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17 Reviews
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
goofy but good.,
By Black Cat de La Bear "see that dark shape o'r... (those dark halls) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
This is a fun game, a bit goofy, but that's Douglass Addams. It seems so goofy at times that it doesn't seem like your in space at all, but on a clown barge. Who cares. The characters are quirky and have personality, not "personality" and what I like most is that I can say anything I want to them, for example; flirt to the reseptionist(who looks like a toaster)or threaten her, or tell the broom to go clean the toilet. Or just ask stupid questions to the other beings on the ship. It is a funny and smart game. The bomb is especially funny. You must watch Monty Python to know the answer though.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Quirky and fun but difficult,
By Aussiemystic "aussiemystic" (Sydney, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
I've heard it said elsewhere that "those with a logical mind will hate this game, since it's based on the skewed logic and warped humour of Douglas Adams".I have a logical mind, but also enjoy Adams' humour. The difficulty comes with meeting the two of them together in a computer game, where you have to think like he does to solve some of the problems. If you ever wanted to know what it might feel like to be a character in an Adams novel, here's your chance. The surrealistic nature of some of the puzzles in this game made them extremely difficult, and I did resort to a walkthrough frequently. It didn't help that I think there are several story-related glitches in the game. There are a couple of places where you can find yourself stuck - that is, if you do a certain thing before taking adequate notes, or solve puzzle A before puzzle B, you can find yourself unable to solve a subsequent puzzle. This was extremely annoying because sometimes I would know what I needed to do but be unable to do it. In a couple of places this required me to restart the game from a very early save. There were also several puzzles where there were several obvious possible ways of obtaining an item but the game required you to find only one, much more obscure way - always an annoyance of mine in adventure games. The system whereby you type what you want to say to the various 'bots on the ship harks back to the old text-based adventures, rather than the more usual dialogue trees that we see nowadays in adventure game. It will also remind you of how annoying these can be - you can be saying the right thing but in the wrong way and the game will not respond. Also, to obtain several key items you have to call in one of the 'bots to get it for you, even though the 'bot isn't normally seen in that area. The game is non-linear. Without spoiling too much, the aim is to collect a number of items scattered throughout the ship in order to regain control of its central intelligence unit and be able to pilot yourself home. Most of these can be collected in any order so if one puzzle is causing you grief you can work on another. Note that some locations around the ship have multiple uses and play a role in more than one puzzle. The graphics look pretty good - slightly dated now but still quite lush. The voice acting is good (including Adams himself, and Monty Pythons Terry Jones & John Cleese) and although some speeches go on for a long time you can usually skip listening to the whole speech, and the full text appears in a dialogue window. The version of the game I played came on 3 CDs in a jewel case, although the game installs fully onto your hard drive. There was no manual, although I understand the initial packaging came with a manual that described some of the controls and the original box had a diagram on it that helps solve one of the puzzles (although the same image can be found hidden in the game). I found it fun to walk around another Adams-designed starship, but at the same time frustrating to have to apply Adams-style absurdist logic to solve a lot of the puzzles.
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Starship Obscure,
By Templeton C. Moss "Templeton Moss" (Taylorsville, KY United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
After an exhaustive search for this title I suppose it was silly of me not to look at Amazon.com first thing. When it arrived I was on Cloud Nine. See, I'm a huge Douglas Adams fan and have acquired as many of his works as possible. And I heard that this was supposed to be a game unlike any other so I knew I had to have it. And they were right. Unlike any other.The story is that a huge and luxurious space-liner has crash-landed in your house and it is up to you to fix it. See, the ship has lost its mind and bits of it are scattered all around the ship. it's up to you to find all the bits of Titania, the ships personality, it's spirit if you will, to get yourself home to Earth. You do this by navigating through the rooms and interacting with robots and things around you. Your first challenge is to upgrade from third to second class, and to do this you must talk to the Deskbot. Type in a simple sentence like "Can I have a free upgrade?" and just like magic, she will say "No." The graphics are beautiful, done by Academy Award winners. The challenges are difficult, but not too difficult that you couldn't solve them by yourself if you had thirty or forty years to spend on this game and this game alone. Douglas Adams himself appears as the voice of the Suc-U-Bus (a system that transports things throughout the ship) and his face appears as that of Leovinus, the man who designed the ship. The cast also includes a brief, uncredited cameo by John Cleese as an annoying bomb and perhaps the most memorable performance of fellow Python alum Terry Jones' entire career: As a parrot. Hearing Jones squawk, "Ooh, look who it is! The bringer of chickens, I DON'T think!" is worth the price of the game alone.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
SP2 workaround extended,
By
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
There is a less drastic way of getting the videos to work under service pack 2.
Simply get a copy of iccvid.dll from XP Service Pack 1 (Often on the original windows disk, it just needs uncompressing) and drop it into the games root directory (The same directory as ST.exe is in). This means you do not have to mess around with windows system DLLs. The game checks the current directory when it loads up before it checks the system32 directory for the file, hence it loads the SP1 version for the game, and all your other programs use the safer SP2 version. Hope this helps.
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Doesn't run on a modern machine,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This game, evidently, is designed for an older operating system (Win 95/98). Though the package claims it will work on Win2k for instance, it doesn't. The website for the game is defunct. The patches can't be downloaded. It's sad. Douglas Adams is such a beloved author, why don't they care about this game?
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Favorite among the many games I've played,
By
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
I've played lots of games (all the Myst series, all the Monkey Island series, 7th guest, etc etc etc): this one remains my favorite. The puzzles are satisfyingly difficult, the characters goofily absurd (in goofiness I'd compare it to Monkey Island)....the parrot in particular has become a permanent part of our family's vocabulary. My teen son and nephews played this and did well with little or no help, too, which surprised me because it is challenging. DEFINITELY worth the money, especially since the whole family will love it AND it is entertaining, not violent. (PS: Don't forget to keep the robots "tuned up"!)
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
SP2 fix - a workaround,
By
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
I just wanted to say that I loved this game when it first came out, and I just now found my copy if it from ages ago, and I am starting ot play it again.
I ran into the same SP2 incompatability problem, but I did a little research (about 5 minutes) and found that if you replace iccvid.dll in C:\windows\system32 with the one found on a sp1 machine (or extract it from the install cd) then it'll work without a problem.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Playing starship titanic in newer versions of Windows,
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
I originally got Starship Titanic when I had Win 95. When I upgraded to XP, the game still played until SP2. I tried the patches which were not satisfactory, and finally retired it. When I upgraded to Win 7, I decided to try the game again. I typed " will Starship Titanic play on Windows 7" into my browser and got a tech geek site that told me how to configure to play the game. The original patch and the Cinepac Codec are still available at the Starship Titanic website. The updated sh33w32.dll driver is available from MacKichan Software. Just load all the patches into your digital Villge file and you are up and running. good luck!
7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Dear Simon And Schuster,
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
I loved this game for it's content, plot, lack of sensibility. It truly lived up to what I would expect from DNA. The problem that I ran into is with the videos during gameplay. I get this nice, full screen view of black with audio. The video just isn't there. While I normally frown on using walkthroughs, it makes it necessary since most of the puzzles are answered in the videos. Top that off with the fact that you cannot even see the puzzle you have to complete at the end of the game, since it too is a black screen. My first instinct was to reinstall, and run under compatability wizard. That failed miserably. My next step was to check for patches, and to my surprise, nobody is supporting the game. My final step was to run through the blogs to see if any talented hacker had reverse engineered the game (very against the EULA, but since nobody sees fit to support it, I don't much care if they make a profit. A fixed problem is a fixed problem.) Every blog I found had users with the same issue that could only be resolved by downgrading windows! Let's just think about that one for a moment. I'm gonna sacrifice my computer's security by downgrading (but is anything that involves getting rid of microsoft really a downgrade?) from sp2 to sp1. NOT! Somebody needs to redo the game, patch it up so that it is finally playable on an up to date system. Since it is Simon and Schuster's name on the cover, it should be them, but I'm having a hard time finding the person to talk to that can fix the issue (even after burying my inquiry in soft peat for three months).
To wrap it up, it's a great game that won't work on XP sp2. GOOD JOB SImon and Schuster, I'll go back to ignoring the "xp compatable" sticker on the cd case.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Titanic Titillator,
By
This review is from: Starship Titanic (CD-ROM)
The Late Great Doug Adams fulfilled his dream adventure game. If you love Adam's Hitchiker's Guide You'll love this game. This game contains just sax and violins, no one is splattered(except a flock of starlings). There is always some sort of cheesy muzak in the background and it gets worse as you go to 3rd class in the "Well". This is a thinking game and most of the puzzles can be solved with a combination of exploring, listening to the robots the PA system and some doing a lot of footwork. This is a graphic and aural masterpiece. If you tried the old infocom games this is the modern adventure game. "OOH Chicken-I love Chicken".
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Starship Titanic by Simon & Schuster Interactive (Windows 95 / 98 / Me)
Used & New from: $9.34
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