The Case of the Cautious Condor
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
The Case of the Cautious Condor | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Tiger Media, Inc. |
Series | Airwave Adventure |
Platform(s) | FM-Towns, CDTV, MS-DOS |
Release | 1989 (FM-Towns) 1991 (CDTV) 1992 (MS-DOS) |
Genre(s) | Adventure |
The Case of the Cautious Condor is an video adventure game in an interactive comic book style developed by Tiger Media, Inc.. It was one of the first CD-ROM-only games that was furthermore a complete new development for that media and not only a port of another version such as an already existing floppy disc game or a laserdisc arcade machine.
Overview
The Case of the Cautious Condor is a detective adventure game in which with your help, private eye Ned Peters has to figure out the identity of the murderer by wandering around the rooms, looking for clues and overhear conversations between the other guests aboard the Spruce Goose-like flying boat "Condor" on a cruise over the Atlantic. The game has no text because all the dialogue is being played from the CD and the interface is completely mouse-driven.
History
The game was first released for FM Towns in Japan in 1989, later also for CDTV (1991) and MS-DOS (1992). It won several awards, such as "Best Adventure 1989" in Japan.[citation needed] The game sold below expectations of the developer also because CD-ROM drives were not yet widespread at that time.[1]
Tiger Media released later a similar game called Murder Makes Strange Deadfellows.
Reception
Computer Gaming World in 1993 stated that "Though the story was manufactured in the Orient Express Murder Mystery machine, this interactive comic book is novel enough to warrant a serious look ... A multimedia diversion for the whole family".[2]
See also
References
- ^ Iacta:Experience Archived 2006-03-25 at archive.today
- ^ "Forging Ahead or Fit to be Smashed?". Computer Gaming World. April 1993. p. 24. Retrieved 6 July 2014.