Hugo III: Jungle of Doom!
Hugo III: Jungle of Doom! | ||||||||||||||||
MS-DOS - USA - Reprint. |
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Hugo III: Jungle of Doom! is graphic adventure puzzle video game developed and published by David Gray and released for MS-DOS on 1992-02-20 and later ported to Windows. It is the third game in the Hugo series, released after Hugo II: Whodunit?. The game was programmed in Quick C, and Gray's graphics were drawn in PC Paintbrush.
In this game, Hugo and Penelope are flying home but end up crash landing in the South American jungle. Penelope is bit by a spider and Hugo must find a cure before she dies.
Contents
Personal
Own? | No. |
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Won? | Yes. Perfect score (needed minor hints). |
Finished | 2018-06-25. |
I played this game shortly after playing Hugo II: Whodunit?, most likely from the same shareware package as the second game. I certainly appreciated the improved artwork, but found the game to be just as dated at the previous titles in the trilogy. I got a little over half-way through the game in my first attempts, but finally hunkered down to play it in earnest and beat it.
Review
3 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
Best Version: MS-DOS
— This section contains spoilers! —
Good
- The artwork, drawn by Gary Sirois, is pretty good for EGA.
- The game engine has a turbo feature.
Bad
- The game's music and sound effects are very dated. They weren't even good for the late 1980s, let alone 1992; Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis was released the same year. Also, a lot of the scenery that should be animated is not.
- The game doesn't seem to know it's set in South America; there are African elephants, African hyenas, and African Zulu shields.
- The game does have a few guess-the-verb style problems especially involving the bridge and the crystal ball. A more forgiving parser would have been nice.
- The book is hidden in such a way that you have to accidentally stumble upon it. No careful examination of the screen or lateral thinking will uncover it.
- There are a couple ways to put the game into an unwinnable state, but they're somewhat obvious.
- The puzzle involving the clay is pretty difficult to figure out, and I'm a bit surprised I solved it without a hint.
Ugly
- The game is far too short for an adventure game that costs money. It's even shorter than the first Hugo game! If you know what you're doing, you can beat it in under 10 minutes!
Media
Screenshots
Videos
Play Online
Representation
Strong female character? | Fail | Penelope is again a side character, and the village women, while helpful, are little more than a plot device. |
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Bechdel test? | Fail | The women never speak to each other. |
Strong person of color character? | Fail | There are several people of color, but they're just for giving out puzzles. |
Queer character? | Fail | There are no queer characters. |
Download
This archive has all of the shareware versions of the Hugo games I could find for DOS and Windows. You can still buy the game from the author.
Links
- Video Games
- 1992 Video Games
- Video games developed by David Gray
- Video games published by David Gray
- DOS Games
- Windows 3 Games
- Video Game Genre - Adventure
- Video Game Genre - Graphic adventure
- Video Game Genre - Passive puzzle
- Video Game Genre - Puzzle
- Media Theme - Adventure
- Media Theme - Cartoon
- Media Theme - Fantasy
- Media Theme - Wilderness
- Software Distribution Model - Shareware
- Video Games I Don't Own
- Video Games I've Beaten
- Video Game Rating - 3
- Video Game Graphics Rating - 4
- Video Game Sound Rating - 2
- Video games which can be played online
- Video games without a strong female character
- Video games that fail the Bechdel test
- Video games without a strong person of color character
- Video games without a queer character
- Video Game Prime Order - Adventure, Strategy, Action
- Game Mechanic - Unwinnable State
- 4-bit Color Graphics
- Trope - Damsel In Distress