Space Quest



         


The Space Quest series of six computer games describes the adventures of heroic (if clumsy and none-too-bright) janitor Roger Wilco as he campaigns through the galaxy for truth, justice and really clean floors.

Initially created for Sierra On-Line by the famous Two Guys from Andromeda (who made a guest appearance in Space Quest 3), the games were mainly a vehicle for terrible puns and really silly puzzles, as Roger fights the likes of Sludge Vohaul and the Pirates of Pestulon to save the galaxy and impress girls.

Unlike the LucasArts games, miscalculations and bad choices can lead to the unfortunate (but generally hilarious) demise of your hero - followed by the dreaded "Restore/Restart" screen.

[Top]

Games

Sierra has tried on several occasions to revive the series for another episode, going as far as working with developer Escape Factory to storyboard and begin creating a game, before ending funding.

Space Quest 7 was way underway when Sierra released the Space Quest Collection: consisting of Space Quest I to V. However, due to the poor sales of this collection (maybe because all Space Quest fans already owned them) and the decreasing popularity of the adventure genre, Space Quest 7 was subsequently canned.

[Top]

'Future' sequels

In SQ IV Roger travels in time, both past and present. Humorously, the creators didn't give the ages Roger traveled in year numbers or another temporal unit, but in sequel numbers! SQ IV takes 'place' in these ages/games:

These games don't actually exist, but exist only in Space Quest's timeline and shed light in the SQ universe's future, in a post-apocalyptic era for the planet Xenon. However it is believed that if Sierra ever continued production fo the series and reached number XII, it would be released under these titles and be faithful to the scenario presented above.

[Top]

Comics

Adventure Comics (a division of Malibu Graphics Publishing Group released three issues based on the Sarien Encounter in 1992 under the name The Adventures of Roger Wilco. The first was written by John Shaw and was in full color. The other two were written by











  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License