Anchorhead (game)
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Anchorhead | |
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Developer(s) | Michael S. Gentry |
Publisher(s) | Self published |
Designer(s) | Michael S. Gentry |
Engine | Z-machine |
Latest version | Release 5 / Serial number 990206 |
Release date(s) | 1998 |
Genre(s) | Interactive Fiction, Aventure, Horror |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Platform(s) | Z-machine version 8 |
Media | download |
Input | Keyboard |
Anchorhead is the name of a 1998 interactive fiction computer game by Michael S. Gentry. It is loosely based on the Cthulhu mythos. Anchorhead takes place in a New England town by the same name that bears a resemblance to Innsmouth, Arkham, and other fictional towns created by H.P. Lovecraft.
The game is divided into days, with the first two corresponding to whole days and the third day divided up into a number of segments. For the most part there is no time limit; each day ends when the player has completed a required task or tasks. Only towards the end does the game impose constraints on the number of turns a player can take to solve the necessary puzzles. Anchorhead is unusual in that its protagonist is female. The player plays the part of the wife of a professor and aspiring author who has moved to the town to take possession of his ancestral family home.
Anchorhead was hailed by critics and players as one of the best interactive fiction games available due to its complex and intricate backstory, well-written dialogue and descriptions, and absence of bugs (or even spelling errors). It won a number of awards after its release, including the 1998 XYZZY Award for Best Setting (it was a finalist for virtually every other Xyzzy award that year).
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The protagonist begins the game exploring her new home and the town and meeting Anchorhead's odd denizens while her husband, Michael, researches his family, the Verlacs of Anchorhead. As time passes, Michael becomse more obsessed and withdrawn into his research. The protagonist begins her own investigation of her husband's family and learns that the Verlacs are hereditary high priests of a demonic cult that dominates the town. Croesus Verlac, Michael's ancestor eighteenth-century ancestor, impregnated his own daughter and used sorcery to transfer his consciousness into her baby's body at the moment of his own death, beginning an obscene "family tradition" that spanned generations. Upon further investigation, she learns that the town sits on a focal point where, through the correct ritual, a gate can be opened to the Womb of Nephilim. Eventually it becomes evident that Croesus's soul, disembodied since the suicide of its last direct-line descendant, now seeks to inhabit Michael's body. Worse yet, Croesus's followers intend to use a sophisticated optical device to summon a Great Old One whose home, a comet, is approaching a flyby with Earth. The protagonist must uncover the secrets of the decaying town, escape from an increasingly dangerous series of traps, stop the insane townspeople from bringing a vengeful being of godlike power to earth, and save her husband by banishing Croesus to the Womb of Nephilim.
[edit] Special edition/rewrite
On May 4, 2006, Michael Gentry announced a rewrite of Anchorhead in Inform 7 preliminarily titled Anchorhead: the Director's Cut Special Edition.
A playable demo of this edition was released on December 15, 2006. [1]
[edit] External links
- Anchorhead at Baf's Guide to the IF Archive provides a brief review, links to other reviews, notes on awards won, and downloads of the game itself and related files off the Interactive Fiction Archive.
- Interactive Fiction archive provides the game for download.
- Edromia is the author's web site.
- iFiction.org lets you play online
- "Search-Based Drama Management in the Interactive Fiction Anchorhead" is a research paper describing work on programmatically organizing drama in a game. They modified Anchorhead as part of their experiments.
- Xtreme! Gentrification The "interactive fiction" section of the author's blog. Here he discusses his work on the Anchorhead: Special Edition.
- "Interview: Mike Gentry" by Terry at Game Couch about Anchorhead: Special Edition.
[edit] Reviews
- IF-review - Review by Interactive Fiction author Emily Short
- Mobygames - Review includes screenshots
- Quandary - Review by Karen Tyers
- Brass Lantern - Review by Gregory W. Kulczycki