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Suspended

 
Games: Suspended

Game Description

You are a cloned AI (Artificial Intelligence unit) called the Central Mentality on a mostly automated planet. You were supposed to sleep for 500 years, but something has gone wrong with the planet. All the areas of the planet you control, including the weather, food production, and transportation, are deteriorating. Worse, many of the humans think *you* are responsible for the situation.

Something must be done to fix the systems but, since you cannot move, you must use the six robots in the facility to see, hear, and fix things for you. This is the job you face in Suspended by Infocom.
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Review: Overall

In Suspended, you are a clone acting as an AI (an Artificial Intelligence unit) in charge of a planetary control facility. Unfortunately, the AI who you replaced went dangerously insane and smashed one of the robots irreparably. People were wary of putting in another AI, so when things on the planet start going wrong, they blame you.

Unfortunately, you cannot move around the facility, so you must make use of the robots to see, hear, and move things around the facility. You have six robots, all of them specialized for a particular requirement. Iris is used for seeing, as its eyes are much more acute than a human's would be. Waldo is used to repair and manipulate objects, Sensa can tell you about earthquakes, radiation, and other problems. Auda has very sensitive hearing. Poet can diagnose machines and objects by touching them, but otherwise talks in what seems to be gibberish. And Whiz can plug into the libraries to give you information. It will take all of your robots and resources to find and solve the root of the problem.

As you play, you will find people in the outside world dying from a variety of causes, but mostly from the weather, lack of food, and transportation malfunctions. It is your job to solve the problem before too many people die.

This is a very different adventure from many others by Infocom because, unlike other games, where you may manipulate objects yourself, in Suspended, you must reply on robots to do the job for you.
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Review: Enjoyment

The added level of difficulty of having to order robots to do everything takes some of the enjoyment out of the game.
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Review: Graphics

None
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Review: Sound

None
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Review: Replay Value

Once you have played the game and won once, there is little reason to go back except to try some of the cute ideas at the end of the hint guide.
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Review: Documentation

The manual describes the main situation and tells you about the robots, but the hints are much more helpful.
~ Lisa Karen Savignano, All Game Guide

Production Credits

Written by: Michael Berlyn
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide
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WordNet: suspended
Top
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The adjective has 3 meanings:

Meaning #1: (of undissolved particles in a fluid) supported or kept from sinking or falling by buoyancy and without apparent attachment
  Synonym: in suspension

Meaning #2: temporarily inactive
  Synonyms: abeyant, inactive, in abeyance

Meaning #3: supported from above
  Synonyms: dangling, hanging, pendent, pendant


Wikipedia: Suspended
Top
For other uses, see suspension.
Suspended: A Cryogenic Nightmare
Suspended cover art
Developer(s) Infocom
Publisher(s) Infocom
Designer(s) Michael Berlyn
Engine ZIL
Platform(s) Amiga, Apple II, Atari 8-bit, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, TRS-80, TI-99/4A, Macintosh
Release date(s) Release 5: February 22, 1983

Release 7: April 19, 1983
Release 8: May 21, 1983
Release 8: May 21, 1984

Genre(s) Interactive fiction
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) n/a
Media 3½" or 5¼" disk
System requirements No special requirements
Input methods Keyboard
Suspended on Commodore 64.gif

Suspended: A Cryogenic Nightmare is an interactive fiction computer game written by Michael Berlyn and published by Infocom in 1983. It belongs to the science fiction genre, and is considered by many fans to be one of Infocom's better non-Zork-related titles. Like most Infocom titles, it was ported to most popular personal computers of the day, such as the Apple II, PC, Atari ST and Commodore 64. It was Infocom's sixth game.

Contents

Background

The player's character has been embedded within a facility that controls vital systems, such as moving public transportation belts and weather control, for an Earth-settled planet called Contra. During the player's five-hundred-year tenure, the player would normally be kept in stasis while his sleeping mind serves as the Central Mentality for the largely self-maintaining systems. As the game opens, however, he is awakened by severe error messages; something is going catastrophically wrong. The facility has suffered catastrophic damage from an earthquake, and the Filtering Computers are shutting down or becoming dangerously unstable. The inhabitants of the city assume that the Central Mentality has gone insane and is purposely harming the city, as a previous CM had infamously done. The player's task is to repair the damage and restore the systems to normal states before a crew arrives at the facility to "disconnect" his mind, killing him, to be replaced with a clone.

Gameplay

Suspended takes a novel approach in its game mechanics; rather than being free to move about and interact with the game world directly, the player's character spends the entire game in a state of suspended animation (hence the title) and can only interact by controlling the actions of a number of robot surrogates. Each robot has its own unique strengths and weaknesses, and describes the same rooms and objects in completely different terms based upon those specializations. The robots are:

  • Iris - The only robot with visual sensors, Iris can provide visual descriptions of locations and objects. As the game begins, however, Iris has suffered a burnt-out microchip and cannot see. Iris is confined to the area surrounding the Central Chamber.
  • Whiz - The most technical robot, Whiz is used mainly for interfacing with a central library computer for historical and technical information.
  • Waldo - The most capable physical manipulator, with several limbs for grasping and holding objects. Waldo perceives the world using sonar. (The term "Waldo" was originally coined by Robert A. Heinlein to describe teleoperated robots.)
  • Auda - Auda is equipped with sensitive audio receptors and can provide information on sounds and vibrations.
  • Poet - A diagnostic robot, Poet can sense the flow of electricity; he tends to communicate in somewhat cryptic language.
  • Sensa - Sensa is specialized for the detection of magnetic and photon emissions.

So, for example, Auda will describe a room primarily in terms of the sounds being generated there, Poet will describe it in terms of diagnostics of the equipment there (and phrase it in amusingly metaphorical language), and Iris will provide a visual description. All six of the robots can be given orders in conjunction, and some of the challenges the player faces require that several of the robots work together to solve them.

There is also a seventh robot, an all-purpose multifunction repair robot named Fred, who spends the entirety of the game broken and cannot be repaired. (See red herring.)

Feelies

The tradition of feelies, or extra items included in the game package, was started with the release of Deadline and continued with Suspended. The game's feelies included:

  • A map of the facility and small tokens representing each robot. These were intended to allow the player to more easily keep track of each character's whereabouts in the somewhat confusing layout of the facility. Unlike most other text adventure games, the room descriptions of Suspended do not mention the directions of possible exits, which makes the map vital to playing.
  • Briefing for the Contra Central Mentality, a booklet that provides an overview of the facility, the robots, the computer system, and the player character's responsibilities
  • A letter from the Contra Central Lottery Commission Headquarters explaining that the player has been chosen to serve as Central Mentality for the next 500 years
  • A Contra Central Mentality Lottery Card

Notes

Suspended "mask" box

One unique feature of Suspended was that the player's "score" was given in the number of deaths suffered as a result of the malfunctioning systems, rather than a number of points for collecting objects or accomplishing goals. (Obviously, the goal was to minimize this number, and players would often replay the game many times even after winning it, trying to get the lowest number of casualties possible.)

The game offered three difficulty settings, which affected the number of turns the player had before "disconnection". As one of the many unique features of this game, the player could also play a customized version, configuring how long the game would last and where some of the robots would initially appear. The game also featured a unique "Impossible" setting, which lived up to its name, since the sun went nova after only a few turns, totally destroying the entire planet.

Due to the complicated series of actions required to win the game and the lack of initial information, however, even the easiest setting is widely considered very difficult. Infocom gave Suspended a difficulty rating of "Expert". Still, Suspended was a highly regarded game; science fiction writer Douglas Adams, an early fan of Infocom games, was particularly taken with it. [1]

The original package for Suspended featured a life-sized white plastic mask set into the front of the box, which has become the most sought-after Infocom collectible item. This was replaced in later packages by a picture of a face.

The working title for the game was Suspension.

"Fooble", which is one of the possible reset codes, is the name of one of the vials in Sorcerer, which was released the following year.

Reception

Suspended was well-received by critics. A review by Computer Gaming World considered each robot to have a unique personality, and praised the use of the library computer as an in-game hint system. The game's parser and time-saving techniques (such as a "follow" command) were similarly praised.[1]

Tagline

Only your wits can save the world.

References

  1. ^ Stone, David (July-August 1983), "Suspended: Review", Computer Gaming World: 10–11, 46 

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Games. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Game Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Suspended" Read more