Space Quest V: The Next Mutation
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Space Quest V: The Next Mutation | |
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Developer(s) | Dynamix |
Publisher(s) | Sierra |
Designer(s) | Mark Crowe and David Selle |
Engine | SCI |
Release date(s) | 1993 |
Genre(s) | Adventure |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Rating(s) | ESRB: Teen |
Platform(s) | DOS |
Media | 3.5" Floppy Disk |
System requirements | 286 CPU, 640KB RAM, EGA, MCGA, or VGA graphics, Adlib, Disney Sound Source, Game Blaster, MIDI, Microsoft Sound System, PC speaker, Pro Audio Spectrum, PS/1 Audio Card, Roland MT-32, Sound Blaster, Tandy/PCjr, or Thunderboard sound card |
Input | Keyboard, Joystick or Mouse |
In Space Quest V, Roger Wilco is now a cadet in the StarCon academy. He graduates (or rather, cheats through the final exam) and is appointed captain of his own spacecraft, a space garbage scow.
Released on February 5, 1993, SQ V is unusual in the series in that it is primarily a specific parody of Star Trek; while there are some references to other fiction movies, like Predator, Alien, and The Fly, the game never moves too far away from its primary target. Roger's new ship features a command bridge and several officers to whom he can give orders, and eventually adopts a facehugger mascot called Spike, who "isn't quite housebroken": he leaves puddles of caustic acid behind him wherever he goes.
[edit] Plot
This game starts in a space station as Roger cheats to pass a StarCon Academy final exam. He's then given his own command— the garbage scow SCS Eureka, which looks like an oversized vacuum cleaner. The game involves several small missions, similar to ones seen in typical Star Trek episodes. Some missions are:
- Roger is hunted, alone, on a jungle planet by a homicidal gynoid (the apparent sister of the Arnold Schwarzenegger look-alike from Space Quest III). The gynoid has an invisibility device and a laser very similar to the plasma caster of the Predator.
- At one point Roger is in the process of being teleported when a fly buzzes into the beam. The teleporter malfunctions, and Roger ends up in a tiny fly body with a human head. He then must find a way to restore his body, while the fly, in Roger's body with a fly head, acts rather stupidly (even by Roger Wilco standards) and jumps into garbage piles.
- While visiting a "space bar", Roger must free his chief engineer from the brig, where he ended up after starting a fight triggered when he overheard a rival ship's crewmember refer to the Eureka as a garbage scow. This parodies the bar fight scene in the famous Trek episode "The Trouble with Tribbles"—except that in this case, as Roger points out, the Eureka actually is a garbage scow!
Roger's son from the future saved him at the beginning of SQIV, and later he shows a hologram of Roger's son's mother. Roger meets this woman in SQV and must protect her, or else his son would not exist, and thus neither would Roger.
The main plot is to stop a mutagenic disease that is spreading through the galaxy by discovering its source, and fighting everyone that got infected. In the end, the disease infects the crew members of the SCS Goliath, the StarCon flagship, whose toupee-wearing commander, Raemes T. Quirk (a rather blatant spoof of Captain Kirk, as portrayed by William Shatner), subsequently attacks the Eureka. In the end, Roger sacrifices his ship to get rid of the plague - and suddenly, if temporarily, becomes the commander of the fleet's flagship.
Roger is presented in a more positive light than usual. He's still a bungler and flies a ship that's falling apart at the seams, but along the adventure he gains the genuine respect of his crew and gets the girl in the end.
[edit] SCS Eureka
This information is from the beginning of the game.
- Crew positions:
- Captain - Roger Wilco
- Pilot/Navigator/Tactical Officer - Droole
- Communications Officer - Flo
- Engineer - Cliffy
- Science Officer - Unfilled
- Systems (working ones):
- Engines (warp and conventional)
- Communications
- Sensors (short- and long-range)
- Shields
- Weapons (minimal)
- Teleporter
- EVA craft
- Garbage retrieval
- Garbage compression
- Chicken Egg Timer Self-Destruct
Once Roger defeats the previously-mentioned gynoid (named WD-40), Cliffy rebuilds her and programs her as a science officer. Also, Roger can retrieve the cloaking device from WD-40's ship (which looks a lot like a Klingon Bird of Prey) and have Cliffy install it on the Eureka.
[edit] Development
This game was the first in the series not designed by the "Two Guys from Andromeda": only Mark Crowe worked on the project, and the game's sense of humour is noticeably different than that in previous games. It was also the first Space Quest game that wasn't developed in-house by Sierra On-Line, but instead by Sierra's sister company, Dynamix, to which Mark Crowe had relocated shortly after the release of Space Quest IV.
Space Quest V was also the only Space Quest game, and the second Sierra title overall (Leisure Suit Larry 5 was the first) to be sponsored by a real-life company. The logo for Sprint would appear following any communications transmissions, appear on a billboard in the Spacebar, and also appear in the ending credits. Additionally, at one point in the game, there is a dialogue between two people where one denounces MCI's "Friends & Aliens" plan as "just not worth it." [1]
Although this game came after the CD-ROM version of Space Quest IV, it was released on floppy disks only, and early plans for a "talkie" version of the game were scrapped. According to then-Dynamix artist Sean Murphy, this was because of Dynamix being in financial trouble at the time and eager to release new games instead of working on "gold versions" of already-released games.
The game's copy protection involves the player's being required to input five-digit target coordinates before going to warp.
Preceded by Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers |
Space Quest V: The Next Mutation 1993 |
Succeeded by Space Quest 6: The Spinal Frontier |