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Mr.Samoal

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Hello Bone Fans,

 

Am a new member, I played Grim Fandango in year 1999 & from that day I never stop playing it. I dont know much about computer games.

 

But this game can change the persons act and life. It gives magic and a view about life.

 

The poetry & art & commuist which have gives the player a new taste.

 

My question is there another part of this magical game?

Or a game which is similar in Art & Magic and poetry?

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Hi, and welcome to the forums.

 

No, there is no other part to Grim Fandango and I haven't seen any games that reminded me of it (if someone has, please share). However, I think you should check out Psychonauts which is also a game by Tim Schafer. Haven't played it myself yet, but people's opinions have been positive.

 

There is also a fan team working on a GF Half-Life 2 Mod. More info here.

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Thankyou very much, But I dont think a fan can continue in the same qulity of the owner. Because the secret of GF is the magic and art and poetry.

 

& How is Tim Schafer, I heard years ago that he will continue and do a part 2..

Is he still in work?

Thankyou again :)

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Hey Mr.Samoal,

 

Even though there isn't a sequel to Grim Fandango, you still check out some of the older adventure games by LucasArts if you haven't already (e.g. Day of the Tentacle, Full Throttle (which were both designed by Tim Schafer aswell), Monkey Island, Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis etc.). Even though they don't quite have the same theme as Grim Fandango, if its adventure games you're looking for, then those are definetily games to try out.

 

PS thanks for the link VampireNaomi :)

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Thats beautiful, thankyou VampireNaomi for the information. Its cheerful :)

I will be always around the forum, I liked it & will continue beeing here. :)

 

I have some other questions about the beautiful music and poetry in GF.

Should i ask here or write another thread?

Thanks very much again. :)

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Hey mate!

I'd suggest you Monkey island games - I've played 'em a little bit and I think that you'd enjoy 'em though, like mr. J. Iisac said, the theme ain't the same but somehow you've this same "khuuL idea and black humour" in it. I strongly recommend you to try that one out!

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Welcome Mr. Samoal, I have to say that I feel the same about this game. I have been changed, in many ways, by the excellence of it.

Unfortunately, there are no games which come close to it, but as it has been pointed out, there are other interesting titles to play.

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Mr.Samoal, nice to meet you.

You seem a romantic person, the way you talk about GF.

 

GF is definitely a masterpiece in the computer games' Art form (and I'm convinced computer games' creation is an Art form). I didn't play many games in my life, but I've never encountered anything like Grim. Masterpieces tend to stand alone, usually :).

 

Though there unarguably are other, different games-masterpieces; in adventure genre, as well.

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Thankyou very much for this welcoming.

I share my friends El Virus & Charie in everything that have said about GF.

 

No game can be compared by GF, Because the game has a story and a dream with Art and Poetry & beautiful magical music.

 

Thankyou again for the warm welcoming. :)

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No game can be compared by GF, Because the game has a story and a dream with Art and Poetry & beautiful magical music.

 

Along with LOOM, I think Grim Fandango is the only game that I consider to be Literature.

 

By the way, LOOM is a game that could be considered similar to GF. It has a nice story and excellent music; sadly it is unavailable and is quite a short game.

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By literature, you mean excellent stories, right?

Yes, and profound and artistic as well.

 

To me the first Gabriel Knight game felt more like an interactive novel than a game, probably due to the game's brilliant narrator.

 

I never got around playing the Gabriel Knight series; your avatar was from the game, right?

 

Once again, some of the text-based games of the 80s are exceptionally good.

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I never got around playing the Gabriel Knight series; your avatar was from the game, right?

 

No, my avatar is from Golden Sun for Game Boy Advance. If you ever get the chance to play any of the GK games, give it a shot.

 

Once again, some of the text-based games of the 80s are exceptionally good.

 

Never played any of those. What do you recommend?

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El Virus

Along with LOOM, I think Grim Fandango is the only game that I consider to be Literature.

I've never even heard about LOOM before.

As for Grim, it has always been more like an interactive movie for me.

Does the term Literature you used above mean the same as my masterpiece comp.game or do you just mean it literally, like 'it deserves to be a book' kind of thing?

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If you ever get the chance to play any of the GK games, give it a shot.

 

I am currently trying to get addresses to old-game retailers, so perhaps I'll manage to get some of the Gabriel Knight games. What are them about?

 

Never played any of those. What do you recommend?

 

I lost the link to the site where I downloaded/played them.

But some of the sites at the Abandonware Rings have got some titles.

If you want to buy them, anything by Infocom* is pretty good; furthermore, those by Brian Moriarity (the creator of LOOM, what a small world), which would be Whishbringer, Trinity and Beyond Zork.

 

*This link lets you play the games for free on Java format, try Wishbringer.

 

--------------------------

 

 

I've never even heard about LOOM before.

 

LOOM

 

It's a very creative game, based on an interpretation of The Swan Lake ballet by Tchaikovsky.

The game was available for download somewhere, but last time I tried the file/link was broken.

I would kill to get the whole game, with box and all.

 

As for Grim, it has always been more like an interactive movie for me.

Does the term Literature you used above mean the same as my masterpiece comp.game or do you just mean it literally, like 'it deserves to be a book' kind of thing?

 

With literature, I meant an excellent artistic story; in the format of a masterpiece of a computer game.

I do not think it deserves to be a book, the video game allows you to interact with the characters and situations in a way that no book or movie allow you to.

 

If this had originally been released as a book, I'm sure it would hold the tiltle it really deserves.

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I am currently trying to get addresses to old-game retailers, so perhaps I'll manage to get some of the Gabriel Knight games. What are them about?

 

The first one takes place in New Orleans in 1993. Gory ritual murders have spread fear all over town, but that doesn't bother one person. Gabriel Knight is a struggling novelist and a bookstore owner who is trying to dig up information about the murders to get inspiration for his new book. Unfortunately the murders have triggered something in his mind and almost every night he suffers from the same nightmare. Eventually it becomes apparent that the murders have something to do with his family history and it's up to him to find out what.

 

I know, sounds like a cheesy, clichéd B-class horror movie, but it's far from that.

 

The second and third game have more impressive plots, in my opinion. The second one could be a small lesson for Bavarian history because it doesn't let you proceed before you've read every note and plate in the several museums you have to visit, listened to a tourist track about Neuschwanstein, interviewed a researcher and so on. The bad thing is that if you don't find history interesting, you might feel a little bored.

 

The third game deals with the same subject as The Da Vinci Code, only that it does everything a lot better than Brown's book.

 

Basically the GK games are interactive supernatural detective stories that require you to study the history of the given subject and find out what the heck it has to do with the events in present time. Definitely my favourite game series.

 

Thanks for the links, I'm definitely checking them out. :)

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Basically the GK games are interactive supernatural detective stories that require you to study the history of the given subject and find out what the heck it has to do with the events in present time. Definitely my favourite game series.

 

Sounds interesting, better than what I expected. For the name of the series I had in mind it would be a fantasy or medieval RPG game, luckily it ain't.

 

Thanks for the links, I'm definitely checking them out.

 

Only possible problem, they require you to read a lot (and I am not sure if you can save them) and use DOS Game commands, but after a while you learn to master them.

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Not too big, in my opinion.

 

Have you ever played those RPG books in which you have to choose your own route, roll the dice to beat your enemies and so on? The Citadel of Chaos was brilliant.

 

Yes, but I didn't read anything, I just went to whatever I thought was a good option. There is a hole publisher devoted to those books here.

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You're all talking about the "only games that seemed to be this excellent"...

 

So how many times do I have to say SHENMUE to you people. SHENMUE SHENMUE SHENMUE! I keep saying it, yet rarely do people seem to listen. Shenmue is one of the greatest games created, hugely underrated but unlike any other game out there. It's incredible.

 

Oh, and hi.

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