Simon the Sorcerer

Simon the Sorcerer is a point-and-click adventure game developed and published by Adventure Soft in 1993 for Amiga and MS-DOS formats. The first instalment in the Simon the Sorcerer series, the game follows a boy named Simon, who is transported to a parallel universe to embark on a mission to rescue a wizard called Calypso from an evil sorcerer named Sordid. The story includes parodies of works such as The Lord of the Rings and Jack and the Beanstalk.

Simon the Sorcerer
The box art for the Amiga 1200 release.
Developer(s)Adventure Soft
Publisher(s)Adventure Soft
Director(s)Mike Woodroffe
Producer(s)Mike Woodroffe, Alan Bridgman
Designer(s)Simon Woodroffe
Programmer(s)Alan Bridgman
Artist(s)Paul Drummond
Writer(s)Simon Woodroffe
SeriesSimon the Sorcerer
Platform(s)Amiga, Amiga CD32, MS-DOS, RISC OS, iOS, Android, Microsoft Windows
ReleaseSeptember 27, 1993[1]
Genre(s)Point-and-click adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

The game was inspired by works such as the Discworld series, and the character of Simon was created to compete with the characters of such works. The character was modelled on characters including Blackadder. Simon the Sorcerer was well-received, with reviewers praising the humour and graphics. The game was re-released on CD, featuring voice-overs, with Simon being voiced by Chris Barrie. The game was released on GOG.com in 2008.

A 20th Anniversary Edition was developed by MojoTouch and released on Google Play in 2013. A 25th Anniversary Edition was released in April 2018.

The second instalment in the series, Simon the Sorcerer II: The Lion, the Wizard and the Wardrobe, was released in 1995.

Plot

A boy called Simon was celebrating his 12th birthday, and was impressed by a magician who pulled rabbits out of hats and conjuring infinite amounts of gaily coloured handkerchiefs. A dog wrapped in paper turned up at the door, who had a book that nobody was able to read. Although Simon's parents were unaware of who had sent the dog, they adopted him and Simon called him Chippy. The book was stored in the loft.[2] One day, Simon hears Chippy in the loft. Investigating, Simon finds that the book is titled "Ye Olde Spellbooke". Simon throws the book onto the floor in contempt, only for a portal to open above it. Chippy quickly goes through the portal and Simon follows, ending up in another world. After escaping from some goblins who intended to eat Simon, he quickly discovers a house in a village belonging to a wizard called Calypso, along with a note from him.[3] Through it, Simon learns he was brought to this world to save Calypso from the evil sorcerer, Sordid.[4]

Instructed to become a wizard, Simon is told to seek out wizards in the local tavern,.[4] He performs tasks for various people, recovering the spell book he lost, as well as locating Sordid's tower. After, gaining entry, he ends up in the tower's garden. Searching the tower, Simon helps to send some demons back to hell, and uses a teleporter to take him to the Fiery Pits of Rondor, so as to destroy Sordid's wand. Simon defeats him, and is sent back to his world. Although he assumes he had a dream, a portal opens in his bedroom, and a large gloved hand appears, taking him back through it.[5]

Gameplay

Simon in a shop, DOS non-talkie version

As a point-and-click adventure game, the player controls Simon using the mouse.[6] The iOS and Android versions feature touchscreen controls.[7] Gameplay involves moving Simon around and interacting with objects and other characters. The player can make Simon perform actions such as giving an item to another character, talk to another character, and pick up (add to inventory), examine, use, move, consume, wear, or open or close an item. Some actions are binary: they involve two objects and the player sometimes, after telling Simon to use an item, needs to specify what to use it with.[8] A map that enables Simon to instantly transport to a major landmark (if it has been discovered) is provided.[9] The postcard is used to load, save, or quit the game.[10]

The game includes parodies of various popular books and fairy tales, including Rapunzel,[5] The Lord of the Rings,[11] Discworld,[12] The Chronicles of Narnia,[7] Jack and the Beanstalk,[11] and the Three Billy Goats Gruff.[11][13]

Development and release

Mike Woodroffe, Simon the Sorcerer's director and producer, wanted to create the game to exploit a market for comic adventure games, which he realised existed due to the success of The Secret of Monkey Island II. His son, Simon, penned the script. He was inspired by Terry Pratchett (Adventure Soft originally intended to make a Discworld game, but were unable to obtain a licence[14][15]), and he and his father hoped that he would become involved with the game. Although he chose not to become involved, the script still contained much original humour. Many scenes are based on fairy tales, and the Wise Owl was modelled on Patrick Moore.[12] Woodroffe said that Adventure Soft (then known as HorrorSoft) had done enough horror games and wanted to try a comedy game. The change in genre prompted the name change.[14]

Simon Woodroffe explained that the character of Simon was a mixture of Blackadder, Rincewind, and Guybrush, and that he was originally intended to be a trainee wizard, similar to Harry Potter.[16] He also explained that he was invented because they needed a character to compete with characters such as Rincewind,[17] and that the game was inspired by the Discworld books and Monkey Island.[18] Mike Woodroffe said that the game was inspired by Dungeons & Dragons' magic stories.[19] Other influences, according to Simon Woodroffe, included Red Dwarf, Fawlty Towers, and Monty Python.[15] The character was invented during a journey on the M5 motorway, and was not named after Woodroffe. The name "Simon the Sorcerer" had that format because of the magical nature of the character, and because other names, such as "Willy The Wizard", were rejected because they were disliked.[17] Simon the Sorcerer was developed by a team of 15 people.[19] There was an effort to be British so as to distinguish themselves from the humour of Monkey Island.[14] Simon Woodroffe stated that his greatest challenges were the script creation and puzzle design, and he tuned the scripts (which were written in an in-house scripting language[15]) continuously. The world was created for the characters rather than the puzzles, and the story was wrapped around characters the team liked. Woodroffe believed that Adventure Soft were able to rival more experienced studios due to their small team, all of whom had the same goals and passion for the game.[14] On deciding which fairy tales to include in the game, Simon Woodroffe said that he "read a whole bunch of that kind of stuff", including the Grimms' Fairy Tales, and that he also owned Ladybird Books when he was growing up. He said that there were some he "really wanted" to include, such as The Magic Porridge Pot, but could not.[15]

Alan Brigman was the technical director and co-producer. He and Mike Woodroffe developed a game creation system, Adventure Graphic Operating System (AGOS) II, which facilitated the development of Simon the Sorcerer and enabled the team to focus on the gameplay and story without worrying about the technical aspects. The system allowed the developers to input text commands on a separate monitor, and the engine could be ported to other platforms. Other features of the engine included translating actions performed by the mouse into text commands (a sentence parser carries them out), the loading of data as needed, and functions could be implemented by the simple addition of commands. The game was built as a database, which contained tables for rooms and objects. These tables contained animation code and information about what is supposed to happen.[12][19] Alan Cox was also involved in the development of the AGOS engine, which is based on AberMUD.[19]

The art was developed by Paul Drummond (lead artist), Kevin Preston (who hand-drew the character art and animation[15]), Maria Drummond, Jeff Wall, and Karen Pinchin. This team were based at a studio in Manchester, rather than Birmingham, the central studio. Their work included character animations, developed in Autodesk Animator using its language POCO, which the graphics tools were built in. The artwork (including the sprites) was made as a selection of clips, and a final image was formed by pasting them together. The ability to use clips in multiple locations, and the colour information being stored separately and used on an as—needed basis meant that the art took much less space than was usual. The background artwork was sketched in black-and-white, and then scanned into a computer and colourised.[12] The music is credited to Media Sorcery.[20]

Simon the Sorcerer, was released on floppy disk in 1993 for the Amiga and IBM PC compatibles.[13] It was re-released in 1994 for the Amiga CD32 and PC CD-ROM, with an enhanced soundtrack featuring Chris Barrie as the voice of Simon.[20][13][11] Simon Woodroffe stated that he had Barrie in mind when writing the scripts (Woodroffe said he is a fan of Red Dwarf and Arnold Rimmer[15]), and that it was easier for him to do so when thinking of an actor he knew speaking the lines. It cost around £3000 per day to hire Barrie.[18] Woodroffe said that there was "no hesitation" in doing a talkie version, and that it was "the next big thing".[14] He also said that Barrie was "very patient and professional".[15] Simon the Sorcerer used the visual and interface designs from LucasArts' games, and Woodroffe stated that this was because they had set a standard, and that Adventure Soft's focus was humour and story-telling.[18]

The PC version was later ported to Microsoft Windows.[21] The game was published in the United States by Activision.[5] A patch was released, fixing compatibility issues with Windows ME, 2000, and XP.[22] Simon the Sorcerer was released on GOG.com in December 2008.[23] In 2009, the game was re-released for the iPhone by iPhSoft.[7] A new version titled '20th Anniversary Edition was developed by MojoTouch and released for Android in August 2013. This version featured new animations and icons, remastered music, high-definition graphics, and new game menus.[24][25] A 25th Anniversary Edition was released on the iOS App Store,[26] Steam[27] and GOG.com[28] on 3 April 2018.[27] A sequel, Simon the Sorcerer II: The Lion, the Wizard and the Wardrobe, was released in 1995.[13]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings86%[29]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Adventure Gamers (DOS)[30]
CVG86% (CD32)[31]
Jeuxvideo.com17/20 (DOS & Amiga)[32][33]
PC Zone86%[1]
CU Amiga90% (Amiga)[34]
90% (CD32)[35]
Amiga Computing89% (Amiga)[36]
80% (CD32)[37]
Génération 489% (PC)[38]
86% (Amiga)[39]
Gamezebo (PC)[40]
Adventure Classic Gaming (PC)[41]
Amiga Power57% (CD32)[42]
Amiga CD32 Gamer90% (CD32)[43]
The One89% (Amiga)[44]
89% (CD32)[45]
Amiga Format70% (CD32)[46]
80% (CD32)[47]
Pocket Gamer7/10 (iOS)[48]
AppSpy4/5 (iOS)[49]
Joystick85% (PC)[50]

Simon the Sorcerer received critical acclaim: across all platforms, the humour and visuals in particular were commended, although criticisms included the controls and the game's linear nature. The game's global sales surpassed 600,000 units by September 1999.[41]

The Amiga version received generally high ratings. CU Amiga praised the high quality graphics and how much fun the game was to play.[34] Amiga Computing's Simon Clays also praised the graphics and the locations, saying the locations' stylisation made the game resemble a fairy tale. He also enjoyed the puzzles and detail in the game.[36] The One's reviewer said the graphics are "excellent", but believed the music did not take full advantage of the Amiga's sound hardware.[44] A reviewer of Génération 4 thought the Amiga version's graphics are "magnificent".[39]

The CD32 version was noted for its speech. CU Amiga's Dean Evans was impressed with "sumptuous" backgrounds and the animation, and believed the main selling point was the digitised speech, especially Chris Barrie as Simon.[35] Jonathan Nash of Amiga Power liked the "gorgeous" graphics, but thought the dialogue was annoying, and he also criticised the puzzles as "spread thinly over the pointlessly large playing area".[42] The reviewer of Amiga CD32 Gamer was impressed with the soundtrack, describing it as "top notch", and thought the story had plenty of wit. The main criticism was the scenes downplaying interaction, making the comedy linear.[43] The One's reviewer corroborated others' views on the graphics, believing them to be "stunning", and also believed the atmosphere was augmented by the speech.[45] Chris Barrie as Simon was believed by Amiga Computing to "greatly enhance" the game by giving the speech a new appeal.[37] Amiga Format's reviewer criticised the controls, believing the controller's limitations would make players "an insane hysterical gibbering wreck", but complimented the addition of speech, and echoed others' opinions on the graphics by calling them "beautiful".[46] In a later review, Andy Smith believed that Barrie's voice acting livened the humour, and concurred with Evans' evaluation of the graphics as "sumptuous", but said that it was difficult to get the game working on an Amiga 1200.[47]

Reviewers of the DOS and Windows versions praised the humour and dialogue. The reviewers of Génération 4 described the adventure as "excellent", and believed Simon the Sorcerer might be the most amusing and idiosyncratic adventure game.[38] Computer Gaming World stated that the "wacky, tongue-in-cheek interactive fantasy [...] features a rich world of tasty puzzles designed to test the wits of the most astute adventurer while keeping the humor dial turned up to the max".[51] Jeuxvideo.com described the characters' dialogue as "crazy" and praised the abundance of humour, but they believed the adventure is over too quickly.[32] Their review of the Amiga version was identical.[33] Tawny Ditmer of Gamezebo lauded the story as "hilarious" and the scenery and music as "wonderfully colorful and cheery", criticised the lack of side-quests and pointed out that the original graphics looks outdated in 2009.[40] The script and dialogue were praised as "fantastic" by Rob Franklin of Adventure Gamers, and complimented Chris Barrie's "brilliant" voice acting, but criticised the plot for being vague. He recommended the game for fans of adventure games and British humour.[30] Zoltán Ormándi of Adventure Classic Gaming thought highly or the puzzles' originality and Simon's humour. He claimed that the game's popularity caused a term, "Simonology" to be coined describing the humour of an adventure's protagonist.[41] GameRankings states the PC version has a rating of 86 per cent.[29] The reviewer of Joystick liked the decoration, animation, and characters.[50]

Paul Marchant of Pocket Gamer reviewed the iOS version, and said that it was the game he liked, rather than the iPhone implementation, but thought the game a "classic" and described the dialogue as "original".[48] Damian Chiappara of AppSpy believed the iOS version's graphics are improved over the original, and liked the "quirky" humour, but thought that it can take time for players to familiarise themselves with its controls.[49] The iPad and Android versions appeared on Pocket Gamer's Top 10 point-and-click adventure games for their respective platforms.[52][53]

In 2011, Adventure Gamers named Simon the Sorcerer the 44th-best adventure game ever released.[54]

gollark: Hey, *you're* the one now annoyed at it because you just filled up everything.
gollark: Well, it's a use, just not a useful use.
gollark: 64k *fluid* cells? That's so useless.
gollark: Probably due to the lack of tooling for producing them on-demand.
gollark: Fluids are, for some weird coincidental reason, mostly produced in bulk.

References

  1. "Review - Simon the Sorcerer". PC Zone. No. 7. Dennis Publishing. October 1993. p. 78.
  2. Manual, p. 2.
  3. Adventure Soft (1993). Simon the Sorcerer (MS-DOS). Scene: Introduction.
  4. Adventure Soft (1993). Simon the Sorcerer (MS-DOS). Scene: Calypso's note.
  5. Scorpia (January 1994). "Simple Simon" (PDF). Computer Gaming World. No. 114. Ziff Davis. pp. 112–114. ISSN 0744-6667. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  6. Manual, p. 3.
  7. Blake Patterson (6 August 2009). "Graphic Adventure 'Simon the Sorcerer' Comes to the iPhone". TouchArcade. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  8. Manual, pp. 3-5.
  9. Manual, p. 5.
  10. Manual, p. 6.
  11. Mark Langshaw (25 October 2014). "Simon the Sorcerer retrospective: How a classic was conjured up". Digital Spy. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  12. "Simon The Sorcerer". Blueprint. PC Zone. No. 5. London: Dennis Publishing. August 1993. pp. 74–77. ISSN 0967-8220.
  13. "The Classic Game: Simon The Sorcerer". Retro Gamer. No. 19. Bournemouth: Imagine Publishing. pp. 64–67. ISSN 1742-3155.
  14. "Behind The Scenes Simon The Sorcerer". GamesTM. No. 82. Imagine Publishing. pp. 138–143. ISSN 1478-5889.
  15. Woodroffe, Simon (2018). "Simon Woodroffe Interview". The Art Of Point-and-Click Adventure Games (Interview). Bitmap Books. pp. 258–263. ISBN 978-0-9956-5866-0.
  16. Philip Jong (8 May 2000). "Simon Woodroffe". Adventure Classic Gaming. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  17. Luc Gilbertz (17 September 2000). "Simon Woodroffe". Adventure-Treff. Archived from the original on 1 April 2015. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  18. "The Bluffer's Guide To Point-And-Click Adventures". Retro Gamer. No. 138. Bournemouth: Imagine Publishing. pp. 22–31. ISSN 1742-3155.
  19. "From The Archives: AdventureSoft UK". Retro Gamer. No. 135. Bournemouth: Imagine Publishing. pp. 42–47. ISSN 1742-3155.
  20. Manual, p. 7.
  21. "Simon the Sorcerer games". Adventure Soft. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  22. "Simon the Sorceror [sic]". GameSpot UK. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  23. Mike Fahey (9 December 2008). "Simon the Sorcerer Joins GoG Lineup". Kotaku. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  24. Cauterize (28 August 2013). "Adventure Soft's Classic 'Simon The Sorcerer' Revived In HD Android Port For 20th Anniversary". RetroCollect. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  25. MojoTouch (3 February 2016). "Simon the Sorcerer". Retrieved 20 March 2018 via Google Play.
  26. "Simon the Sorcerer on the App Store". App Store. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  27. "Simon the Sorcerer: 25th Anniversary Edition on Steam". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  28. "Simon the Sorcerer: 25th Anniversary Edition". GOG.com. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  29. "Simon the Sorcerer – DOS". GameRankings. Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 7 March 2008.
  30. Rob Franklin (5 August 2004). "Simon the Sorcerer". Adventure Gamers. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  31. "Simon the Sorcerer" (PDF). Computer & Video Games. No. 155. October 1994. p. 98. Retrieved 4 November 2017. It's an essential buy.
  32. "Test : Simon the Sorcerer". Jeuxvideo.com (in French). 28 January 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  33. "Test : Simon the Sorcerer". Jeuxvideo.com (in French). 28 January 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  34. Tony Gill (February 1994). "Simon the Sorcerer". CU Amiga. No. 48. pp. 68–70. ISSN 0963-0090. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  35. Dean Evans (July 1994). "Simon the Sorcerer". CU Amiga. No. 53. p. 46. ISSN 0963-0090. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  36. Simon Clays (April 1994). "Simon The Sorcerer". Amiga Computing. No. 72. pp. 114, 115. ISSN 0959-9630. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
  37. "Simon The Sorcerer". Amiga Computing. No. 80. Europress. December 1994. p. 136. ISSN 0959-9630.
  38. "Simon The Sorcerer Ici le Mage gît...". Génération 4 (in French). No. 58. September 1993. pp. 46–48. ISSN 1624-1088.
  39. "Simon The Sorcerer". Génération 4 (in French). No. 63. February 1994. p. 71. ISSN 1624-1088.
  40. Tawny Ditmer (21 June 2009). "Simon the Sorcerer Review". Gamezebo. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  41. Zoltán Ormándi (12 September 1999). "Simon the Sorcerer". Adventure Classic Gaming. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  42. Jonathan Nash (October 1994). "Simon The Sorcerer". Amiga Power. No. 42. Bath: Future plc. p. 52. ISSN 0961-7310.
  43. "Simon The Sorcerer". Amiga CD32 Gamer. No. 4. September 1994. pp. 37–39.
  44. "Simon The Sorcerer". The One. No. 64. Peterborough: Emap International Limited. February 1994. pp. 76–79. ISSN 0955-4084. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  45. "Simon The Sorcerer". The One. No. 74. Peterborough: Emap International Limited. November 1994. p. 63. ISSN 0955-4084.
  46. "Simon The Sorcerer". Amiga Format. No. 64. Bath: Future plc. October 1994. p. 70. ISSN 0957-4867.
  47. Andy Smith (May 1998). "Simon The Sorceror [sic]". Amiga Format. No. 110. Bath: Future plc. p. 28. ISSN 0957-4867.
  48. Paul Marchant (1 September 2009). "Simon the Sorcerer". Pocket Gamer. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  49. Damian Chiappara (7 August 2009). "Simon the Sorcerer Review". AppSpy. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  50. Calor (October 1993). "Simon the Sorcerer Un Sérieux concurrent à la légende de Kyrandia". Joystick (in French). No. 42. pp. 124–126.
  51. "Taking A Peek". Computer Gaming World. February 1994. pp. 212–220.
  52. Mark Brown (9 September 2011). "Top 10 point-and-click adventures for iPad". Pocket Gamer. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  53. Mark Brown (27 February 2014). "Top 10 best point-and-click adventure games on Android". Pocket Gamer. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  54. AG Staff (30 December 2011). "Top 100 All-Time Adventure Games". Adventure Gamers. Archived from the original on 4 June 2012.

Sources

  • Adventure Soft (1998). Simon the Sorcerer Manual (Windows CD ed.). Sutton Coldfield: Adventure Soft.
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