This is Amazon: Guardians of Eden, another entry for your worst games of all time list

This is Amazon: Guardians of Eden, another entry for your worst games of all time list

From 2010 to 2014 Richard Cobbett (opens in new tab) wrote Crapshoot, a column about rolling the dice to bring random games back into the light. What happens when a company wants to make an interactive movie long before the technology is available? Pain, mostly. Pain, and regret.

I’ve always had a bit of a soft spot for FMV. I remember it when it was the impossible technological dream, the future of gaming, the disappointing present, and then the best-forgotten past, and honestly it made the jump to the second half of that with good cause. Still, there’s something so endearing about the goofiness of a green screen—amateur actors desperately trying to carry stories by first-time scriptwriters and all. I still look back on them a little fondly. But Amazon: Guardians of Eden? Amazon was an interactive movie that couldn’t even wait for CD-ROM. Be afraid.

OH MY GOD I AM EXPRESSING SURPRISE BECAUSE I WAS JUST SURPRISED AND THAT IS WHAT I WOULD DO!

Access Software, as we’ve seen before, was a weird company. Their bread and butter ended up being golf simulators, the Links series, which was ultimately why the company got picked up by Microsoft and closed a few years later after everyone realised golf is boring. What made them interesting were the other games they did, most famously the Tex Murphy interactive movies that saw employees (led by writer/director/star Chris Jones, Access’s money guy turned green screen detective) joining such high-powered names as Margot Kidder to truly redefine the word “starring”. 



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