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Return to Zork


 

Return to Zork is a 1993 adventure game in the Zork series for the PC and Apple Macintosh. It was developed by Activision and was the final Zork game to be published under the Infocom label. The player's character is a sweepstakes winner who ultimately must destroy the evil Morphius. Return to Zork takes place from a first-person perspective, and made use of video-captured actors as well as detailed graphics; a point-and-click interface replaced the text parser for the first time in a Zork game. The overall gameplay style was somewhat similar to Myst, although Return to Zork predated Myst by a few months. Unlike Myst, Return to Zork featured multiple ways of interacting with each object in the game world, as well as with several non-player characters also present in the world.

Related Topics:
1993 - Adventure game - Zork - PC - Apple Macintosh - Activision - Infocom - Sweepstakes - Point-and-click - Parser - Myst

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Among the actors who appeared in the game were a number of instantly recognizable (by face, if not necessarily by name) character actors as well as a number of well-known younger actors: A.J. Langer from My So-Called Life as "Rebecca Snoot", Robyn Lively of Twin Peaks as "The Fairy", The Wonder Years' Jason Hervey as "The Troll King", and Sam J. Jones from the 1980 film Flash Gordon as "The Blind Bowman".

Related Topics:
Character actor - A.J. Langer - My So-Called Life - Robyn Lively - Twin Peaks - The Wonder Years - Jason Hervey - Sam J. Jones - 1980 - Flash Gordon

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The game was packaged with an abridged version of the Encyclopedia Frobozzica, which also served as the game manual and provided copyright protection.

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Throughout the game, the player could take photographs of the environment with a camera and record significant information with a tape recorder. The game also automatically generated a map as the player progressed, and took notes in a notebook as the plot unfolded through dialogue or events in the game.

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Return To Zork is set in the year 1647 GUE, later than any other game in the fictional history of Zork.

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Unlike earlier text-adventure games by Infocom, violence against innocent bystanders is possible. It is possible to kill several of the game's civilian non-player characters without immediate reprisal from the game, where as in every other Infocom or Zork game, such actions are either impossible to accomplish or immediately punished by death. However, because killing innocents will eventually cause a masked vigilante to steal all your items, such behavior quickly makes the game unwinnable.

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As in the Zork text-adventure games, there are several ways to make the game "unwinnable" by using or altering an object or item in an unintended manner. The most obvious example of this occurs with the weed by the side of the road near the beginning of the game. Although the weed is essential later on, it is very easy to unintentionally kill it, and the game gives no indication that the weed is at all important.

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