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125 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
125 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
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LEISURE SUIT LARRY GOES LOOKING FOR LOVE (In Several Wrong Places)
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LEISURE SUIT LARRY GOES LOOKING FOR LOVE (In Several Wrong Places) is an
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animated adventure (from Al Lowe and Sierra On-Line) that picks up the tale of
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Larry Laffer, the quintessential nerd who made his first appearance in the
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acclaimed LEISURE SUIT LARRY IN THE LAND OF THE LOUNGE LIZARDS. LSL2 offers
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excellent graphics and animation, easy gameplay, a save option, MIDI support, an
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adjustable "filth" level, and no copy protection. The Atari ST version is the
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basis of this review; IBM and Amiga version notes follow.
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In this second installment of the Larry Laffer saga, you'll spend less time
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chasing the girls -- most of whom are dangerous rather than desirable (although
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they're that, too) -- and spend more time pretending you're Indiana Jones.
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Winning the lottery and the Dating Game are outrageous enough, but when Larry
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resists KGB spyettes and battles killer bees, snakes, quicksand, and several
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barbers, LSL2 enters new territory. Exactly what that new territory is could be
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difficult to say. A blurb on the LSL2 package expresses it best: "Another
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humorous, harmless endeavor for adults." And that's just about what it is.
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The game picks up where LOUNGE LIZARDS left off. Unfortunately, neither Eve nor
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her dog wants anything to do with Larry, who must hit the streets again in
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search of his soulmate. He's going to hit a lot more than the streets, and he's
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going to become much more than a nerd: pickpocket, liar, TV star, millionaire,
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adventurer, spy, transvestite, and romantic hero.
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The ST screen display consists of graphics scenery within which Larry moves and
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interacts. As you reach the edge of a screen, a new one will be loaded. Text
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windows pop up onscreen to keep you informed; they can be removed with the
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Return key or a mouse click. Each first keypress opens a window for your text
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commands.
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Although you'll have to type in plenty of commands, much of the game involves
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moving Larry through the screens. This can be accomplished with the arrow keys,
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mouse, or the numeric keypad. There are keystrokes to repeat commands, give an
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inventory, and pause the action. Game positions can be saved. You'll need a
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previously formatted disk, and you needn't use a conventional filenames.
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"Standing on a sandy beach" is the example in the instruction manual, and it is
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much more useful.
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LSL2 is not copy-protected but you'll have to match onscreen pictures of women
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with their pictures and phone numbers in the instruction manual before you can
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play. The game works on either a color or monochrome monitor, requires 512K and
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a double-sided disk drive, and supports a hard disk, which (as the manual points
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out) needs a lot of room. Music and sound effects are set up to play through the
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ST's sound chip, but if you own a Roland MT-32 or a Casio CZ-101 synthesizer (a
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Casio 230S will work, too), it can be connected to the MIDI channels. Your
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particular MIDI setup can then be installed as part of the game.
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Like most Sierra adventures, parts of LSL2 play by themselves, specifically the
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Dating Game, the jungle, and the endgame. These animations are part of the lure
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of Sierra games; they're humorous, wonderfully executed, and great fun to watch.
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An opening cartoon defines Larry to a T, and a mini-walkthru in the instruction
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manual offers a glimpse of the silliness and surprises in store for you,
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especially when you make the wrong moves.
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The graphics of the game are superb. Colors are lush, details are extremely
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clear, and the animations run with no flicker or glitches of any kind. On looks
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alone, LSL2 is nearly worth its steep price. The play system is easy to learn
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and use, and the game itself is silly, rude, and funny.
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LEISURE SUIT LARRY II is a "humorous and harmless endeavor," much needed after
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the cinematic horrors of MANHUNTER: NEW YORK. Al Lowe and Sierra have another
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winner!
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IBM VERSION NOTES
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The continued adventures of Larry are as much fun as the casual (as opposed to
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dedicated) gamer should be allowed to have on the IBM. LSL2 is, in many
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respects, the perfect "behind closed doors" game: You can turn off the sound
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(which isn't a bad idea, actually, unless you have an enhanced music card; my
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IBM-PC/AT has just the IBM internal speaker, and it sounds _very_ tinny). And if
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you press the "boss" key, the screen changes to make it look like you're working
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on a letter in your word processor. Best of all, you can feel deliciously guilty
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about wasting the time you should be spending on something with a modicum of
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redeeming social value.
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I played in EGA mode, and the game looks 1000% better than its predecessor
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looked (even on the Amiga). The animation is handled smoothly; there are two or
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three screens that are extremely impressive. And the jokes are better. (Not much
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better, true, but better.) I could have done without a few of the longer
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animation scenes where you have nothing to do but watch what happens, but this
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is a minor quibble in light of the quality of the graphics.
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The program requires 512K and recommends Turbo 8 MHz or higher. It comes with
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six 5-1/4" disks and two 3-1/2" disks, and is easily installed on a hard drive.
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In fact, I have trouble imagining playing any other way, especially if you have
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only a single floppy drive like I do. Music and sound effects can be enhanced
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through drivers for the Roland MT-32, AdLib, or IBM Music Feature cards, which
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can be specified when you install the game on hard disk. The program also
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supports both joystick and mouse.
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LSL2 is a great game to sit around and giggle over, and it's the perfect time
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killer until LSL3 materializes.
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AMIGA VERSION NOTES
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In its ongoing effort to release a new generation of SCI games for the Amiga,
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Sierra has continued to do a good job of design and support. In LEISURE SUIT
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LARRY II, the sound and graphics are virtually identical to those in the IBM
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version. The only noticeable difference is the slowdown in complex animation
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sequences, and the hesitation between scenes (and this only in comparison to the
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fastest IBM systems). We can hope that such minor glitches disappear as Sierra
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becomes more familiar with the handling of this hardware platform.
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LSL2 comes on four copyable disks, and requires one (or more) blank disks for
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game saves. You can use a joystick, a mouse, or the keypad and arrow keys to
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control the onscreen character. Only 512K of RAM is necessary. New instructions
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are included for installing to a hard disk, so Sierra has finally made this
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option available for Amiga users (it wasn't in SPACE QUEST III); hooray!
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As in its other machine incarnations, LSL2 is quite entertaining. It's very
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linear in some spots: If you haven't acquired certain necessary items by a
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specific point in the game, you must go back to a previous save. And there are
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lots of "click the mouse carefully on the right pixel" kinds of puzzles, which
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some might find a bit frustrating. But the gameplay is chockfull of immense
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variety and high hilarity. LSL2 is a welcome addition to the world of adventure
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games for the Amiga.
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LEISURE SUIT LARRY GOES LOOKING FOR LOVE (In Several Wrong Places) is published
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and distributed by Sierra On-line, Inc.
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*****DOWNLOADED FROM P-80 SYSTEMS (304) 744-2253
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