Thread: Lucasarts
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Old 01-11-2004, 01:20 PM   #1
Sebatianos
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Ljutomer, Slovenia
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As you probably guessed I'm a great adventure game fan, and I saw you have many adventures, but the oldest one from Lucas Arts was LOOM. It says in the review it's the one that started the Landslide of great Lucasarts adventures, but I don't really think so. Their first real adventure was Maniac Mansion (1987) - all who played Edd's computer in the Day of the Tentakle know what I'm talking about, then came my favorite Zak McCraken and the Alien Mindbenders (1988) - which has an unoffitial sequel by some LucasFans, next was Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) - the first to have fight scenes, and !a soundblaster sound! insted of the old PC speaker.
Only then Loom (1990) happened, which was actually an experiment, that looked and sounded good, but it was not mainstream (still isn't and that's what makes it even better). So LucasArts returned to their traditional way of game-making and created The Secret of Monkey Island (1990).
All of the above are a part of their offical Classic Archives (which came out 1992).
Also 1992 was the year they published Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revange (their last non-talkie game), and their first talkie [color=orange]Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis.
O.K., that's enough history I guess, 'cos then followed Day of the Tentackle, Sam'n'Max (where they abandoned the classical interfaze), The Dig, Full Throttle, and in the end Grim Fandango (their first #d game). I guess you know the rest!
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