[{"TitleName":"The Pen and the Dark","Publisher":"Mosaic Publishing Ltd","Author":"Keith Campbell, Sacha Z","YearOfRelease":"1984","ZxDbId":"0006780","Reviews":[{"Issue":{"Name":"Micro Adventurer Issue 6, Apr 1984","Price":"£0.75","ReleaseDate":"1984-03-15","Editor":"Graham Cunningham","TotalPages":52,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Graham Cunningham\r\nAssistant Editor: Carmel Anderson\r\nSoftware Editor: Graham Taylor\r\nMaster Adventurers: Tony Bridge, Mike Grace\r\nEditorial Secretary: Cleo Cherry\r\nAdvertisement Manager: David Lake\r\nAdvertisement Executive: Simon Langston\r\nAdministration: Theresa Lacy\r\nManaging Editor: Brendon Gore\r\nPublishing Director: Jenny Ireland\r\nTelephone number (all departments): [redacted]\r\nUK Address: [redacted]\r\nUS Address: [redacted]\r\nSubscriptions: UK £10.00 for 12 issues, overseas surface (excluding US and Canada) £16 for 12 issues, US and Canada air-lifted US$33.95 for 12 issues.\r\n\r\nMicro Adventurer is published monthly by Sunshine Books, Scot Press Ltd. Typesetting by In-Step Ltd, [redacted]. Printed by Eden Fisher (Southend) Ltd, [redacted]. Distributed by SM Distribution, [redacted].\r\n\r\nISSN 0265-4156\r\n\r\nRegistered at the Post Office as a newspaper.\r\n\r\n© Sunshine Books 1984"},"MainText":"LIGHT CAST ON DARK STREET\r\n\r\nMICRO: BBC 32K, Spectrum 48K\r\nPRICE: £9.95\r\nFORMAT: Cassette\r\nSUPPLIER: Mosaic, [redacted]\r\n\r\n\"You've read the book now play the game\".\r\n\r\nLike The Hobbit before it, this game is closely based on a previously written tale.\r\n\r\nThe tale is science-fiction, which is included in the booklet that accompanies the cassette. The story is The Pen and the Dark by Colin Kapp. It is one of a series featuring the Unorthodox Engineers.\r\n\r\nThe game instructions advise the player to read the first few pages of the story which sets the scene and reveals the object of the adventure. The remainder of the plot should only be read when the player is stuck.\r\n\r\nThe player assumes the identity of Fritz Van Noon, head of a team known as the Unorthodox Engineers.\r\n\r\nYou are set the task of solving the mystery surrounding the appearance on the planet Ithica of a strange black hole phenomenon known as the Dark.\r\n\r\nAll previous attempts to destroy the Dark have been foiled by the Pen, the surrounding vast, freezing shadow that chills the mind and body of all who approach.\r\n\r\nAs you would imagine, the Unorthodox Engineers find a very unorthodox solution to the enigma, which is why the story has been supplied with the game as without its help I doubt if anyone would arrive at the correct solution.\r\n\r\nAs the instructions point out, however, knowing the solution is only part of the problem. You must find the equipment required and faithfully re-enact the storyline, which in itself has many problems.\r\n\r\nThe game is coloured-text only and uses the GO DOOR type format of commands.\r\n\r\nOverall the text has a nice feel to it probably because it has been lifted from the book. It contains many amusing replies, such as; \"To carry more you would need a supermarket trolley complete with outboard motor\".\r\n\r\nTo ensure that the player follows in the footsteps of the story the program will only permit certain objects to be obtained where the correct sequence of the storyline is followed. This means that unless you SAVE the game state you cannot take short cuts when you replay the game at a later date.\r\n\r\nI enjoyed playing this, an unusual adventure, which has some nice touches. It should be said, however, that a quick glance at the program, which is written in Basic, reveals some very unsophisticated programming. This probably accounts for the limited number of locations contained within. A short game which. while it's fun, does not deserve its high price tag.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"23,24","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Andy Mitchell","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":null,"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Micro Adventurer Issue 8, Jun 1984","Price":"£0.75","ReleaseDate":"1984-05-17","Editor":"Graham Cunningham","TotalPages":48,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Graham Cunningham\r\nAssistant Editor: Carmel Anderson\r\nSoftware Editor: Graham Taylor\r\nMaster Adventurers: Tony Bridge, Mike Grace\r\nEditorial Secretary: Cleo Cherry\r\nAdvertisement Manager: David Lake\r\nAdvertisement Executive: Simon Langston\r\nAdministration: Theresa Lacy\r\nManaging Editor: Brendon Gore\r\nPublishing Director: Jenny Ireland\r\nTelephone number (all departments): [redacted]\r\nUK Address: [redacted]\r\nUS Address: [redacted]\r\nSubscriptions: UK £10.00 for 12 issues, overseas surface (excluding US and Canada) £16 for 12 issues, US and Canada air-lifted US$33.95 for 12 issues.\r\n\r\nMicro Adventurer is published monthly by Sunshine Books, Scot Press Ltd. Typesetting by In-Step Ltd, [redacted]. Printed by Eden Fisher (Southend) Ltd, [redacted]. Distributed by SM Distribution, [redacted].\r\n\r\nISSN 0265-4156\r\n\r\nRegistered at the Post Office as a newspaper.\r\n\r\n© Sunshine Books 1984"},"MainText":"BOOKING-UP SOFTWARE GAMES\r\n\r\nJohn Fraser evaluates the book and software packages currently available.\r\n\r\n\"You've read the book, now play the game\" seems to becoming an increasingly popular slogan in advertisements for adventure games. Since the spectacular success of The Hobbit several other companies have moved into producing bookware, books combined with software cassettes in one package.\r\n\r\nSometimes, however, the games bear little resemblance to the books on which they are supposed to be based and the attractive packaging can be quite misleading. Indeed, the diversity of approaches, not only to the games but even to the books, makes choosing a suitable package all rather confusing for the new enthusiast.\r\n\r\nAlmost all the currently available bookware falls into the general categories of science fiction or fantasy, which raises several interesting questions. For example how suitable are these genres for translating into micro adventures? How closely do the games follow the books? What are the advantages and disadvantages of these to mediums? Are such packages all that they claim to be?\r\n\r\nFirst of all there are several obvious but nevertheless fundamental differences between books and software which concern their physical formats alone. For one thing a book is portable. You can read a book anywhere, whereas you cannot - at least not yet - take your micro on a train journey and play adventure games, except with printed versions such as The Warlock of Firetop Mountain and subsequent titles.\r\n\r\nESCAPE\r\n\r\nNor do you have to wait before you can read a book. A long adventure like The Hobbit takes several minutes to load and even then you may experience loading difficulties or find that the game does not always do what it should. My copy of The Hobbit for example, crashes when I try to escape through the trap door in the Elvenking's cellar and this has been known to happen with other copies.\r\n\r\nIt is easy, too, to keep your place in a book. If you wish to return to a particular page you can do so almost instantaneously. Although you can save your current game position in many adventures, the process is time consuming and much less convenient. Nevertheless, it is a useful option if you have just spent several hours exploring the farthest reaches of Middle Earth and dread the thought of having to start all over again the following night.\r\n\r\nFor those with printers, The Hobbit enables you to obtain print-outs of the adventure windows so that you can examine your progress at any time. Effectively, you have your own program-generated story in which you decide the course of the action. One wonders whether fiction writers will eventually be churning out best selling novels with special novel-writing programs?\r\n\r\nWith the memory limitations of home micros full length novels or, for that matter, text adventures of a similar size, are out of the question, although Gilsoft's new adventure-writing program The Quill, now means that anyone can write their own adventures without any previous experience of programming.\r\n\r\nFrom what has just been said it might appear that adventure games are too much of a hassle to be worth playing. As I hope to show, however, this is certainly not the case since the different formats that the games can take are extremely varied.\r\n\r\nThe book may be a straightforward novel or story such as Colin Kapp's The Pen and the Dark or may be arranged, as in The Warlock of Firetop Mountain, in the manner of a programmed learning course whereby the reader selects different options at each stage of the narrative and so becomes an active participant in the adventure.\r\n\r\nOn the other hand, the games may be pure text adventures which follow the story closely (The Pen and the Dark); text and graphic adventures (The Hobbit); arcade maze games which bear little resemblance to the book (Warlock); or adventures offering selected incidents from the story with strategy or arcade type games (Korth Trilogy).\r\n\r\nThe imaginary worlds of science fiction and fantasy are natural choices for software writers. One of the advantages of producing a game based on a previously published novel or story is that you have a ready-made scenario and here there is no shortage. The Hobbit was an early classic which has inspired fantasy writers ever since. Originally published in 1937, the book appeared well before the first mainframe computer became operational, but if ever there was a ready-made scenario this was it.\r\n\r\nHEROES\r\n\r\nThe plot is virtually a blueprint for fantasy adventures: a journey across a vast and often inhospitable land in search of precious gold. Along the way Bilbo, a hobbit, in the company of dwarfs meets all sorts of creatures - goblins, elves, trolls and ultimately the evil dragon, Smaug.\r\n\r\nWarlock concerns a similar quest, although in this case you take on the role of the hero and have to locate the Warlock's treasure, hidden deep within the dungeons of Firetop mountain.\r\n\r\nThe Pen and the Dark and the Korth Trilogy represent two ends of the science fiction spectrum. The Pen and the Dark is the only one to be based on a strictly scientific premise and is one of five stories by Colin Kapp, about the various anomalies investigated by Fritz Van Noon of the Unorthodox Engineers. In this story he attempts to solve the mystery of the Dark, a vast mushroom-shaped artefact left by an alien intelligence. The Dark appears to be indestructible, absorbing all the energy that the Unorthodox Engineers can unleash. Surrounding the Dark itself is the Pen, the region which negates all energy.\r\n\r\nThe Korth Trilogy tells of how three young heroes eventually save the earth from repeated attacks by the mighty Korth empire. This is sheer space opera, cowboys and Indians among the stars following in the wake of Star Wars and the kind of simple scenario one finds in so many arcade games.\r\n\r\nEven though all these books are quite different from each other they nevertheless have one common feature. They describe imaginary worlds that are subject to the same laws that govern our own or else possess an internal consistency which the reader can believe in. Even in Middle Earth, where magic rings and fire-breathing dragons are taken for granted, logical limitations are imposed. Bilbo has very human weaknesses and emotions, and is the sort of reluctant hero the readers can readily identify with.\r\n\r\nThere are several factors which ought to be considered whether you are setting out to convert your favourite book into a mammoth adventure or merely trying to decide which package to spend your money on first. Clearly, if you happen to be familiar with any of the books you are on surer ground. Although these considerations inevitably overlap to some degree, they fall roughly into three main areas which I shall look at in turn.\r\n\r\nATTACK\r\n\r\nBelievability: is the fictional world so credible that the reader becomes thoroughly immersed in the events, characters and places in the book? The Hobbit is one of those rare books that people read again and again, and yet the story remains the same each time. So does the game add anything to the reader's enjoyment of the book? And what about those games which only portray selected incidents from a story? if the book is not essential to playing the game is it of any value?\r\n\r\nInterest: are some games so complex that you would rather just sit down with the book and passively absorb the story, leaving the game alone? In The Hobbit events proceed slightly differently each time you play the game. There is an element of the unexpected, with the possibility of being attacked at any moment. It is also possible to interact with the main characters so that the story becomes more your own creation.\r\n\r\nThe Pen and the Dark, in contrast, is a fixed adventure, but the problems raised in the game are sufficiently complex to sustain your interest for hours. Warlock and the Korth Trilogy are graphic adventures only and cannot really be compared to the text from which they are derived.\r\n\r\nEase of Play: this overlaps to some extent with the need to capture the player's interest. Without clear and complete documentation you are only going to find the game too frustrating to play. With some packages fairly comprehensive booklets are included that offer advice on such things as communicating with the other characters, crossing rivers and so on.\r\n\r\nWith others you can obtain a sheet of hints for solving most of the problems that you encounter, although without giving too much away. The graphic adventures such as Warlock and the Korth Trilogy are self-contained, with full instructions appearing on the screen.\r\n\r\nHaving now established some criteria for assessing bookware, let us take a closer look at each package in turn and see how the software writers have tackled the problem of converting a book into an adventure game. Each combination of book and software cassete illustrates different features which I shall focus on.\r\n\r\nThe obvious example to begin with is The Hobbit, since the game has been a bestseller for some time and is often regarded as the adventure by which all others should be judged. It also contains several innovations which are either difficult or quite impossible to reproduce in book form.\r\n\r\nIt is not difficult to see why The Hobbit has been so highly praised, even though more recent examples, such as Valhalla, have extended the possibilities of adventures still further, so that you can now actually see the characters moving in accordance with your instructions. But The Hobbit was revolutionary because it not only combined a text adventure with high-resolution graphics, but also displayed some degree of artificial intelligence.\r\n\r\nThe player could communicate with the characters in the story using plain English, or Inglish, as the publishers have chosen to call it. Naturally there were limitations to the Inglish language but this novel feature was a considerable advance.\r\n\r\nThe ability of the characters to lead independent lives also enhanced the appeal of the game enormously. Elrond invariably gives you different directions each time you ask him to read the map. Often Thorin refuses to co-operate when you ask him to help you escape from the goblin's dungeon.\r\n\r\nAnd, on rare occasions, you may be captured in Beorn's house and find yourself in the Elvenking's Hall. In fact, there is no one solution to The Hobbit. As anyone who claims to have finished the game will know, you may still be making new discoveries each time you play it.\r\n\r\nREPRODUCED\r\n\r\nThe textual descriptions are concise and, unlike pure text adventures, there are no lengthy descriptive passages. You are not told what Gollum or a vicious warg looks like because all that is in the book. What you do get is a basic description of your location, such as \"You are in a dark dungeon in the Elvenking's Hall. To the south west there is a red door...\" and there is an attractive picture of the dungeon on the screen. The book fills you in on the atmosphere of the place and describes Bilbo's predicament and his reactions to it, in a way which no text and graphics could hope to do.\r\n\r\nThe real time element, however, cannot be reproduced in book form. As you ponder over your next move all the other characters are going about their business, which means you cannot spend too long hanging around. Thorin will soon tell you to hurry up or he will sit down and start singing about gold.\r\n\r\nThe game also allows you to explore various locations. You may look through doors and windows to see what lies beyond or who might be waiting for you. You can follow characters, examine objects, eat and drink. In fact live out a surprisingly real existence.\r\n\r\nThere are some slight departures from the book, though the sequence of events are much the same. One significant difference is that Bilbo has lost 13 dwarfs and only has the chief dwarf, Thorin, and the wizard, Gandalf, to accompany him. Another is that the answer to Gollum's riddle is not the same as it is in the book. Then again, you may find objects which do not appear in the book at all, such as the golden key in the Misty Valley.\r\n\r\nOPTIONS\r\n\r\nThe success of the game has a good deal to do with how much it involves the player in the action. But it is equally due to Tolkien's own fertile imagination which created the evocative land of Middle Earth and its host of characters in such convincing detail. Tolkien's world has long had a steady stream of visitors and now newcomers, or already hardened travellers, have the opportunity to become in a sense part of that creation.\r\n\r\nWith The Warlock of Firetop Mountain we are on somewhat different ground, although the invented worlds of Middle Earth and the Warlock's lair have a good deal in common. It was first published in 1982 and since then more than one million copies have been sold. The book offers a comparatively cheap means of adventure gaming, which has more in common with dungeons and dragons type role-playing games: your initial characteristics are determined beforehand by rolling die and recording the results on an adventure sheet.\r\n\r\nYou start with the minimum of equipment - a sword, rucksack with food and drink and a shield. You may find other objects along the way. To restore your skill, stamina or luck points you can take a magic potion at any time. Whenever you have to fight a creature there is an elaborate combat system and escape options are sometimes provided.\r\n\r\nThe book attempts to simulate a degree of randomness by continually providing different options for the player and facilities whereby he can test his luck and so on. While this is a demanding and time-consuming adventure, you do get the satisfaction of being able to deal with all sorts of nasty creatures yourself and, should you succeed, the additional enjoyment in having discovered the treasure. Unlike Bilbo's quest there is only one route to your journey's end, although it can take you several attempts before you find the correct one.\r\n\r\nAs a marked contrast the game is an arcade type in which you manoeuvre a figure through a complex maze and have to collect 15 keys to unlock the treasure chest and find the way out. All manner of creatures may attack you, but you have to react quickly for this is a very fast game. Often, there are lengthy periods when little happens at all.\r\n\r\nThe book conveys far more of the atmosphere of the place than the game does. You cannot really imagine the dark dungeons and slimy walls when zapping around the maze; nor do you have much time to think things over. The book does not fall victim to the memory limitations of many home micros and so can afford to devote far more space to description. As in an exciting novel you feel compelled to read on, only here you take on the role of the hero which adds greatly to the suspense. Will some loathsome creature be waiting for you behind the door? Will you manage to cross the fast-flowing river? Will you even survive the journey to the Warlock's treasure?\r\n\r\nThe element of suspense is lacking in the game. The emphasis falls more on fast reactions and good co-ordination. For the experience of being involved in a fully realised world of fantasy you need the book, but at least the combination offers a choice of formats for less than the price of many adventures.\r\n\r\nThe Korth Trilogy consists of three book/software packages. There are three games on each tape representing episodes from the narrative. While some of the games are of the arcade variety, others are strategic with layouts that resemble board games on which the player moves his men around usually in an attempt to infiltrate the alien base.\r\n\r\nThe inside cover of each book gives notes on the accompanying programs, together with page references to the incidents in the story. But the games can quite easily be played without having to read the books. Sufficient information is provided on the screen. It is best, though, to make notes before trying to play them because there is a good deal to remember.\r\n\r\nIn the first book, Escape from Arkaron, the heroes test-fly a newly developed ultra light ship. When tests prove successful they venture out to an inner planet of the Sirius system, where they make their first contact with the Korth empire.\r\n\r\nThe related games tape contains Testrun, an uninspiring game which shows the simulator developed after the first test run. The object is to fly either to Sirius or Pluto, avoiding the continuous stream of meteors that scroll jerkily down an oblong window in the centre of the screen. There is a similar simulation game on the second tape, which is a lunar lander type and adding little to your enjoyment of the book.\r\n\r\nThere are other games which allow the player to participate in the more exciting incidents, such as Prisoner in which your mission is to rescue one of your men from the Korth prison and have to fight your way along a maze of corridors to free him from the cell. In Alpha, on the second tape, you must find and reprogram the computer responsible for sending unmanned Korth ships towards the solar system. You can move up the floors via lifts or stairs, though you do have to watch out for unfriendly guards along the way.\r\n\r\nOne game even portrays events which supposedly occurred before the story opens. In Empire you must have to run the empire while the computer is being repaired. You must deal with uprisings, shortages, overproduction and so on. This is perhaps the most interesting game in the trilogy although, as the situation does not arise in the story, the books are of no help at all.\r\n\r\nCONTRIVED\r\n\r\nFor your children these packages are worthwhile. The games will doubtless encourage the child to read the books and vice versa. Sometimes, however, the pace of the story momentarily slackens. When the trio is testing the revolutionary space drive, for example, the reader is bombarded with technical data which might have been better relegated to an appendix for all the good it does in advancing the plot. It is almost as if the stories were written after the games and the incidents slotted into place around them.\r\n\r\nBooks written specifically for computer games are more likely to be contrived, because the writer has written to a predetermined formula rather than sought inspiration from his imagination. In the case of the Korth Trilogy the same writer was responsible for the books and the games.\r\n\r\nBut effective characterisation, literary style makes for entertaining fiction which can so easily be discarded as the player presses on with the action. An exciting story, though, is what children generally want to read and, on the whole, this is just what the Korth Trilogy, with its intergalactic battles and desperate missions and character development, provides in abundance.\r\n\r\nFRUSTRATING\r\n\r\nFor a more intellectually demanding adventure you may prefer The Pen and the Dark, which follows the main events in Colin Kapp's ingenious story: the engineers' investigations of the Pen and their attempts to gain entry into the Dark.\r\n\r\nThe game introduces new problems concerning how to obtain and use the equipment necessary to complete your objective.\r\n\r\nFortunately a hints sheet is available from the publisher, although even then, you may well find yourself in extremely frustrating situations. You can spend much of the time trying to open doors which cannot be opened until you have completed some other task, if only you knew what that other task was.\r\n\r\nAt least there is no real time element to contend with, so you can take as long as you like over a problem without feeling threatened.\r\n\r\nThe instructions recommended that you read only the first section of the story before playing the game, otherwise your enjoyment of finding out the secrets of the quest and perhaps the conclusion of the story for yourself may be considerably reduced.\r\n\r\nLike The Hobbit the text is minimal, but often the program will respond to meaningless inputs in a rather more humorous vein. At the same time the responses can be irritating when you have tried everything you can think of and do not seem to be making any headway.\r\n\r\nWhile The Pen and the Dark lacks the innovative features of The Hobbit, it certainly throws out a challenge to anyone who delights in problem-solving. It is very much a matter of personal taste which sort of game is to be preferred. And, of course, as with literary awards, no two players will agree on what they consider to be the best package.\r\n\r\nCOMPLEMENT\r\n\r\nIn any case it is not a question of whether one is better than another; the games are simply different.\r\n\r\nWhich is not to say that book/software packages cannot be evaluated at all. At least we can affirm a general principle: that adventures, whether text, graphics or both, should not be a substitute for the book, but that one should complement the other. Ideally, playing the game will lead to a greater appreciation of the book, while reading the book at the appropriate stage leads to a greater understanding of the game.\r\n\r\nBook/software packages are becoming increasingly popular with software writers and publishers. While taking plots from existing books may be less work for programmers short on original ideas, established book publishers are recognising the enormous potential that such packages can have.\r\n\r\nREVOLUTION\r\n\r\nNumerous projects are reported to be under development, among them Harry Harrison's Stainless Steel Rat from Mosaic, a Tolkienesque fantasy from Century and, for the BBC micro, The War of the Worlds from CRL.\r\n\r\nAnd Quicksilva's recent release based on Raymond Briggs children's book The Snowman is bound to be a great success. Like the Korth Triology this is not an adventure game, although it does involve the child in ways that are unusual.\r\n\r\nWhether we are heading for the software revolution that some writers are forecasting remains to be seen. But certainly bookware shows all the signs of being a growth area, and the sort of combinations likely to be dreamed up over the next few months is very much open to speculation.\r\n\r\n((c) Sunshine Books for UK magazine rights - otherwise ((c) John Fraser).","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"32,33,35,36","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"John Fraser","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":null,"CompilationReviewScores":[]}]}]