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UninvitedBy: The J Man |
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If the title reminds of you an old PC game made back in '86 by ICOM... well that's probably because this is the very same game. Uninvited is essentially a text-based adventure, polished up with some basic graphics and a point-and-click interface. If you don't like such games, or reading, the door is over there. If you're otherwise interested, read on, though with caution. In Uninvited, you play a regular, average Joe, driving with your sister down a country road. You see a figure in the road, swerve to avoid it, and wrap your car around a tree and yourself around the steering wheel. When you come to, you're outside a giant creepy mansion, and your sister is missing. To trap you and further the plot along, your car then dramatically explodes as you exit it for no reason at all. Must have been a Pinto. It's now up to you to traverse the spooky mansion grounds like Shag and Scoob, hunting for clues to find your big sis. Of course, searching for your sister/loved one has been done before, and not just in the game's previous PC version. And naturally there's something much more sinister going on in the house that you must also put a stop to. I'm going to just level with you ahead of time, the story's cliché and lame. If this really is going to bother you, and you're expecting something more than just an average "means to an end" style plot, then you shouldn't bother with the game. It won't satisfy you. If you're more forgiving, well, there are still more problems that you must first agree to overcome.
Here's a small spoiler, so skip this paragraph if you really want to play. But this puzzle is so stupid that I must share it. Randomly throughout the rooms you will encounter a grinning monster with a key in its maw, who dances across the screen to Japanese music like the Whammys from the old show Press Your Luck. You need the key. The solution? In one of the rooms there is a plate. You must place a cookie on the plate to distract the monster. Where's the cookie? Why, inside a magically sealed jar, which in turn is LOCKED in a SAFE! You must get the combination by solving an elaborate chemical puzzle using the atomic weight numbers of elements. But wait, there's more. You can't simply open the jar, no, no, you must find an axe in one of the rooms and smash it open. And it must be this axe, as no other item will shatter the magic cookie jar. I should point out, of course, that nowhere in the game does it mention that the monster with the key likes cookies. I guess that's just supposed to be common-fricking-knowledge.
There is also an item that will kill you slowly, without real warning, if you pick it up. If it's in your inventory, you'll make some progress and then just keel over, dead, in about three minutes. I had no clue what was going on at first, I suspected FOXDIE, and it took quite some time to weed out just what the deadly item was - far be it for me to deny you the pleasure yourself by telling you the item now. Tee hee. I can only assume this is thrown in there to muck up the "pick up everything that isn't nailed down" standard of adventure gaming. But once again, it raises the frustration. Oh, and of course, there are certain rooms that kill you instantly if you enter them... probably meant to disrupt the "explore everything" standard of adventure games, which leads me to wonder how exactly the designers expected this game to be played.
Given everything I've said, you might think that I dislike adventure games. Not true. I just don't like this one. It's not a bad port to the NES, and the graphics and interface are actually pretty good. However it has some serious gameplay flaws, and often is just difficult and complicated for the sake of drawing the game out. And maybe that's in its best interest since it would take under an hour to beat if all the crap wasn't in the way. If you like text adventures then you might get some enjoyment out of this, especially if you really like odd challenges, though the bottom line is that it's just average compared to other adventure games. My recommendation is not to invite it on your hard drive. -reviewed 8/21/02 - game copyright 1991 Kemco/Seika
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