Dracula Unleashed

Dracula Unleashed

Box art
Developer(s) ICOM Simulations
Publisher(s) Viacom New Media
Director(s) Mike Plant
Designer(s) Anthony Sherman
David Marsh
Karl Roelofs
Katherine Tootelian
Platform(s) Sega CD, DOS, PlayStation 2, Macintosh, Xbox
Release 1993
Genre(s) FMV adventure
Mode(s) Single-player

Dracula Unleashed is a 1993 video game created by ICOM Simulations and published by Viacom New Media for the Sega CD, Apple Macintosh and DOS platforms.

It was one of the earliest titles to make heavy use of full-motion video as an integral part of the gameplay. Other contemporary titles utilizing full-motion video include Night Trap, Sewer Shark and Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective.

Story

The player assumes the identity of a young Texas businessman named Alexander Morris, who has come to London, England during the winter of 1899 to research the strange surroundings involving his brother Quincey's death 10 years earlier. In the process, he meets an English woman named Annisette Bowen and becomes distracted and engaged to be married too.

Due largely to their "extremely close relationship", Quincey's good friend, Lord Arthur Holmwood, has proposed Alexander's induction into the mysterious and exclusive Hades Club. However, Alexander Morris soon discovers a part of his brother's life he had no knowledge of: Quincey Morris was part of a group which destroyed the legendary vampire, Count Dracula.

As Alexander Morris, the player must travel to specific locations in London at certain times with certain items gathered throughout Morris' travels in order to gather clues about the events which occur during the game and achieve victory over Dracula.

DVD

In 2002, Infinite Ventures, Inc. released the game on DVD. The game is identical in play, but uses full-screen, DVD-quality video. It also has a "behind the scenes" featurette, as well as some audio bloopers.

There are some minor differences between the DVD version and the Sega CD and PC versions:

Parental advisory

When it was released for the Sega CD, it was given an MA-13 label by the Videogame Rating Council. The game has a spooky atmosphere and musical score, along with some images of blood and a very effeminate bookstore owner. It was also reviewed by BBFC and attributed a 15 rating.

Reception

GamePro gave the Sega CD version a positive review. They criticized that the slow-moving cursor and long load times can make the game painfully slow, but highly praised the audio, gameplay, and "well-acted and nicely staged video", especially the "eerie" dream sequences.[1] Electronic Gaming Monthly commented that despite the full motion video being excessively grainy, the riveting storyline and "excellent" soundtrack keep the player invested in the game. They scored it a 7.25 out of 10.[2]

References

  1. "ProReview: Dracula Unleashed". GamePro (57). IDG. April 1994. p. 38.
  2. "Review Crew: Dracula Unleashed". Electronic Gaming Monthly (57). EGM Media, LLC. April 1994. p. 40.
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