Fahrenheit 451 (video game)

Summary

Fahrenheit 451 is an interactive fiction game released in 1984 and based on the 1953 novel of the same name by Ray Bradbury. Originally released by software company Trillium, it was re-released in 1985 under the company's new name Telarium.

Fahrenheit 451
Developer(s)Byron Preiss Video Productions
Trillium
Publisher(s)Trillium
Designer(s)Lee Jacknow
Robert Strong
Programmer(s)Michael P. Meyer
Artist(s)Robert Strong
Brian Humphrey
Writer(s)Len Neufeld, Ray Bradbury
Platform(s)Apple II, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, Macintosh, MSX
Release1984
Genre(s)Interactive fiction
Mode(s)Single-player

The player's goal is to help Guy Montag, the main character from the novel, to evade the authorities and make contact with an underground movement. Bradbury contributed to the game[1] by writing the prologue and responses of the game's intelligent computer "Ray".[2]

Publication history edit

The plot and text of the game were co-written[3] by Len Neufeld (known for his previous authorship of books in the Be an Interplanetary Spy interactive novel series), working under the aegis of Byron Preiss Visual Publications.

The game was released for the Apple II, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, Macintosh, MSX and Tandy computers.

Plot edit

At the ending of Fahrenheit 451, former Fireman Guy Montag is a fugitive, wanted for murder for killing his supervisor and stealing contraband books. The game takes place five years later. A pointless war has swept across the country, leading to martial law by the Firemen. Now an agent for the literary underground, Montag makes his way to New York. His mission is to break into the heavily guarded New York Public Library on 42nd Street. The books themselves were burned, but the contents had first been transferred to microcassette. The microcassettes need to be retrieved and uploaded into the Underground's information network. Along the way, he discovers that Clarisse McClellan, the young woman who inspired him to rebellion, is still alive.

Challenges for the player involve finding ways to alter one's appearance, fingerprints, and "chemindex" (body chemistry) in order to evade detection. Other issues arise in finding food to eat and safe places to rest. The player must also make contact with members of the Underground hiding in the city, through the use of a lighter and literary quotations.

In the end, Montag is able to break into the Central Library and meet up with Clarisse. The microcassettes are found and transmitted on the information network to resistance cells all over the world. While Montag and Clarisse achieve victory in saving the extensive collection of literature, it costs them their lives as firemen storm the office after the last cassette is transmitted, immolating them both.

Reception edit

In the 1980s, a reviewer praised the "gripping prose" and the "unique approach of obtaining and using literary quotations".[4] German reviewers maintained the complexity of the plot, the graphics and the large number of scenes and non-fictional characters.[5]

In 1993, a German study about the history of interactive fiction described Fahrenheit 451 as a highly complex, interactive computer fairy tale.[6] It referred to the adventure as a play with classic literature quotations.[7]

Reviews edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ray Bradbury, from the game package blurb: "I'm thrilled to be participating in the evolution of my Fahrenheit 451 into a computer adventure. For anybody curious about what happens to Montag after the book ends, or about what science fiction software might be, here is an exciting place to start."
  2. ^ Murphy, Jamie (1985-05-13). "Stepping into the Story: Players participate in 'interactive fiction'". Time. Vol. 125, no. 19. Reported by Cristina Garcia. p. 64. Archived from the original on 2010-10-29. Retrieved October 7, 2021. For Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury supplied programmers with more than 100 possible responses to questions that players are able to pose to 'Ray,' an intelligent computer that figures heavily in the story line. (the quote is possibly on page 2)
  3. ^ a b "GAMES Magazine #63". May 1985.
  4. ^ Gil Merciez: "Fahrenheit 451", Antic Amiga Magazine, Vol. 5 Nr.1, 5/1985, p.81).
  5. ^ Boris Schneider-Johne, Heinrich Lenhardt: Science Fiction-Adventures, Happy Computer 5/1985, p.145ff (in German)
  6. ^ Werner Faulstich: Von Trollen, Zauberern, der Macht und anderen wundersamen Abenteuern. Kleine Einführung in interaktive Computer-Märchen [From trolls, wizards, power and other wondrous adventures. Brief Introduction to interactive computer-tales.], Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik [Journal for Literature and Linguistics], Vol. 92, 1993, p. 96-125 (p. 114) (in German)
  7. ^ Werner Faulstich: Von Trollen, Zauberern, der Macht und anderen wundersamen Abenteuern. Kleine Einführung in interaktive Computer-Märchen [From trolls, wizards, power and other wondrous adventures. Brief Introduction to interactive computer-tales.], Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik [Journal for Literature and Linguistics], Vol. 92, 1993, p. 96-125 (p. 117) (in German)

External links edit

  • Fahrenheit 451 CASA: The Classic Adventure Solution Archive
  • Text version of the game manual
  • Fahrenheit 451 at Museum of Computer Adventure Game History by Howard Feldman
  • Fahrenheit 451 at Adventureland by Hans Persson and Stefan Meier
  • Fahrenheit 451 at MobyGames
  • Fahrenheit 451 at the Interactive Fiction Database
  • Game Magazine #64 At the internet archive