The Witness | |
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Developer(s) | Infocom |
Publisher(s) | Infocom |
Designer(s) | Stu Galley |
Engine | ZIL |
Platform(s) | Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Apple II, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, TRS-80, TI-99/4A, Macintosh |
Release date(s) | Release 13: May 24, 1983
Release 18: September 10, 1983 |
Genre(s) | Interactive fiction |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Rating(s) | n/a |
Media/distribution | 3½" or 5¼" disk |
System requirements
No special requirements |
The Witness is an interactive fiction computer game written by Stu Galley and published by Infocom in 1983. Like Infocom's earlier title Deadline, it is a murder mystery. The Witness was written in ZIL, which allowed it to be released simultaneously on many popular computer platforms including the Apple II and the Commodore 64. It is Infocom's seventh game.
Contents |
The game takes place in Cabeza Plana, a quiet (and fictitious) suburb of Los Angeles, California in February 1938. Freeman Linder, a local millionaire, has begged the police for protection from a man named Stiles. The player's character is a detective assigned one evening to check out the wealthy man's claims.
Is Linder seriously in danger or just another rich eccentric? Before the player can decide, a window explodes and Linder collapses, dead. The case of possible harassment has just become a murder, with the player as the only living witness. With the help of Sgt. Duffy (last seen in Deadline), the player has until sunrise to solve the mystery. As usual, motive, method and opportunity must all be established to secure a "solid" arrest and the optimal ending.
The suspects include:
With a little exploration, it can easily be proven that Stiles was near the window around the time of Linder's death. But naturally, this is much too neat an explanation; the truth is much more convoluted.
Eventually, the player can prove that Freeman Linder had developed an elaborate scheme. Since he believed Stiles was responsible for his wife Virginia's suicide, he planned to lure Stiles to his house by offering money, then frame him for attempted murder. Linder enlisted Monica to hide a handgun within a grandfather clock and attach a tiny explosive charge to the window. When Linder pressed the button, allegedly to ring for Phong, it would simultaneously detonate the charge and fire the gun, creating the illusion that someone had shot at Linder through the window. The bullet would miss him, he thought, and Stiles would go to jail.
Monica blamed Freeman for her mother's suicide, however. Virginia Linder took her own life in despair because she felt that her husband had emotionally abandoned her, not because of Stiles' influence. Monica subtly altered the angle of the gun so that the shot would be fatal instead of a near-miss. Phong had collaborated in the plot to frame Stiles, but had no idea of Monica's plan to commit murder.
Included in each package of The Witness were the following supplementary items, called feelies:
The Witness was labeled as "Standard" difficulty.
The game is notable as gameplay begins before the actual murder occurs, which the player can witness in different ways due to their actions. Of course, the player is unable to actually prevent the murder, short of killing someone and bringing the game to a premature conclusion.
The game is written in the style of hard-boiled detective novelists of the 1930s, such as Raymond Chandler and Mickey Spillane. Slang of the genre fills the dialogue and descriptions.
"The Brass Lantern", the name of the restaurant advertised on the matchbook, is an apparent reference to the player's primary light source in the Zork series of games.
"Cabeza Plana", the town where Linder lives, is Spanish for "Flat Head". This is another Zork reference, this time to the Flatheads, the royal family of the Great Underground Empire.
In a humorous Easter egg, at one point Phong can be seen "opening a can of worms".
The game was released in 1983 and takes place in 1938.