The Lawnmower Man (video game)

The Lawnmower Man

Cover art
Developer(s) SCi
Publisher(s) SNES

Sega Mega Drive, Mega CD

  • NA Time Warner Interactive
  • EU Time Warner Interactive

Designer(s) Simon Pick
Composer(s) Allister Brimble
Platform(s) Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Super NES, PC, Sega CD, Game Boy
Release date(s) SNES
  • JP February 11, 1994
  • NA November 1993
  • EU 1993

Sega Mega Drive/Genesis

Sega Mega CD

Genre(s) Action
Mode(s) Single-player
Distribution Cartridge
CD-ROM

The Lawnmower Man is a video game based on the 1992 film of the same name. The game was released/published in Japan by Coconuts Japan under the title Virtual Wars (バーチャル ウォーズ Bācharu Uōzu).

Plot

Dr. Lawrence Angelo is a scientist working for Virtual Space Industries (VSI) in "Project 5", a secret research facility that attempts to increase the intelligence of primates using psychotropic drugs and virtual reality (VR) training. Dr. Angelo is reluctant to use the research for military purposes, and after one of the chimps escapes and shoots a guard, Dr. Angelo is given a forced vacation. While taking notes on the need for experiment with a human subject, he discovers Job Smith (Jeff Fahey), a man with an intellectual disability who makes his living by doing odd jobs such as mowing the grass (hence the title of the movie). Angelo takes in Job, subjecting him to VR treatment. The first experiments quickly increase Job's intelligence, but after an accident, Dr. Angelo stops the experiments. The Shop, a secret agency overseeing Project 5, reinserts the drugs responsible for Job's violent behavior into the program and speeds up the treatment. As Job develops telekinetic powers, he starts to take revenge on those who abused him before he began the treatments, and plots to take over all of the computers in the world.

The SNES version continues the storyline after the point where it ends in the film. Job transfers his mind into VSI's computers, and from there is able to corrupt and destroy information systems all over the world, a course of action which is implied to bring about World War III. With society in complete meltdown, Dr. Angelo discovers that Job has been acting under the control of a person known as the Doomplayer, who is the head of The Shop, and poised to take over what remains of the world. With Job apparently having been erased now that he has served his purpose, Angelo sets off to put an end to The Shop once and for all.

Gameplay

While the CD version of the game (PC, Sega CD) is an interactive movie, all three cartridge versions are platformers. The player takes control of either Dr. Angelo or Carla Parkette (the mother of Jobe's best friend) in a typical side-scrolling shooting action, similar to Contra and Metal Slug. The player collects weapon upgrades or data discs. Once the player has collected a number of data discs, the discs morph into a Virtual Suit that gives the player protection from one hit.

The player visits several locations seen in the movie, such as Harley's Gas 'Er Up and the VSI headquarters. The game includes true-3D level connectors that are based on the CG sequences of the movie. These involve avoiding obstacles and the occasional high-speed shooting in the VR world. There are four different levels (Virtual World, Cyber War, Cyber Run and Cyber Tube), and each takes a slightly different approach. Virtual World is set in first person and the objective is to dodge obstacles such as trees and arches to get to the exit. Cyber War is similar to Virtual World, but with some shooting stops. Cyber Run is set in the third person and requires occasional shooting of obstacles, while Cyber Tube involves fast travel and plenty of enemies in a VR tunnel.

Reception

Reviewing the Genesis version, GamePro criticized that the quality of the controls and graphics varies through the game, but praised the game's combination of "above average" run-n-shoot adventure, "hypnotic" first-person flying, and "brain-teasing" puzzles.[1]

GamePro commented that the Sega CD version makes good use of the system's audio and graphical capabilities, but that the puzzle-based gameplay is dull.[2] Electronic Gaming Monthly gave it a 5.6 out of 10, remarking that "The variety of games is a good option, but the overall appeal of the whole theme seems tired by now."[3]

Sequel

In late 1995, SCi released a sequel for MS-DOS and Macintosh computers known as CyberWar. Copies of the sequel are quite rare, as it had a limited release by Interplay instead of the publisher of the first game, Time Warner Interactive. CyberWar splits from the story of the second movie, Lawnmower Man 2: Beyond Cyberspace, and has its own story. In early 1996, rumors of a third Lawnmower Man video game were spread via chatrooms and video game magazines such as Next Generation and Electronic Gaming Monthly's Quartermann column. The rumors suggested a release for Sega Saturn, Sony PlayStation and Microsoft Windows 95, but no further sequels were produced and no further news has been reported by these publications.

References

  1. "ProReview: The Lawnmower Man". GamePro (IDG) (65): 110. December 1994.
  2. "ProReview: The Lawnmower Man". GamePro (IDG) (69): 54. April 1995.
  3. "Review Crew: Lawnmower Man". Electronic Gaming Monthly (Ziff Davis) (66): 42. January 1995.

External links