Questprobe featuring Spider-Man
Spider-Man's assailant in this episode is the former Hollywood special effects designer Quentin Beck, otherwise known as Mysterio. He wields his power of hypnosis and illusion from behind a fishbowl helmet supplied with oxygen to isolate him from the thick gas emitted from his canisters which obscure Spider-Man's vision and spider senses. When the game begins, we find that our hero has been captured, his mind stripped of everything he knows (a convenient excuse for us controlling him).
Despite an okay plot, the game quickly degenerages into a tedious game of running errands for various characters ("Spider-Man the Errand Boy" would be an appropriate subtitle). Although the solution to the encounters with these characters can be gleaned from the information in the manual's glossary, there are still several illogical puzzles that can only be solved by pure trial-and-error. The game is also logically inconsistent in parts: there are one or two locations which lead to an abrupt 'something stops me' message, but I never figured out what; and, despite superhuman senses, our hero falls and breaks his neck at one point.
Overall, Scott Adams' Spider-Man is a disappointing game that reduces the famous hero to pitiful pizza delivery boy. Stay away at all costs, unless you like boring puzzles, below-average writing, and stupid puzzles.
Average Rating: | 6.34 [23 votes] |
Genre: | Interactive Fiction |
Designer: | Scott Adams |
Developer: | Adventure International |
Publisher: | Adventure International |
Year: | 1985 |
Software Copyright: | Adventure International |
Theme: | Science Fiction, Licensed, Cartoon |
Multiplayer: | |
Related Links: | PDD's Adventure Page (download other Scott Adams games) , CRASH review of Spectrum version |
More Info: | Mobygames | The Web |
System Requirements: | DOS |
If you like this game, try: | Batman Returns, Questprobe featuring The Fantastic Four, Questprobe featuring The Hulk |
Thanks to... | |
Technical Notes: |
Screenshots © The Good Old Days