Chuck the Plant
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Chuck the Plant is a mascot of sorts in several of LucasArts' adventure games.
Chuck the Plant is first found in the library of Maniac Mansion. It appears to be an ordinary plant, but using the cursor to examine it (or otherwise attempt to manipulate it) reveals that this is, in fact, Chuck. Apart from the unusual property of having a human name, the plant is otherwise unremarkable and useless (a 'red herring').
Another plant with the label Chuck appears in the game Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure in Henry Jones' house. In the demoversion of the game, it is called LeChuck the Plant.
In Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, there is an object labelled "the Plant", but it is found on a screen that was cut from the final game. It is visible only with SCUMM reverse-engineering programs such as SCUMM Revisited.
Of course, Chuck reappears in the Maniac Mansion sequel Day of the Tentacle as a large, and presumably mutated, cactus.
Note: Some gamers confuse Chuck with a mutated (seemingly intelligent) carnivore plant found upstairs, next to a typewriter. That plant is not Chuck, since Chuck is found in the library and is significantly smaller.
[edit] Appearance in non-Lucas games
- In homage to LucasArts, the adventure game Enclosure also contains a plant named Chuck.
- In The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, Charles the Plant can be found in 'Jobasha's Rare Booksit's'. It is widely accepted in the Elder Scrolls community that Charles is an homage to Chuck. Like many plants in Morrowind, it can provide alchemy ingredients; in this case, a unique ingredient "Meteor Slime", another homage to Maniac Mansion.
- The Chuck Plant also appears in the Housemarque point-and-click adventure Alien Incident.
- Chuck the Plant appears in a LucasFan Games production "The new Adventures of Zak Mc Kracken"
- In the Nintendo DS game Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney, the main character keeps a plant named Charley in his office.
[edit] Meaning
The origin of the name is not clear, nor why it has been given recurring appearances in so many games. It may simply be completely unfathomable to the rest of the world.
Reportedly LucasFilm general manager Steve Arnold, told designer Ron Gilbert that he really liked the name Chuck and would like to see it appear in more games, so maybe the name was given to the plant because there was no room for an additional character name in Maniac Mansion.[citation needed] There are rumors that a cast crew member, called Chuck, wanted to have his name in one of Lucas Arts game. This was used as trivia for LeChuck from the Monkey Island series but not officially applied to Chuck the plant, although a lot of fans think that the "Chuck" similarity is intentional (see the renaming of the plant higher).