Amber: Journeys Beyond

Amber: Journeys Beyond
Developer(s) Hue Forest Entertainment
Publisher(s) Hue Forest Entertainment (1996) (mail order)
Cendant Software (199?)
Changeling (199?)
Graphic Simulations Corporation (199?)
Designer(s) Frank Wimmer, Susan Wimmer
Engine Macromedia Director
Platform(s) Mac OS System 7, Windows 95
Release date(s) 1996
Genre(s) Adventure
Mode(s) Single player

Amber: Journeys Beyond is an American computer game released in 1996 for Apple Macintosh computers and Windows 95. It is the only game produced by Hue Forest Entertainment, founded by Frank and Susan Wimmer.

Gameplay

Amber: Journeys Beyond is a first-person point and click adventure game similar to Myst. Gameplay is nonlinear and events in the game occur at random depending on the player's progress.

Plot

Note: Minor details such as puzzles and their solutions have been omitted for simplicity. As the game is nonlinear, events described below may not necessarily occur in that order when playing the game.

You (the protagonist) have come home from work and check your e-mail. It seems that your friend Dr. Roxanne ("Roxy") Westbridge has recently purchased a reportedly haunted house in North Carolina and is performing paranormal tests there. A friend of yours asks you to check on her, as he is worried that she may be too hasty with the still undeveloped ghost hunting equipment. You drive to the house by means of the highway and then a long dirt road leading to it. Suddenly, in the middle of the road an apparition appears as you are turning left to follow the road. You swerve to the right to avoid the ghostly shape and end up buried in the nearby pond. As you emerge soaking wet from the pond, you explore the garage and house. Roxy appears to be unconscious in the garage with a device on her head and the house has no electricity. After restoring electricity, and exploring inside the house you discover that Roxy has several types of ghost hunting equipment: surveillance cameras, the BAR (Bulbic Activity Reader), a doorknob sensor which detects spiritual residue in doorknobs, the PeeK, a pocket television-like device which allows the user to listen to the sounds in the doorknobs, and works with the BAR and cameras to observe spiritual activity from a safe distance, and the AMBER (Astral Mobility By Electromagnetic Resonance) headset device itself, which allows the user to actually enter the minds of ghosts to discover what they are thinking and seeing and to remind them of who they are so they may ascend. The last device is still in the testing phase and its use is considered to be very risky. Apparently Roxy's spirit is lost "somewhere" while she was attempting to use the AMBER device.

Through the combined use of the devices you discover that there are three resident ghosts in and around the house. Brice, a gardener who believed that UFOs would come to take him away. He fell in love (or obsession) with his employer's daughter, Mandy, who disliked him and didn't share his interests. When he believed that they were finally coming, he banged on the backdoor to the house and called Mandy, who answered. Mandy did not respond positively, so he killed her and placed the body in a hidden compartment under the gazebo he had built. Subsequently, he killed her parents and committed suicide after he realized what he had done. After you assist his spirit, he is received by the aliens; however, rather than being sent to paradise, he is sent to another unpleasant place.

Another ghost is Margaret, whose husband is overseas fighting in World War II. She expects him to come home the next day and has baked a "Welcome Home" cake for him. However, she receives a message saying that her husband has been killed. She commits suicide. After you assist her spirit, she joins her husband's spirit in the afterlife.

The final ghost is Edwin, a child who was sledding when he ended up on the frozen pond. The ice broke and he was trapped beneath it and drowned. You reunite him with his teddy bear and clown doll in Edwin's underwater castle.

After the three ghosts are freed, you help Roxy by doing some programming with her computer, which tells you to place the AMBER on her head then leave the area quickly. After doing so, you stand a safe distance from the garage which apparently explodes. Roxy emerges from the flames seemingly unscathed and unaware of all the events that took place. She thanks you and explains the algorithms for AMBER probably need tweaking (hence the explosion); she asks if everything is all right in the house. Roxy excitedly explains the results of these tests of AMBER should be sent to the lab very soon. In the final moments of the game, Roxy asks, "Where'd you park your car?"

Cast

Reception

The game was not a commercial success as it was an independent project and was not released by a major company. However, around the time of release, the game received moderate to favorable reviews from critics such as GameSpot.[1] In April 1997, when the game was reviewed in Computer Gaming World, it received four stars. Newsweek also gave a positive review in their November 1996 issue.

In later years, the game received praise from several online reviewers and currently has a cult following. The game was not without its criticism however, many of the critics and players felt that the game was not long enough and that the conclusion was anticlimactic.

Awards

References

  1. AMBER: Journeys Beyond at GameSpot, the 1996 review is included.

External links

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