Bad Mojo

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Screenshot from the game
Screenshot from the game

Bad Mojo is a computer game by Pulse Entertainment, released in 1996. The player is cast as Roger Samms, an entomologist planning to embezzle money from a research grant to escape his sordid life above an abandoned bar. An accident with his mother's enchanted locket unleashes the bad mojo, turning him into a cockroach.

The gameplay consists of guiding the cockroach through a series of puzzles.

Got Game Entertaiment rereleased the game in December 2004, packaging it with a DVD containing a variety of extra material.

The story line in Bad Mojo is very loosely based on Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis. In the game, the cat's name is Franz and the main character Roger Samms is a play on the lead character in Metamorphosis (Gregor Samsa).

Contents

[edit] Storyline

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The story takes place in a filthy bar owned by Eddie Battito. Roger has stolen a million dollars worth of loan money from a science corporation he had previously worked for and is planning to leave for Mexico City to start a new life. But after a small argument with his landlord, Eddie, he remembers a little trinket that he gotten in his early childhood: a bug-like locket that belonged to his dead mother, Angelina. Upon its discovery, the locket transforms Roger's soul into a cockroach, and transports him to a mysterious sewer system connected to every section of the bar. His adventure first takes him to the basement, which is also Eddie's bedroom, the bathroom, the kitchen, the bar room, Roger's room and finally his research room. As the roach (Roger) explores a world filled with danger at every turn, including rats, garbage disposals, and his own pet cat, Franz, he is constantly being guided by an oracle that just so happens to be his mother. We soon discover the sad past of both Roger and Eddie, finding out that Roger had been abandoned to an abusive nun, was the center of bullying as a young man, and his failure to be taken seriously by his superiors. Eddie has had just as bad a life, having his beloved wife (also named Angelina) die during childbirth, and giving up his son. During Roger's exploration, he is forced to extinguish the pilot light to a gas stove in the kitchen to save a baby cockroach that, in turn, assisted him in jamming the garbage disposal with a spoon. This act eventually causes the whole bar to be filled with gas. Roger must then set off a smoke detector to wake a previously unconscious Eddie (which was Roger's fault) and then finally reach the locket in his own unconscious body's hand. With both men safely out of the bar when it explodes, Roger and Eddie discover that they are, in fact, father and son, which was exactly as the Oracle planned. Reunited at last, Roger takes Eddie with him to Mexico, where they start a happy new life together in Belize.

[edit] Success

Although it was a short game in terms of length, Bad Mojo sold very well, and its originally creepy atmosphere, challenging puzzles, and excellent acting and storyline made it reach cult status among both Mac and PC gamers alike. Also for a game that was made in 1996, it had aged extremely well, and little had been changed to the environment in the 2004 redux version of the game.

[edit] Trivia

  • Bad Mojo contains four different endings, depending on who the player is able to rescue from the bar's inevitable explosion.
  • If the roach crawls near the mouth of the rat caught in a trap in the basement, the rat will eat him.
  • Standing on the mouse trap in the bathroom will obviously set it off, hinting that you will have to find another way to kill the rat under the sink.
  • One of the pictures in the bar shows the Bad Mojo team crew.
  • The breasts on the woman in the calendar in Roger's research room are topographical.
  • Some of the cut out eyes on the wall of Roger's research room are interactable. Stepping on some will cause them to blink, while others will follow the roach's movement. Others are eyes of famous celebrities, including David Letterman, Daniel-Day Lewis, and Michelle Pfeiffer.

[edit] External links