Night of the Raving Dead
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Sam & Max: Night of the Raving Dead | |
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Developer(s) | Telltale Games |
Publisher(s) | Telltale Games GameTap |
Designer(s) | Brendan Q. Ferguson David Grossman Steve Purcell |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release date | USA February 12, 2008 (GameTap) INT February 13, 2008 (Online) |
Genre(s) | Adventure |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Rating(s) | ESRB: T |
Media | Download |
Input methods | mouse |
"Night of the Raving Dead" is the third episode of Sam & Max Season Two created by Telltale Games and published by GameTap. Compared to the episodes before and after it, it was considered to be disappointing by many reviewers.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The episode begins with Sam and Max trapped in a mortal contraption, the Soul Stealer, by Jurgen, a German emo styled vampire, while reminiscing about how they got themselves in this mess.
It all started when a zombie stormed in Sam and Max's office and stole one of their most prized items, the right hand of Jesse James, to replace his lost one. Soon the duo figured that the whole town was infested with lots of them, and their investigations tracked the source of this outbreak to Jurgen's castle in Stuttgart, Germany.
Upon arriving at "The Zombie Factory" (which turns out to be a rave), the freelance police meets the emo vampire, who tells them that there was nothing they could do to stop his intentions, as the zombies were being attracted to his "incomparable style". To thwart his plans, Sam and Max created a series of incidents to break apart his reputation, but after trying to take down Jurgen by themselves, they ended up being defeated and trapped in his "Soul Stealer" device, which transformed them into zombies too, separated from their souls.
With the help of a Frankenstein-like monster created by Jurgen, Sam and Max managed not only to find a way to return to the world of living, but to make their Euro-nemesis pay the price for good. Just before the end of the episode, Flint Paper, who was following Bosco, revealed to the duo that somehow he disappeared from the Earth.
[edit] Trivia
- One of the buttons in Jurgen's disco table contains a recorded voice saying "Sub-Zero", in allusion to the Mortal Kombat video game series.
- When Sam unscrews the bulb from Stinky's sun lamp, Max says "Did you just get déjà vu?" This refers to Sam & Max Hit the Road where, at one point in the game, Sam unscrews a bulb illuminating a signpost in the office closet.
- Curt, one of the C.O.P.S., explains that S.O.L. (Stuttgart On Line), (which is a play on AOL "America On Line") their new Internet service provider, is "so simple, even a zombie could use it", a possible reference to an AOL TV ad from several years ago that used the phrase "So easy, even dad can use it." and/or a reference to the famous GEICO "caveman" ad campaign.
- Jurgen lets out a Wilhelm scream as he's crushed by the Soul Sucker.
- After Sam and Max are killed in Jurgen's machine, "You Are Dead" appears on the screen in a similar fashion to the Resident Evil video game series. The typewriter ribbon Sam and Max find in the nightclub is another reference to Resident Evil. After picking up the ink ribbon, Max comments that they really need healing herbs, a common healing item in Resident Evil. Later on, a zombie tells you that he worked for a drug company, but that an accident had happened, referencing the fictional "Umbrella Corporation", which is also from Resident Evil.
- The driving game developed by the C.O.P.S. in this episode is an allusion to the 1984 Atari video game, Paperboy.
- After Jurgen's monster awakens, he proclaims "Happy Birthday!" This alludes to Frosty the Snowman who says this whenever he appears.
- Jurgen's fighting pose is the "crane stance" from the final scene of the film The Karate Kid.
- The horse call whenever Agent Superball's name is mentioned is a running gag from the film Young Frankenstein.
- Title of this game is a parody of Night of the Living Dead,a 1968 black-and-white independent horror film directed by George A. Romero
- If you press the button on the buzzer in the TV-studio, Sam will pretend to answer it, saying "Hi, Elaine. Come on up", a reference to the TV-show Seinfeld.
- The plot consisting of raving, zombies and an overconfident German vampire may be references to a German director Uwe Boll and his movie House of the Dead
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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