Atlantis: The Lost Tales

Atlantis: The Lost Tales
Cover art
Developer(s) Cryo Interactive Entertainment
Publisher(s) Cryo Interactive Entertainment (Europe)
Interplay Productions (North America)
Director(s) Rémi Herbulot
Producer(s) Rémi Herbulot
Jean-Martial Lefranc
Philippe Ulrich
Designer(s) Johan Robson
Programmer(s) Éric Safar
Artist(s) Thomas Boulard
Writer(s) Johan Robson
Composer(s) Pierre Estève
Stéphane Picq
Platform(s) Windows, MS-DOS, Saturn, PlayStation
Release PC
  • NA: September 30, 1997
Sega Saturn
  • EU: June 1998
PlayStation
  • EU: October 1998
Genre(s) Adventure
Mode(s) Single-player

Atlantis: The Lost Tales is a 1997 fantasy adventure video game developed and published by Cryo Interactive. Interplay published the game in North America, where it released on September 30, 1997. The game is named after its initial and most important setting, Atlantis. It is the first in a Myst-like series, and is followed by Atlantis II (Beyond Atlantis outside Europe), Atlantis III: The New World (Beyond Atlantis II), Atlantis Evolution and The Secrets of Atlantis: The Sacred Legacy.

Despite poor sales in the United States, Atlantis was a commercial hit, with over 500,000 copies sold worldwide by 2001.

Gameplay

Atlantis is a first-person perspective puzzle game. The entire game is in pre-rendered, panoramic 3-D. The HUD is basically a 'window' into the world of Atlantis, instead of moving a mouse around the screen, moving the mouse actually moves the screen itself. To interact with the world, the player must position the item, NPC or thing into the middle of the screen. Some critics have found this annoying,[2] as there is no crosshair in the middle of the screen. This means the player must guess where the centre is, and move the screen accordingly. This has since been fixed in Beyond Atlantis and Beyond Atlantis II, where a crosshair is apparent.

Progression through the game involves solving various puzzles of varying difficulty. Some puzzles are extremely abstract and the solution is completely unexpected, whereas other puzzles are very simple. Another feature of Atlantis is having periods where the player must react quickly to certain events happening in the game. For example, in one section guards chase the player away from a certain area. If the player hesitates in moving backwards and looking for shelter, then the player will lose and will have to restart from the beginning of the scene. This can also be frustrating, as there is only one particular path the player may take, and taking any other part results in capture, death and restarting.

The Saturn version of the game supports the Saturn mouse, despite the fact that it was only released in Europe, whereas the Saturn mouse was only released in North America and Japan. European Saturns can be used with imported peripherals. The PlayStation version lacks the movement clips found in the other versions.

Plot

The game begins with Seth, the protagonist, joining the Queen's Companions, the personal guardians of the Queen of Atlantis. He discovers after he arrives that the Queen disappeared shortly before he joined. As the story progresses, Seth learns that a power struggle is taking place between the Queen and the Guards of the Consul. The leader of the Guards, Creon, wishes to supplant Ammu, the goddess of the moon, as the most worshiped of Atlantis' gods, replacing her with Sa'at, the sun god; he then wants to conquer the world in the name of Sa'at, using a new weapon that he has developed.

The weapon is revealed to be half of a crystal that is capable of granting immense knowledge to its holder. Long ago, the crystal was split into Light and Dark halves, and the halves were hidden in Easter Island and Stonehenge, respectively. Creon found the Dark Crystal, which has a side effect of driving its holder mad.

Seth retrieves the Light crystal from Easter Island, then returns to Atlantis to face Creon. After Creon's defeat, the weapon he built causes a volcano on Atlantis to erupt. Seth and a few survivors are seen sailing away from Atlantis as it is destroyed by the volcano.

Development

The game features a number of proprietary technologies developed by Cryo. One such technology is called OMNI 3D which provides a smooth, panoramic 360-degree first-person view of the game environment. Unfortunately, this view tends to be less crisp looking than the movement clips that are pre-rendered in the game. All the character animations are motion captured and feature another technology called OMNI SYNC to ensure proper lip synchronization with audio speech.

The soundtrack for Atlantis: The Lost Tales was composed by Pierre Estève & Stéphane Picq of Shooting Star and was released in 1998 as a two-CD set (one of which being an enhanced CD containing wallpapers) on the Shooting Star label.[3]

Atlantis was first released in March 1997.[1]

Reception

Sales

Atlantis was a commercial hit.[4][1] The French newspaper Les Échos reported it as one of the top 10 best-selling computer games of 1997.[4] By April 1998, its global sales had reached 250,000 units, of which 50,000 were sold in France.[1] The game totaled 300,000 units sold by that November.[4] In September 2001, IGN's Dave Zdyrko wrote that Atlantis had topped 500,000 global sales.[5] However, according to Bob Mandel of Adrenaline Vault, the game "sold very few copies sold in the United States" despite its "smash hit" status in European countries.[6] The combined global sales of Atlantis and its first two sequels, Atlantis II and Atlantis III: The New World, surpassed 1 million units by 2004.[7]

Critical reviews

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
CGM[8]
PC Gamer (UK)72%[9]

PlayStation Power gave the game a 52% rating, specifically finding that the game was marred by extended loading times.[10] Adventure Lantern gave the game 86 out 100 score largely due to the intriguing story, pleasant atmosphere and the fascinating locations.[11]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Mizio, Francis (April 10, 1998). "La société des multiloisirs. Jeu sur DVD, livre, disque et site: c'est sous ces quatre formes que sort, le 25 avril, «Atlantis». Quatre versions d'un même univers, par quatre sociétés françaises. Le tir groupé est une démarche payante qui attire les éditeurs. Tel Cryo, qui sort «Ubik», jeu tiré du roman de Philip K. Dick". Libération. Archived from the original on July 17, 2018.
  2. "Atlantis Review". Quandary/Quandaryland. Archived from the original on 2006-04-02.
  3. "Stéphane Picq personal site (CDs section)". Archived from the original on 2011-10-01.
  4. 1 2 3 Feraud, Jean Christophe (November 27, 1998). "Cryo entre en Bourse pour devenir un grand du jeu interactif". Les Échos. Archived from the original on July 14, 2018.
  5. Zdyrko, Dave (September 27, 2001). "Beyond Atlantis 2: The New World". IGN. Archived from the original on August 4, 2002.
  6. Mandel, Bob (September 28, 1999). "Preview; Atlantis II". Adrenaline Vault. Archived from the original on May 16, 2000.
  7. Bronstring, Marek (May 24, 2004). "Atlantis Evolution - E3 2004". Adventure Gamers. Archived from the original on May 27, 2015.
  8. Yans, Cindy (1997). "Atlantis". Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on February 6, 2005.
  9. Pierce, Matthew. "Mystical". PC Gamer UK. No. 45. Archived from the original on March 19, 2002.
  10. PlayStation Power #33 (December 1998), p. 113
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-05-18.
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