Flight of the Amazon Queen

Flight of the Amazon Queen is a graphical point-and-click adventure game by Interactive Binary Illusions originally released in 1995 for Amiga (using AMOS) and MS-DOS (using C),[1] and re-released as freeware in 2004[2][3] for use with ScummVM. Its gameplay is very similar in style to many of LucasArts' popular point-and-click adventures of the 1990s, and was inspired by Monkey Island[4] and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure.[5]

Flight of the Amazon Queen
Developer(s)Interactive Binary Illusions
Publisher(s)Renegade Software
Designer(s)John Passfield
Steve Stamatiadis
Composer(s)James Hannigan
Richard Joseph
EngineJASPAR
Platform(s)Amiga, MS-DOS, iOS, Android
Release1995
Genre(s)Adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Plot

In 1949, Joe King, pilot for hire and owner of the Amazon Queen airplane which he uses for his work, arrives at a hotel in Rio de Janeiro to transport his next customer, famous film actress Faye Russel, only to be ambushed by his Dutch rival Anderson. Locked in a hotel room and trapped by Anderson's goons, Joe quickly gains assistance from Lola, a showgirl at the hotel and a former love interest, and escapes, making it back to the airport with his mechanic Sparky, just in time to stop his rival taking Faye. Wasting no time, Joe quickly pilots the Amazon Queen towards the location of Faye's shoot, only for a storm to cause him to crash-land in the Amazon jungle. After getting Faye and Sparky to safety, Joe begins searching for help, soon encountering a parrot named Wedgewood with a message for help. Seeking out the person the message was for, Joe meets with Trader Bob, a merchant who lives amongst an indigenous tribe in the jungle, who soon asks for his help in rescuing a princess named Azura from Floda, a lederhosen company that Bob suspects is a cover for something much more sinister.

Joe quickly begins searching for the jungle, encountering an entire tribe of Amazon women who capture him and took in Faye when she decided to seek help herself. Released by the tribe, Joe agrees to help them rescue Azura as well. Finding the princess within a hidden base beneath Floda, Joe frees her and returns to her tribe, only to find himself coming face-to-face with Floda's leader - Dr. Frank Ironstein, a mad scientist who seeks to conquer the world by turning Amazon women into dinosaur warriors through the use of his DinoRay invention. Seeing that Joe was smart to get around his security, Ironstein coerces him into helping him find an artifact from a temple that he requires known as the Crystal Skull, threatening to harm Azura if he doesn't. Left with no choice, Joe agrees, and heads for the temple, navigating traps and puzzles and eventually finding what he needs. Returning it to Ironstein, Joe quickly finds himself betrayed and trapped in Floda's base, but soon escapes and goes after Ironstein with the help of Anderson, his former rival having originally been hired by the scientist to assist but later deciding to turn against him. Heading into the valley, Joe assists in trying to find Ironstein and manages to stop him, saving the day, before taking the scientist's Zeppelin and flying into the sunset with Azura.

Releases

Prior to release, the game was sent by the publisher to Future Publishing's Amiga Power magazine, to be reviewed by Jonathan Nash in issue 51. Whilst playing he found an error which prevented progression through the game (at the start, the bellhop would not relinquish the door key). He informed the publisher which resulted in the game release being delayed for several months as, at the time, the game had been sent to the disk duplication factory ready for reproduction. As it was also too late to change the magazine content and layout, the issue went to press with an apology that they had unintentionally reviewed an "unfinished" game, which was against one of their policies.[6] The screenshots for the issue came from the PC version, also against their policy. The front cover of this issue featured an artist's impression of the 'escape from Rio' car chase scene.[7]

The Amiga version had no voices, whereas the DOS CD version was a talkie featuring full voice-acting. The voice of the Temple Guardian was provided by British actress Penelope Keith. Actor William Hootkins, who played Red Six (Jek Porkins) in Star Wars, also voiced a number of characters.

The DOS CD version contained a Mini-Game of sorts. The file Queen.1 (1.82MB, CRC-32: D72DCD56) is found in the INTERVIE folder in the CD-ROM's Root. The Mini-Game is a fully playable adventure game, where the main character tries to get an interview from the game's development team. The game features MIDI music and full text, but no talkie version was ever released. The Mini-Game features familiar locations, characters, and game spoilers. The Mini-Game usually goes unnoticed as it is not bootable or playable from within the main game. The Mini-Game is fully supported by the recent ScummVM release.

In March 2004, the game was released as freeware, and support for it was added to ScummVM, allowing it to be played on Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, and many other operating systems and consoles. The datafiles for both the floppy disk and CD-ROM version are available from the ScummVM website. The Fedora RPM software repository has an installer for the game alongside ScummVM. This game is directly included in the Debian software repository.

In 2009, iPhSoft took ScummVM's FOTAQ iPhone / iPod Touch free port and modified it. This modification has been commercially sold on iTunes and discontinued Mid-2015, due to lack of iOS 8 and up support.

In 2013 released at GOG.com as a digital download ready to play on modern PCs.

In March 2016, MojoTouch, working with John Passfield, the designer of the original game, released the 20th Anniversary Edition on the App Store (iOS), Google Play and Amazon Appstore. This version includes improved graphics rendering, full voice acting, new touch interface, auto-save, multi-language support, high definition menus and the following bonus material: Making of Flight of the Amazon Queen booklet, a play through of the interactive interview mini-game with audio commentary by John Passfield, the original Game Manuals (both US and international versions) and the Official Playing Guide.

Reception

Discussing the game's commercial performance, designer John Passfield said in 2013, "I believe it sold fewer than 100,000 copies, which at the time was okay".[13]

Flight of the Amazon Queen received generally positive reviews from critics. At GameRankings the iOS version scores 72.50%[8] and the PC version 75.00%.[9] Pocket Gamer's Spanner Spencer called the iPhone release of Flight of the Amazon Queen "more of a direct conversion than an adaptation, the quality of the original still shines through and makes this an easy game to enjoy."[11]

References

  1. "Making of Flight of the Amazon Queen: A 20th Anniversary Retrospective". Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  2. Gamershell.com (2004-04-26). Flight of the Amazon Queen Freeware Archived 2009-04-06 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on 2009-01-19.
  3. "Copyright file". Ubuntu. Archived from the original on 2011-08-13. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  4. Passfield, John (2007-04-27). "Scumm 20th Anniversary". Game Musings. Passfield Games. Retrieved 2007-05-15.
  5. Passfield, John. "Flight of the Amazon Queen" in Passfield Games. Retrieved on 2009-01-19.
  6. Nash, Jonathan. "Footnotes". AP2. Archived from the original on 2012-05-29. Retrieved 2007-05-16.
  7. Amiga Power. Cover Image of issue 51. Retrieved on 2009-01-19.
  8. "Flight of the Amazon Queen for iOS (iPhone/iPad)". GameRankings. Archived from the original on 27 May 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  9. "Flight of the Amazon Queen for PC". GameRankings. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  10. "Flight of the Amazon Queen review". Adventure Gamers. 20 May 2002. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  11. Spencer, Spanner (18 June 2009). "Flight of the Amazon Queen review - iPhone reviews". Pocket Gamer. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  12. Kershaw, Stuart (12 June 2009). "Flight of the Amazon Queen Review". Slide To Play. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  13. Bevan, Mike (August 2013). "Flight of the Amazon Queen". Retro Gamer (118): 48–51.
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