A Loose End Begins the Next Jurassic Park Video Game

blogadmin On June - 17 - 2011Comments Off

With the license to make a game in hand Jurassic Park, Telltale Games had to find the ideal starting point for a story that appears in the canon of the film without disturbing or recreate the events of the first film.

They found it in a can of shaving cream, lost for nearly 20 years.

The Barbasol remember? In 1993, the summer blockbuster, the unfortunate Nedry turned to get the plan embryos of dinosaurs on a shaving cream is false bottom which releases the dinosaurs and highlights the survivors frantically trying to flee the island.

Nedry never made it to the handoff, of course. During a torrential downpour his jeep bogged down and he was devoured by dilophosaurs, whose iconic (if scientifically unsupported) neck fans and poison spit made them about as memorable as the nasty velociraptors. But after Nedry croaks, that’s it. We don’t know what happened to the canister, nor do we know what his handlers did when Nedry didn’t show. For something worth $1.5 million, surely they would have gone looking for it, right?

That loose end provided Telltale the perfect entry to a story contained entirely within the time of the first film—much more memorable and enjoyable than its two underwhelming sequels—without repeating or adapting its events for a game, much less retconning anything.

At E3 2011 last week, Telltale showed off what creative director Dave Grossman called the studio’s “most cinematic game to date.” It’ll arrive later this year on PC/Mac and on the PlayStation Network, in an episodic form similar to the rollout of Back to the Future. The Xbox 360 will see a retail release containing all of the game’s chapters on a single disc.

It’s a Telltale Game, so this isn’t a third-person action game or, heaven forbid, a shooter. It’s very story-driven, focused more on puzzle solving, paying attention and advancing the story than it is action. It does have some faster-paced sequences, navigated entirely by timed button presses within Quicktime events.

In conversations, a Mass Effect-style dialogue wheel allows some role-playing choice, but the discussions don’t truly branch and all arrive at the same conclusion.

Spoiler Alert: As it’s a narrative game, to discuss what Jurassic Park does, we’ve got to talk about the story it’s telling. Fans of the first film looking forward to this new chapter of its story should consider whether they want to read further.

Alright? We’re cool now? Good. Back to what I saw.

In the sequence I was shown, you’ll be playing as one of the two people assigned to meet Nedry. You control Nima, who is a profit-motivated mercenary but certainly not a stooge, nor particularly evil. Miles, her companion, is a backstabber, which is why you don’t control him. While all the characters you play in Jurassic Park will have their own agenda, for some that will mean cooperating with others.

Nima and Miles encounter Nedry’s jeep and his chewed-up remains during a clue-finding investigative sequence. At this point they’re not aware of the bizarre danger surrounding them; the writing and the acting in Jurassic Park the game portrays the dinosaurs the way the film did: not as monsters but as animals, albeit extremely threatening ones.

Nima, in a sequence initiated by the player, figures out that Nedry must have dropped the Barbasol can and uses an object of similar weight to simulate where it may have rolled. She and Miles are then set upon by dilophosaurs. Miles sacrifices Nima as bait to make his own escape, but he meets the requisite grisly end. Nima avoids the creatures (entirely by Quicktime event) and makes it into the jeep and ultimately to safety, ending the scene.

Telltale said this will be the first game it’s done where a player can fail in a way that gets his character killed, and we saw Nima buy the farm once, just to prove that point. Dinosaur types will appear and reappear throughout the game, rather than turning the entire tale into a case of “Here’s the dilophosaurus level; here’s the velociraptor level,” etc.

The way the film foreshadowed the threat before losing the dinosaurs is something Telltale wants to honor, too, Grossman said, and Jurassic Park will offer its own prehistoric adversaries. “There is also a mysterious new threat that even the chief veterinarian doesn’t know about,” Grossman said.

The pre-alpha version of the game we saw had yet to refine the facial movements in the dialogue scenes and some details, like gunfire muzzle flashes, needed to be added. Environmentally, it was richly illustrated and the visual style is realistic, not cartoony.

Reveal believe with some reason, it did not contain the best of all games maker, and most importantly, there will be reason to pick up the game. It is much more interactive than a story, but it will not be rapid contraction of entertainment by any stretch. Jurassic Park is the target audience will be those who liked the first movie and want to explore the island, not to visit old haunts in another environment.

The Walking Dead Video Game Coming From Telltale Games

blogadmin On February - 18 - 2011Comments Off

The people at Telltale Games have been a good day today. First, Episode 1, back to the Future: The game is sold on the iPod. Episode 2 of the game was released for PC and Mac versions and now, as rumored, confirmed that Telltale Games will develop a new game based on the popular series The Walking Dead comic book was recently adapted for a television mini-series AMC.

AllThingsD reports that Telltale Games is working on The Walking Dead video game and it’s just the latest big franchise that Telltale has snagged. They got the rights for Back to the Future and Jurassic Park from NBC Universal last year. Telltale produces high-quality adventure games (think old-school point-and-click) that are distributed only digitally and aren’t sold in brick and mortar stores.

Telltale Games has big things planned for The Walking Dead. They told AllThingsD that they believe it could sell 1 million digital copies sold, a first for them. They added that they believe that The Walking Dead game could become a “$20 million to 30 million franchises“. Telltale Games currently only sell about 200,000 units, according to what they told AllThingsD.

No word on how a zombie game that the work of Telltale Games. Usually, because zombies running, shooting and screaming – maybe not the best for adventure game point and click. Games Telltale representatives said that their next game Jurassic Park is a different style of game titles from their usual – and you have to imagine that everything they do in Jurassic Park used to be The Walking Dead (if n is only conjecture on my part).

Go Back to Back to The Future… But Only in a Video Game

admin On September - 2 - 2010Comments Off

Unless there’s some chronal chicanery involved, we’re never going to see more BACK TO THE FUTURE movies. But that doesn’t mean we’ve seen the last of Doc Brown and Marty McFly.

Telltale Games is bringing the beloved characters and their decade-jumping exploits to your local console, and USA Today premiered some artwork showing how the game’s exaggerated versions of Doc and Marty might look.

The games will unfold in five “episodes”, and the original trilogy’s screenwriter Bob Gale is working on the story with the game developers. Steven Spielberg is among the producers, and Christopher Lloyd is back to provide Doc’s voice as only he (well, and Dan Castellaneta) can.

The episodes will feature the familiar DeLorean, Hill Valley circa 1985, and additional characters from the movie series. Versions of the games are expected on all major game platforms.