial?These come in mind:
Cruise for a corpse
Fascination
Gold Rush!
Code-Name Iceman
Laura BOow series
DEJA VU series
Les Manley series
Operation Stealth
Nippon Safes Inc.
Conquests of the Longbow: The Legend of Robin Hood (does this count?)
The Beverly Hillbillies
Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist
Flash Traffic: City of Angels
The Big Red Adventure
Igor: Objective Uikokahonia
Undercover Missions: Operation Kursk K-141
In the Dead of Night
Night Trap
Repentant
Teen Agent
Ace Ventura
Devil In The Capital
The Dame Was Loaded
Santa Fe Mystery Series
Stonewall Penitentiary
Noir: A Shadowy Thriller
Black Dahlia
The Painscreek Killings
The Last Express
Riddle of the Sphinx: An Egyptian Adventure
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Final Cut
Post Mortem
In Memoriam Series
Agatha Christie Series
Echo: Secret of the Lost Cavern
Super Jazz Man
Murder in the Abbey
Late Shift
So Blonde
Treasure Island
Tango: The Adventure Game
L’affaire Morlov
Football Game
15 Days
A New Beginning
MISSING: An Interactive Thriller - Episode One
Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel
James Peris: No Licence Nor Control
1953 - KGB Unleashed
The Deed
Actual Sunlight
Adventures of Max Fax: Episode 1
Dream Chamber
Helga Deep in Trouble
Contradiction - Spot The Liar!
The Raven
The Low Road
Richard & Alice
1954 Alcatraz
Al Emmo and the Lost Dutchman’s Mine
Always Sometimes Monsters
Lost in Paradise
Beyond Eyes
Black Island
Agent A: A puzzle in disguise
Some of these I havent finished or played many years ago,so I may be wrong
Some Freeware:
Date In the Park
9 Months In
Beyond the horizon ALPHA
Mudlarks
Pleurghburg: Dark Ages
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