MENU
Home
Sitemap

RAND GAME
  • Radar Rat Race
  • Crystal Caves
  • Wwe Crush Hour
  • Microsoft Flight Simulator
  • Silent Hunter
  • Buzz Aldrin's Race Into Space
  • Medal Of Honor: Rising Sun
  • Disciples: Sacred Lands
  • Sprung
  • Genuine Games
  • Creative Assembly
  • Nikitova Llc
  • Magic: The Gathering
  • Raiden Series
  • Lunar Series
  • Tales Of Destiny 2
  • Croteam
  • Toejam And Earl
  • Half-life 2: Episode One
  • Agent Hugo
  • Solar Jetman: Hunt For The Golden Warpship
  • 25 To Life
  • 7 Studios
  • Wwf Attitude
  • Turrican
  • Lucasarts
  • Mortal Kombat
  • Spectrum Holobyte
  • Mega Man Legends 2
  • Flight Plan
  • Konami
  • International Karate Plus
  • Donkey Kong Classics
  • Sanxion
  • Beatmania

  • AFFILIATES

    tricks.mirrorz.com - Cheats & Hits Center!
    CoversClub
    GAME CONSOLE & PC RELATED: "Starship Titanic"

    ~* More Games *~

    Starship Titanic


    End of Term

    This has been an amazing year for me as a parent. My son is wrapping up second grade, and I've always seen this age as a pivotal one because of what happened to me at that point in my own life. I discovered books. I read "I Robot" by Issac Asimov when I was in second grade and I was hooked. I started reading the Caves of Steel trilogy after that, then the Robots of Dawn books, and from there it was naturally on to Empire. Unfortunately, my paternal Grandfather had passed away just before, but fo

    More...




    ~* Starship Titanic *~

    Starship Titanic

    Developer(s)The Digital Village
    Publisher(s)Simon & Schuster Interactive
    Designer(s)Douglas Adams
    Platform(s)Macintosh, Windows 95
    Release date1998
    Genre(s)Adventure game
    Mode(s)Single player
    MediaCD (1)
    Input methodsMouse, Keyboard

    Starship Titanic is a computer game designed by Douglas Adams and made by The Digital Village. It was released in 1998. It takes place on a starship of the same name which has undergone "Spontaneous Massive Existence Failure" and crash landed on Earth on its maiden voyage (in an allusion to the 1912 disaster involving the real-world RMS Titanic).

    The player acts the part of a human (whose house the starship crashed into) who goes aboard to help fix the ship, and must solve puzzles to collect the parts of the sabotaged onboard computer, Titania. Once all the parts have been collected and inserted in the correct places, Titania comes alive and talks.

    Gameplay

    One of the most significant parts of the game is the conversation engine (dubbed "Spookitalk") used to interact with the robot staff onboard the ship. Players type what they wish to say into the Personal Electronic Thing (PET) at the bottom of the screen. The robots' responses appear as text in the PET and are also spoken. The conversation engine works by interpreting user input and selecting relevant pre-recorded speech responses.

    A feature of the game and the starship itself is the "Succ-U-Bus", a communications system which moves physical containers through a network of tubes by vacuum. Messages and objects can be placed in the containers, and the system is used to deliver items to the player from other locations. The name of the system is a play on the word "succubus." Similar systems called pneumatic tubes exist in the real world; for example, those used by supermarkets to offload cash from tills to a secure area.

    Among the voice actors for the game are former Monty Python members Terry Jones as the Parrot, and John Cleese (under the pseudonym of Kim Bread) as the Bomb. Adams himself is the voice of the Succ-U-Bus, and plays the part of the ship's creator, Leovinus, in one of the closing scenes. If you turn on the television in the prologue of the game Douglas Adams will appear and tell you to get on with the game.

    A book entitled Douglas Adams's Starship Titanic, based on the game, was written by Jones. Critical reaction has been lukewarm; the general consensus is that the novel reads like a poor imitation of Adams' style. In an unusual move for a publisher, the contents of the novel -- every word -- has been published on the official Starship Titanic website. The words are in alphabetical order, for convenience in referencing them, although readability suffers somewhat.

    The Starship Titanic and "existence failure" were first mentioned in Life, the Universe and Everything, the third book in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy "trilogy". This would seem to suggest that the game takes place in the same fictional universe as the Hitchhiker's Guide stories. However, in response to mentions of characters or quotations from the Hitchhiker's Guide, the game will accuse the player of mixing up different universes.

    Prior to the game's release, the publishers launched a web site purporting to be that of an intergalactic travel agency called Starlight Travel, which in the game is the Starship Titanic's parent company. The site combined copious amounts of Python-esque writing (by Terry Jones) with methods commonly associated with Alternate reality games to generate interest in the site, and in the game, long after the initial site visit. A typical example of this occurred when a site visitor filled out a personal information form, including email address and "favorite frog" (from a convenient -- and long -- drop-down list); approximately one week later, a spam email for something other than Starlight Travel would arrive, and would include a reference to the specific frog that the visitor had selected. Another example involved a series of three emails; the first called the reader's attention to a password-protected area of the Starlight Travel site, the second urged the reader to delete unread any future emails, as confidential information was being erroneously emailed, and the third revealed the confidential password for the restricted site: "1".

    Spookitalk

    Front cover of the box from the original US Windows 95 CD-ROM release of Starship Titanic, by Simon & Schuster Interactive.

    The Spookitalk engine was developed exclusively for the game by creator Douglas Adams and several programmers from The Digital Village, the company working with Adams to develop the game. The engine has the ability to converse with the player in an almost lifelike manner, partially because it incorporates over 10,000 different phrases, pre-recorded by a group of talented voice actors. The recorded phrases would take over 14 hours to play back-to-back.

    Other British science fiction

    In the current Doctor Who series, the 2007 Christmas Special "Voyage of the Damned" takes place on a Starship by the name of Titanic; this episode has several references’ to Douglas Adams' writings, including several key plot line similarities between the episode and ones used in the game and book. No reference to Douglas Adams is included in the credits.

    See also

    • Tale of the fate of the Starship Titanic

    References

    Hitchhiker's Portal
    1. ^ "Wish You Were Here, The Official Biography of Douglas Adams", Nick Webb, p. 326.

    External links

    • Official Site
    • Starship Titanic at MobyGames
    • Douglas Adams on Infinite MHz - Douglas Adams Interview from 'Infinite MHz'


    ~* Help *~

    See Also: 0 A.D. Project Gotham Racing 2 Pyjamarama The Dig Air Combat Stonkers Ultima Underworld II: Labyrinth of Worlds Airport Tycoon 2 Zoo Tycoon Darkstone Acclaim Entertainment EA Sports Human Entertainment Chase H.Q. Destineer Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back King of Dragon Pass Little Big Adventure Half-Life: Source Masterblaster Super Hang-On Abomination: The Nemesis Project Medal of Honor: Allied Assault Jakks Pacific Bahamut Lagoon Mario Kart Arcade GP SEGA Call of Duty 2 Deer Hunter Pilotwings Sonic Adventure 2 Ground Control Colossal Cave Adventure FTL Games Strange Adventures in Infinite Space Capcom Production Studio 1 Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater IQue THQ Alien vs. Predator 3D Cabela's Big Game Hunter: Ultimate Challenge Virtual Woman Warhammer: Dark Omen Castlevania Mega Man Zero 4 Kuru Kuru Kururin 18 Wheels of Steel Einhander Pit-Fighter Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles