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It Came From the Desert - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It Came From the Desert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It Came From the Desert
The game cover
Developer(s) Cinemaware
Publisher(s) Cinemaware
Designer(s) Kenneth Melville
Engine Custom
Release date(s) 1989
Genre(s) adventure/first-person shooter
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) N/A
Platform(s) Amiga, DOS, Atari ST, Sega Genesis/Megadrive, Turbo Grafx 16
Input Keyboard, joystick and mouse

It Came From the Desert is a 1989 adventure/first-person shooter game by Cinemaware. It was originally released for the Amiga.

Like most of Cinemaware's titles, It Came From the Desert takes its inspiration from Hollywood. This game is undoubtedly inspired by dozens of 1950s "B" movies, especially the 1954 mutant-ant classic Them!, It Came From the Desert is one of Cinemaware's most innovative creations.

Contents

[edit] Description

The rural town of Lizard Breath witnessed a meteor fall, and the player, the town's resident geologist, has to discover the source of some strange occurrences. Gameplay centers on the player choosing what they want to do by selecting an option on the multiple choice screens that pop up. There are several buildings in town, as well as farms, mines, an airport, and even a drive-in theater. Since time ticks away quickly at one minute per second of real time, quick decision is key to success.

The game featured a first person shooter part, years before Wolfenstein 3D or Doom, the two games credited with popularizing the genre.
Enlarge
The game featured a first person shooter part, years before Wolfenstein 3D or Doom, the two games credited with popularizing the genre.

Once the investigation begins, the player soon realizes there are large, mutant ants roaming around the outskirts of town. These ants are dangerous, and to survive the player must fight them with a handgun, an apparently infinite number of grenades, and bug spray used in airborne attack.

This game put the gamer in a "movie" years before it became popular in the Resident Evil series. It also featured "stealth" gameplay and a first person shooter part that appeared in this game years before Doom (however, without scenery animation). The game also featured an engaging soundtrack.

[edit] Ports

Antheads was the only sequel to It Came From the Desert.
Enlarge
Antheads was the only sequel to It Came From the Desert.

It Came From the Desert was ported to several other popular systems of the era.

As a last attempt to stay in business, Level 9 Computing ported this game to DOS in early 1991. However, this was not enough and the firm closed in June of that year.

Other ports were created for Atari ST and Sega Genesis/Megadrive in 1990. In 1992 it was released for the TurboGrafx CD, the CD-ROM peripheral of the Turbo Grafx 16. Note that the styles of play in the aforementioned console versions are distinctly different from the versions released for computer platforms, so the use of the word "port" could be construed as inaccurate.

The Sega version is an overhead shooter with the main protagonist running around on foot, and able to walk in all directions, rather than being constrained such as in games like Commando (video game). Among the differences in play mechanics, the Sega version allowed the player to create powerups that were fashioned by collecting machinery pieces and joining them together in different combinations. Note that the Sega version was never actually offered for sale; it was distributed as a ROM image (see Console emulator) from the Cinemaware website after the turn of the 21st century. Despite the similarity of camera perspective, the Sega version did not appear to reuse any of the graphical elements created for use in the computer-based versions.

The TurboGrafx CD version was also completely different from any other release. This version was a CD-ROM based game that made use of Full motion video with recorded sequences of live actors. There were also action sequences that used drawn graphical elements (not captured, as seen in games such as Mean Streets by Access Software). The side-scrolling action sequence was comprised of the player battling ants in tunnels. The TurboGrafx CD version did reuse the graphical elements from the computer version for the overhead battle sequences, but not for any of the character conversation segments. Unfortunately, this version was marred by poor quality in the recording of the video sequences, and the side scrolling arcade sequences were abysmal in terms of gameplay. The acting in the video sequences was of B-movie quality, keeping in-line with the source material that served as an inspiration for the game.

[edit] Legacy

It Came From the Desert was followed by an expansion pack called Antheads in 1990. Antheads was made available in the United States through mail order directly from Cinemaware, and on store shelves in Europe. Antheads was not a standalone game; it required ownership of the original chapter in order to play.

It Came From the Desert was considered "abandonware" for some time and distributed by web sites like Home of the Underdogs, but versions for all three platforms are now freely available from the revived Cinemaware's web site.

[edit] Trivia

  • A spinoff of this appeared in Command & Conquer: Red Alert as a secret mission named "It came from Red Alert". During these four missions with a Command and Conquer twist, the player combats giant ants.
  • It Came From the Desert was parodied in a Space Quest IV reference: the player can find the box of the game He came for the Dessert in a store, where the woman holds a cake, and a fat man replaces the ant.

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