Lurkley Manor
Lurkley Manor | ||||||||||||||
TRS-80 CoCo - Screenshot - Title. |
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Lurkley Manor is a graphic adventure created by Richard Ramella and published in The Rainbow magazine in March 1985 for the TRS-80 Color Computer. It was programmed in Color BASIC and plays like the first few graphic adventure games published by Sierra On-Line in the early 1980s.
The story finds you locked in the dangerous Lurkley Manor for some unexplained reason with the goal of finding your way out without being killed.
Contents
Personal
Own? | No. The game was never sold. |
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Won? | Yes. |
Finished | 2017-08-01. |
I first saw this game at my cousin Brian's house on their TRS-80. This is the very first computer game I can remember ever seeing (around age 5 or 6). It may even be the first non-arcade video game I ever saw in person, though my family may have had our Atari 2600 first, I can't remember. Brian showed me around a few rooms, and talked about the various ways he had already died in the game, and we explored a few other rooms. The next time I came to visit him, he told me he had beat the game and then showed me how. The quirkiness of the game made an impression on my young mind and, 30 years later, I still remembered enough about the game to find it without being able to remember the title. At one point in my late teens, I even tried to remake the game using QuickBASIC, though I didn't remember enough to get very far.
Review
2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
Best Version: TRS-80 Color Computer
— This section contains spoilers! —
Good
- The game is quirky. It's quaint to see rooms and animation drawn with BASIC primitives like DRAW and CIRCLE. The script is kind of funny too.
Bad
- The game looks and sounds awful.
- Even for its time, the game was technically weak (Déjà Vu: A Nightmare Comes True!! was released the same year).
- It's annoying to have to watch all the text be slowly drawn across the screen, only to have it erased the moment it finishes being written.
Ugly
- Death is frequent and unexpected, and every single time it happens, you have to restart the game from the beginning and re-watch the introduction. Although this mechanic was typical for games of this type, it's still not fun.
- The game is so linear, even if you follow the hints the game gives you, you can still die if you don't perform them in the order expected by the designer.
- The game is extremely short. If you know what to do, you can beat the game in about 3 minutes, and most of that time is waiting for the screens to draw. If screen drawing wasn't an issue, you could beat the game in a few seconds. It's actually nice that the game is so short, since restarting a long game from the beginning after every death would be unacceptable.
Media
Documentation
The Rainbow - 1985-03 - Cover.
Screenshots
Videos
Play Online
Representation
Strong female character? | Fail | The only woman isn't important. |
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Bechdel test? | Fail | There is only one woman. |
Strong person of color character? | Fail | Everyone is white. |
Queer character? | Fail | There are no characters. |
Download
Links
- Video Games
- 1985 Video Games
- TRS-80 Color Computer Games
- Video Game Genre - Adventure
- Video Game Genre - Comedy
- Video Game Genre - Graphic adventure
- Video Game Genre - Passive puzzle
- Video Game Genre - Puzzle
- Media Theme - Comedy
- Media Theme - Horror
- Software Distribution Model - Freeware
- Software Distribution Model - Open source
- Video Games That Can't Be Owned
- Video Games I've Beaten
- Video Game Rating - 2
- Video Game Graphics Rating - 2
- Video Game Sound Rating - 1
- 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