Shadow of the Comet

Shadow of the Comet (later repackaged as Call of Cthulhu: Shadow of the Comet) is an adventure game developed and released by Infogrames in 1993. The game is based on H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos and uses many elements from Lovecraft's The Dunwich Horror and The Shadow Over Innsmouth. A follow-up game, Prisoner of Ice, is not a direct sequel.

Shadow of the Comet
Developer(s)Infogrames
Publisher(s)
Platform(s)MS-DOS, PC-98, Linux
ReleaseMarch 25, 1993[1]
Genre(s)Adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Shadow of the Comet: The Official Strategy Guide (Prima Publishing, 1994; re-released by the author, 2019) was written by Steve Schwartz. In addition to a game walkthrough, all game dialog, and a disk of saved games, the book includes the Lovecraft story The Call of Cthulhu.

Gameplay

The player can control the protagonist Parker via the arrow keys. When Parker comes across something he can interact with, a button press will allow the player to do so. Items that Parker can take will project a white line from Parker's eye to the item, indicating that when the player interacts with the item, it will be added to Parker's inventory. Apart from this the game plays like a standard third-person adventure game.

Plot

The game takes place in 1910, and concerns the visit of a young British photographer, John Parker, to the isolated New England town of Illsmouth (an alteration on Lovecraft's Innsmouth) to witness and photograph the passage of Halley's Comet. In 1834, on the last passing, Lord Boleskine visited the town after learning that certain conditions near the town would allow astronomical objects to be seen clearer and closer than on any other spot on earth. He decided to test this theory by observing the comet from Illsmouth, but something unexpected happened and he went insane, spending the rest of his life in a lunatic asylum. Parker, learning of the 1834 incident and reading over Boleskine's papers, wishes to succeed where his predecessor failed. When he arrives, Parker stumbles upon a sinister conspiracy and must survive the three days between his arrival and the comet's passage while finding out what happened in 1834.

Reception

Computer Gaming World praised Shadow of the Comet's plot, puzzles, writing, and "rather naughty, dark Gallic sense of humor" but criticized the lack of mouse support, calling object manipulation and puzzle solving without one "painful". The magazine concluded that the game "is a high quality graphic adventure that offers nothing particularly new as far as technological advances and is, in some ways, a touch old-fashioned. This may, however, not be a bad thing" given the plot's quality.[2]

In 2011, Adventure Gamers named Shadow of the Comet the 74th-best adventure game ever released.[3]

Reviews

gollark: Sure, but he is not free to do *anything* with it.
gollark: Thus, nonfree.
gollark: If Zig's creator suddenly started adding a garbage collector and making it compile to bytecode and such, they would likely lose money.
gollark: They are constrained by what people are paying for.
gollark: They do not have freedom in what they do.

References

  1. "PC Zone Magazine". PC Zone. No. 1. April 1993. p. 8. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  2. Matthews, Robin (August 1993). "Robin Matthews Launches a Detailed Investigation of France's Latest Export". Computer Gaming World. p. 82. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  3. AG Staff (December 30, 2011). "Top 100 All-Time Adventure Games". Adventure Gamers. Archived from the original on June 4, 2012.


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