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词条 Star Trek: 25th Anniversary (computer game)
释义

  1. Gameplay

  2. Plot

  3. Development

  4. Reception

  5. Sequel

  6. References

  7. External links

{{For|other releases of the game of the same name|Star Trek: 25th Anniversary (disambiguation)}}{{Infobox video game
|title = Star Trek: 25th Anniversary
|image = File:St25thannivboxsm.jpg
|caption = MS-DOS box art
|developer = Interplay Productions
|publisher = Interplay Productions
|producer = {{unbulleted list|Bruce Schlickbernd|Jacob R. Buchert III (Amiga)}}
|designer = {{unbulleted list|Elizabeth Danforth|Jayesh J. Patel|Bruce Schlickbernd|Michael A. Stackpole|Scott Bennie}}
|programmer = {{unbulleted list|Jayesh J. Patel|Paul Edelstein}}
|artist = {{unbulleted list|Todd J. Camasta|David A. Mosher}}
|composer = {{unbulleted list|The Fat Man|Dave Govett|Allister Brimble (Amiga)}}
|series = Star Trek
|platforms = Microsoft Windows, macOS, Linux, MS-DOS, Classic Mac OS, AmigaOS
|released = DOS{{Video game release|WW|1992}}Amiga{{Video game release|WW|1994}}Mac OS{{Video game release|WW|1995}}OS X, Linux{{Video game release|WW|7 May 2015}}
|genre = Adventure
|modes = Single-player
}}

Star Trek: 25th Anniversary is an adventure video game developed and published by Interplay Productions, based on the Star Trek universe. The game chronicles various missions of James T. Kirk and his crew of the USS Enterprise. Its 1993 sequel, Judgment Rites, continues and concludes this two-game series, which together may be seen as the final two years of the USS Enterprise{{'}}s five-year mission.

Gameplay

The player takes on the role of Captain James T. Kirk on board the USS Enterprise, a Starfleet vessel as seen in the American science fiction television series The Original Series. It is split into two main modes, a main bridge view, and a third-person mode whenever an away team is transported to a planet or space station.[1] During several combat sequences the player controls the Enterprise in battle against enemies in space; originally required, Interplay later offered a patch making them optional.[1] The controls on the bridge are split across the crew, with Montgomery Scott allowing access to the shield and power controls, Pavel Chekov controlling navigation, and Hikaru Sulu controlling the orbit of the ship, for example.[3] The away team always consists of Kirk, Spock and Leonard McCoy, as well as one of eight different redshirts, many of whom can die during the mission.[1] The player interacts with these modes using a point and click interface via the mouse.[5]

Plot

The game was broken up into a series of episodes, with each episode opening with a message received in-game from Starfleet Command. They are typically structured to have a ship to ship combat before the game moves onto a third-person adventure game featuring an away team.[6]

The Episodes are as follows:

  1. Demon World: Settlers belonging to a religious sect have reported being attacked by "Demons" near their mines. Kirk must discover the truth behind these "Demons".
  2. Hijacked: The USS Masada has not reported in. Upon investigation, The Enterprise discovers that the ship has been captured by Elasi Pirates who are holding the crew hostage. Kirk must discover a way to recover the ship and crew unharmed.
  3. Love's Labor Jeopardized: Romulans have crossed the Neutral Zone and attacked the Federation Research Station Ark 7. Unfortunately, the attack has created a biohazard situation that Enterprise crew must deal with, as well as the Romulans.
  4. Another Fine Mess.....: When responding to a distress call from a ship under attack by pirates, the Enterprise discovers none other than Harry Mudd is involved. He is traced to a derelict alien spacecraft. The Enterprise crew must discover the connection between the derelict, the pirates and Mudd.
  5. Feathered Serpent: A Klingon battle fleet is about to cross into Federation space, in pursuit of a "War Criminal". The Enterprise must find this "War Criminal" to prevent a war.
  6. That Old Devil Moon: Strange power readings have been detected from a large asteroid approaching a pre-warp star system. The Enterprise discovers an ancient nuclear missile base that does not realize that the war ended 1000 years earlier, and must prevent it from destroying the native civilization a second time.
  7. Vengeance: The Enterprise, responding to a distress call from the USS Republic, finds it nearly destroyed. Kirk must figure out what destroyed the ship and stop those responsible from striking again. Unlike the other missions, this mission is longer and more complex in the CD version of the game; the original floppy version of this episode consists only of a brief away team segment followed by an extensive ship-to-ship combat sequence.

In the CD-ROM edition of the game, following the conclusion of the last mission is a title card memorializing Gene Roddenberry with a short voice over narration by William Shatner praising his life.

Development

The game was initially released in 1992 for the PC on a series of 3.5" floppy disks, with a later release on CD-ROM adding improved sound effects and the voices of the actors from The Original Series.[2][3] When the game was ported to the Amiga for a 1994 release, it was restricted to the Amiga 1200 model as the game required an installation on a hard drive.[1] It became available on a DOS emulator via archive.org in January 2015.[4]

Following a deal with CBS,[5] Star Trek: 25th Anniversary was subsequently re-released on the distribution network GOG.com with, additional German and French subtitles, on 7 May 2015 alongside Judgment Rites and Star Trek: Starfleet Academy for Microsoft Windows, macOS and Linux.[6] Shortly after, Interplay Entertainment also re-released Star Trek: 25th Anniversary to the distribution network Steam, however, only for Microsoft Windows and without subtitles. Both sequels followed the game to Steam the day after, 8 May 2015, respectively.[7]

Reception

{{Video game reviews
| CVG = 93%[8]
| NGen = {{rating|4|5}}[15]
| rev1 = ACE
| rev1Score = 940/1000[9]
| rev2 = Amiga Computing
| rev2Score = 80%[10]
| rev3 = Amiga Down Under
| rev3Score = 80%[11]
| rev4 = Amiga Format
| rev4Score = 50%[12]
| rev5 = Amiga Power
| rev5Score = 62%[13]
}}

Together with Judgment Rites, 25th Anniversary sold more than 300,000 copies by April 1994.[14] 25th Anniversary by itself ultimately sold more than 350,000 units and was a commercial hit, according to PC Player.[15] The original PC version of 25th Anniversary was received positively by the critics; the review in Computer Gaming World stated that 25th Anniversary was "the most outstanding Star Trek yet produced for the computer". The graphics and sound audio were praised, and concluded that "for this Trek-fanatic-turned-reviewer, [the game]'s major shortcoming is that it is over too soon".[16] Frank O'Connor in his review for Computer and Video Games said that "this is the first one to deliver" on the promise of a good Star Trek game. He praised detailing of the sprites and the authentic music, calling it "one of the most involving and entertaining games of its type".[8]

The reviews for the Amiga port were more mixed than the PC version, with criticism often directed at the shaky graphics and unresponsive interface. Simon Clays, for Amiga Computing described the video sequences as "jerky" and called the mouse controls "sluggish", but praised the missions which "require you to use at least a touch of your grey matter".[10] In Amiga Format, Tim Smith called the graphics "juddery", and also criticised the hour-long install of the 9mb onto a hard drive. He did praise both the storylines and the puzzles seen in the game, adding that it should appeal to Star Trek fans but general Amiga gamers would look elsewhere.[12] Dave Golder said in Amiga Power that the game was "dull" and that the adventure segments of the game were "routine", while the space sequences "came across like a bog-standard flight sim" but were "moderately exciting".[13]

Charles Ardai of Computer Gaming World said in May 1994 that the television cast's voices on the CD version was "a little like getting a phone call from an old friend ... the original, as good as it was, can't hold a candle to the new version". He stated that the episodes' "feel is Star Trek through and through", mostly because of the added music and "layer upon layer of digitized bloops, whirrs, hisses, and clicks taken straight off the TV. Phaser fire sounds like phaser fire. Communicators trill the way communicators ought to". Ardai wished that Shatner, Nimoy, and Kelley did not sound so "oddly sedate" but believed that "Trekkers ... will be rapturously grateful to have them at all", and concluded "I can't imagine the Star Trek fan who will want to miss the CD version ... it may be one of the last chances we'll have to see the old crew work together again".[17]Next Generation reviewed the Macintosh version of the game, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that "If you like Star Trek, you've just gotta have this game."[18]

Stew Shearer reviewed the game after its release on GOG.com in 2015, saying that the plots were "predictable, but a lot of fun" and praised the voice work conducted by the original actors. He said that to his surprise, the game was still "rather enjoyable".[19]

25th Anniversary was nominated for Best Fantasy Roleplaying/Adventure Game at the Compute! Choice Awards in 1993, but lost out to Dune.[20] It has been listed as one of the best video games of the franchise. Mike Fahey, while writing for Kotaku in 2009, listed the game as one of the three best alongside Voyager – Elite Force and Bridge Commander, saying that Star Trek games until the release of 25th Anniversary were "generally ho-hum affairs".[21]

Sequel

Following the success of 25th Anniversary, Interplay developed a sequel entitled Judgment Rites. This was set up in the same manner as the original game, with it broken into a series of episodes and the split between the adventure game away team mode and the space combat/flight simulator mode using the same interface.[22]

References

1. ^{{Cite magazine |last=Greenberg |first=Allen |date=March 1994 |title=Passing Judgment On A Pop Icon |url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1994&pub=2&id=116 |magazine=Computer Gaming World |pages=42-43}}
2. ^{{cite news|last1=Blackford|first1=David|title=Star Trek: 25th Anniversary|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-12549870.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160417212753/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-12549870.html|dead-url=yes|archive-date=April 17, 2016|accessdate=June 28, 2015|work=Computer Shopper|date=October 1, 1992|subscription=yes|via=HighBeam Research}}
3. ^{{cite journal|last1=Broida|first1=Rick|title=Star Trek: 25th Anniversary CD-ROM Edition|journal=Compute!|date=June 1994|issue=165|page=112}}
4. ^{{cite web|last1=Birch|first1=Aaron|title=Play over 2000 DOS games in your browser|url=http://www.denofgeek.com/games/internet-archive/33553/play-over-2000-dos-games-in-your-browser|publisher=Den of Geek|accessdate=June 28, 2015|date=January 8, 2015}}
5. ^{{cite news|last1=Tolentino|first1=Josh|title=Maximum Warp: GOG bringing back classic Star Trek games|url=http://www.destructoid.com/maximum-warp-gog-bringing-back-classic-star-trek-games-291748.phtml|accessdate=June 28, 2015|work=Destructoid|date=May 7, 2015}}
6. ^{{cite web|title=Star Trek Premieres on GOG.com|url=http://www.gog.com/news/star_trek_premieres_on_gogcom|publisher=GOG.com|accessdate=June 28, 2015|date=May 7, 2015}}
7. ^{{cite web | url = http://store.steampowered.com/app/359650/ | title = Star Trek™ : 25th Anniversary on Steam | website = Steam | publisher = Valve Corporation | accessdate = 10 August 2015}}
8. ^{{cite journal|last1=O'Connor|first1=Frank|last2=Boone|first2=Tim|title=Star Trek|journal=Computer and Video Games|date=April 1992|issue=125|pages=60–61}}
9. ^{{Citation | last = Whitta | first = Gary | author-link = Gary Whitta | title = Star Trek – The 25th anniversary | newspaper = ACE | pages = 60–65 | date = April 1992 | issue=55}}
10. ^{{cite journal|last1=Clays|first1=Simon|title=Star Trek: The 25th Anniversary|journal=Amiga Computing|issue=71|date=March 1994|pages=108–109|url=https://archive.org/stream/amiga-computing-magazine-071/AmigaComputing_071_Mar_1994#page/n108/mode/1up}}
11. ^{{cite journal|title=Star Trek: 25th Anniversary|journal=Amiga Down Under|date=April 1994|issue=8|page=77}}
12. ^{{cite journal|title=Star Trek: 25th Anniversary|journal=Amiga Format|date=February 1994|issue=56|pages=84–85|url=https://archive.org/stream/amigaformatmagazine-056/Amiga_Format_Issue_056_1994_02_Future_Publishing_GB#page/n83/mode/2up}}
13. ^{{cite journal|last1=Golder|first1=Dave|title=Star Trek|journal=Amiga Power|date=February 1994|issue=34|pages=38–39}}
14. ^{{Cite journal |last=Coleman |first=Terry Lee |date=April 1994 |title=Engage! With Spectrum HoloByte's Role-Playing event |url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1994&pub=2&id=117 |journal=Computer Gaming World |issue=117 |pages=14, 16, 18}}
15. ^{{cite journal | author=Austinat, Roland | title=PC Trek: Eine Kurze Geschichte der Sternzeit | journal=PC Player | date=March 2001 | pages=58, 59 }}
16. ^{{cite news | url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1992&pub=2&id=94 | title=Install Long and Prosper | work=Computer Gaming World | date=May 1992 | accessdate=November 24, 2013 | author=Greenberg, Allen | page=46}}
17. ^{{Cite magazine |last=Ardai |first=Charles |author= |last2= |first2= |date=May 1994 |title=Spock's Vox |department= |url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1994&pub=2&id=118 |magazine=Computer Gaming World |pages=36,38}}
18. ^{{cite magazine|last=|first=|title=Finals|magazine=Next Generation|issue=7|publisher=Imagine Media|date=July 1995|page=76}}
19. ^{{cite news|last1=Shearer|first1=Stew|title=Star Trek: 25th Anniversary – A Highly Logical Adventure|url=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/video-games/goodoldreviews/13994-Good-Old-Reviews-Star-Trek-25th-Anniversary|accessdate=June 28, 2015|work=The Escapist|date=May 30, 2015}}
20. ^{{cite journal|title=The 'Compute' Choice Awards|journal=Compute!|date=January 1993|issue=148|page=65}}
21. ^{{cite news|last1=Fahey|first1=Mike|title=The Best And Worst In Star Trek Video Games|url=http://kotaku.com/5243995/the-best-and-worst-in--star-trek-video-games|accessdate=June 28, 2015|work=Kotaku|date=May 7, 2009}}
22. ^{{cite news|last1=Krasnoff|first1=Barbara|title=Star Trek: Judgment Rites|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15506207.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181117110437/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15506207.html|dead-url=yes|archive-date=November 17, 2018|accessdate=June 28, 2015|work=Computer Shopper|date=July 1, 1994|subscription=yes|via=HighBeam Research}}

External links

  • {{IMDb title|tt0365786|Star Trek: 25th Anniversary}}
  • {{MobyGames|/star-trek-25th-anniversary|Star Trek: 25th Anniversary}}
{{Star Trek video games}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Star Trek: 25th Anniversary (computer game)}}

15 : 1992 video games|Adventure games|Amiga games|Amiga 1200 games|DOS games|Games commercially released with DOSBox|Interplay Entertainment games|MacOS games|Mac OS games|Single-player video games|Video games based on Star Trek: The Original Series|Video games developed in the United States|Video games scored by Allister Brimble|Video games scored by George Sanger|Windows games

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