[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Police Quest: Open Season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Police Quest: Open Season
Developer(s)Sierra On-Line
Publisher(s)Sierra On-Line
Director(s)Tammy Dargan
Producer(s)Tammy Dargan
Designer(s)Tammy Dargan
Programmer(s)Doug Oldfield
Artist(s)Darrin Fuller
Writer(s)Tammy Dargan
Composer(s)Neal Grandstaff
SeriesPolice Quest
EngineSCI
Platform(s)MS-DOS, Windows, Mac OS
ReleaseNovember 1993[1]
Genre(s)Adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Police Quest: Open Season (also known as Police Quest IV[a]) is a 1993 police procedural point-and-click adventure video game developed and published by Sierra On-Line. It is the fourth installment in the Police Quest series. Departing from the fictional setting of Lytton, California from the first three installments, Open Season follows police detective John Carey as he investigates a series of brutal murders in Los Angeles.

The game was produced in cooperation with former Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) chief Daryl F. Gates, replacing former series director ex-California Highway Patrol officer Jim Walls, who left Sierra around 1991.

Open Season received mixed reviews and underperformed compared to previous entries. An updated CD version was released in 1996. An indirect sequel and spinoff, Police Quest: SWAT, was released in 1995.

Gameplay

[edit]

Open Season uses point-and-click gameplay. Icons for "walking", "speaking, "using", and "looking" are used rather than the text-parsing system used in the first two games. The mouse is used to select and interact with objects from the game world and the player's inventory, as well as to direct the player character around the various environments.

Like previous Police Quest games, Open Season places emphasis on following proper police procedure, with penalties for failing to do so. These extend from actions to how the player treats certain characters; for example, the player choosing to harass female characters will eventually lead to a game over.

Most of the game uses full-motion video, with most characters being video recordings of actors and most background being edited photographs of real locations in Los Angeles, such as the interior of the Parker Center. Written text is replaced by audible narration and dialogue in the 1996 CD version.

Plot

[edit]

In Los Angeles, LAPD Robbery-Homicide detective John Carey is dispatched to investigate a brutal homicide in a South Central alleyway. There, Carey finds his best friend and ex-partner Bob Hickman dead, alongside an eight-year-old boy. Over time, five more people are murdered, mutilated, and found in public places. As Carey investigates the murders, the believed motive for them shifts from gang-related reasons to the work of a serial killer(the young boy was gunned down by a drug dealer, but Hickman was the first in a string of torture killings).

In his investigation, Carey questions the owner of a second-rate movie theater, who offers him tea and invites him inside to watch a film. Carey passes out and hallucinates the theater owner as a cross-dresser at the scene of Hickman's murder, before being woken up and thrown out. Carey finds the killer's house (led there by his dog), and finds a severed head in a fridge alongside a hidden passage that leads back to the theater. Investigating further, Carey finds a woman passed out in the seats, and sees her being dragged into a back room; however, before Carey can intervene, he is knocked unconscious.

Waking up, Carey determines the theater owner is the killer and scavenges hair spray and a lighter to arm himself with a makeshift flamethrower. Searching the apartment above the theater, Carey finds the theater owner preparing to kill the woman and torches him with the flamethrower, killing him and saving the woman. For his efforts, the Mayor of Los Angeles presents Carey with the LAPD Medal of Valor.

Development

[edit]

Open Season was the first entry in the Police Quest series to be developed without former series designer Jim Walls, who left Sierra due to undisclosed circumstances.[2] The game was developed in Sierra's SCI engine.

Sierra had three box designs in consideration for the game: A bloody hand reaching for the title, a file folder, and the Los Angeles city skyline. The company had a focus group vote on them, and the file folder design garnered almost no votes, with the other two covers splitting the majority. The final decision was reached because parents in the focus group often had a negative side comment about the bloody hand design, so the skyline cover eventually won.[citation needed] The game was released in November 1993.

Whereas previous Police Quest installments included a police procedure handbook that functioned as a proper game manual with relevant gameplay information, Open Season included an actual LAPD policy handbook that, while informative, focused more on LAPD resources such as radio codes, uniform dress, and legal regulations, but largely lacked information that would be relevant in the actual game.

The 1996 CD release of the game included audio dialogue, a two-minute promotional video, and copies of official LAPD documents.[3]

Reception

[edit]

The first four Police Quest games totaled 850,000 sales by late 1995. However, Markus Krichel of PC Games noted that "interest on the part of the gamer fell slightly" with Open Season (Mainly due to the absence of creator Jim Walls, and those who did play the game weren't happy playing as anyone besides the series's classic protagonist Sonny Bonds), which led Sierra On-Line to experiment with a new direction for the series with Police Quest: SWAT.[4] According to Sierra, combined sales of the Police Quest series—including SWAT—surpassed 1.2 million units by the end of March 1996.[5]

Computer Gaming World stated in February 1994 that "Police Quest: Open Season evinces a remarkable degree of work-a-day police realism as a result of Gates' contributions", with "marvelous digitized backgrounds".[6] A longer review in March 1994 stated that the game had succeeded "at so many levels", that its realism and "seemingly endless amounts of" police procedure offered "larger implications about our society and its struggle against the drug machine". The reviewer noted that treating NPCs with the same "lack of consideration" players do so in other games "seems incredibly damning—and heartrending—because it's true to life. We treat each other, the game implies, in our attempts merely to cope with the problems with which we are faced, like NPCs". The magazine concluded that "Open Season tells that story magnificently".[7]

Next Generation reviewed the Macintosh version of the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "the ultimate Sierra police-based game is still a fond dream to look forward to; and in the meantime we can still keep ourselves amused with the Leisure Suit Larry series."[8]

In a retrospective 2013 review, Adventure Gamers gave the game 2 out of 5 stars and lambasted it for constant backtracking to find what the player missed, pixel hunting, an unsatisfying ending rendering most of the plot irrelevant, and flat and stereotyped characterisation.[9] PC Gamer, in a 2015 entry of its Reinstall retrospective series, found the police work bureaucracy a chore while enjoying more the game's reactions to out-of-line actions, and likewise criticised the game for pixel hunting, ethnic stereotyping and a disappointing ending making most of the preceding story superfluous.[10]

Controversy

[edit]

Open Season was met with some controversy over its portrayal of minorities. In the game, most African Americans use exaggerated African-American Vernacular English (e.g. a witness introducing himself as "I be Raymond Jones the third"), and numerous businesses are owned by immigrants who also speak in stereotypical accents (e.g. a convenience store owned by a Chinese American who speaks Engrish).

Although credited as the game's author, Daryl Gates did not write the game's storyline and denounced the depictions, insisting they were not his idea. Gates claimed that the story had been penned by Sierra writer Tammy Dargan, a former segment producer for America's Most Wanted; Dargan said the African American dialogue was based on Fab Five Freddy's rap dictionary Fresh Fly Flavor.[11]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ The game is listed as Police Quest 4 (PQ4) in the manual. It is also shown in the file names and the credits, and when exiting the game in DOS, "Thank you for playing Police Quest IV: Open Season". The number does not appear on the title screen.
  1. ^ Fyfe, Duncan (January 18, 2018). "How Sierra and a Disgraced Cop Made the Most Reactionary Game of the 90s". Waypoint. Vice Media. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  2. ^ Walls, James. "Rap Sheet - Jim Walls Reloaded". Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  3. ^ "Making Of Police Quest IV: Opean Season". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2013-10-16. Retrieved 2007-06-02.[dead link]
  4. ^ Krichel, Markus (November 1995). "Spezialeinheit". PC Games: 40, 41.
  5. ^ Sierra On-Line Form 10-K (Report). Bellevue, Washington. March 31, 1996. pp. 7–9. Archived from the original on April 16, 2018.
  6. ^ "Taking A Peek". Computer Gaming World. February 1994. pp. 212–220.
  7. ^ Owens, Dennis (March 1994). "The Killing Game". Computer Gaming World. pp. 44–45.
  8. ^ "Finals". Next Generation. No. 9. Imagine Media. September 1995. p. 99.
  9. ^ "Police Quest: Open Season review". Adventure Gamers. 2013-05-10. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  10. ^ Andy Kelly (2015-08-12). "Police Quest: Open Season was a detective game that wanted you to play by the book". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  11. ^ Tirella, Joseph (April 1994), "Video Vigilante", Vibe, USA, p. 23
[edit]