Nightlong: Union City Conspiracy

Nightlong: Union City Conspiracy is a cyberpunk-themed adventure game developed by Trecision, published by Team17 and distributed by MicroProse in Europe and DreamCatcher Interactive in North America. It was later ported to the Amiga by ClickBOOM.

Nightlong: Union City Conspiracy
Developer(s)Trecision; ClickBOOM[1]
Publisher(s)Team17
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Amiga
Release1998
Genre(s)Adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Premise

The game takes place in the futuristic Union City in the year 2099. The player assumes the role of an investigator named Joshua Reev. His long-time friend, Hugh Martens (who is now in charge of the city), summons him to help him with a matter of major political importance. It seems that a group of terrorists are threatening the city, and Martens' reporter friend Simon Ruby (who was investigating) has vanished. Martens has called on Reev to investigate.

Gameplay

Nightlong is a point-and-click adventure game, predominantly focusing on inventory management and puzzle-solving.

The game is played mostly from the third-person perspective showing Joshua Reev and his surrounding area. As with many games of the genre, NPCs appear in some areas and can be interacted with. The navigation interface uses left-click to examine an object, right-click to use, interact with, or combine objects in the game or in Josh's inventory. Hotspots are indicated with on-screen text, including area exits. They are labelled as "Go to..." if Josh has yet to explore the area.

Background music and sound effects are unobtrusive. There is little dialogue between characters, although the game itself is narrated by Josh as he interacts with the items, areas and characters. If Josh has nothing to say, he will shrug. Strong language infrequently appears in Josh's narration.

The game has backgrounds that appear to be a mixture of texture-mapped and hand-drawn graphics. An inventory bar is accessible at the bottom of the screen, and the Escape key is used for the game control menu.

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
CGM[2]
PC Gamer (UK)46%[3]
PC Zone43/100[4]
PC Gaming World8/10[5]

The game received mainly mixed reviews, with reviewers praising the graphics and sound while criticising the plot and complexity of some of the puzzles. The game sold well enough to warrant the later Amiga conversion and a patch release allowing the game to be played on Windows XP.

Due to its science fiction setting, Nightlong received an overt recommendation from The Sci-Fi Channel (now SyFy), to the point of Sci-Fi's logo being present on the box art. It is the only game to ever be officially recommended by Sci-Fi.

See also

References

  1. http://clickboom.com/nightlong/
  2. Backer, Andy (February 21, 2000). "Nightlong: Union City Conspiracy". Computer Games Magazine. Archived from the original on February 5, 2005.
  3. Pierce, Matthew (Christmas 1998). "Poor". PC Gamer UK. Archived from the original on March 17, 2002.
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20070317040853/http://www.computerandvideogames.com/article.php?id=3259
  5. Jones, Cal. "Nightlong Review". PC Gaming World. Archived from the original on June 14, 2000.
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