Genre: | Adventure Game: Text/Illustrated |
Publisher: | Incentive |
Cover Art Language: | English |
Machine Compatibility: | Spectrum 48K, Spectrum 128K |
Release: | Professionally released on Cassette |
Available For: | Amstrad CPC464, BBC Model B, Commodore 64 & Spectrum 48K/128K |
Compatible Emulators: | ZXSpin (PC (Windows)) Nutria (PC (MS-DOS)) |
Original Release Date: | 27th November 1986 |
Original Release Price: | £7.95 |
Market Valuation: | £11.53 (How Is This Calculated?) |
Item Weight: | 98g |
Box Type: | Cassette Double Plastic Clear |
Author(s): | Tim Walsha & Simon Lipscomb |
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Not a bad game overall, but I found it difficult to get on the same wavelength, and reached a personal maximum of 14 per cent. Read Review
Winter Wonderland's location descriptions are never particularly long, but they are always well-constructed, imaginative pieces with clues as to how you might proceed. Read Review
Should be quite fun. As you'd expect from The Graphic Adventure Creator the graphics are good, but as an adventure it's a bit basic for the full price. Read Review
The game itself doesn't quite live up to the expectations created by the scenario, but I'd be happy to go back to it and I reckon it's just got the edge on Apache Gold. Shame about the price. Read Review
A game with limited vocabulary and a disappointing lack of responses. Torrance gives clues which are laughable for their lack of subtlety. Read Review
Breaking through the dense cloud cover, you were relieved to see a dazzling white snowfield spread below you. Desperately preparing for a crash landing, you were distracted by a glint of sunlight on glass - a building? Could this be the lost civilisation? Your attention however was drawn back to the ground, hurtling towards you...
An illustrated adventure fantasy set deep in the Himalayan mountains. Written on the Graphic Adventure Creator by Tim Walsha and Simon Lipscomb.
Winter Wonderland is one of the first in the Medallion Graphic Adventure series. The Medallion adventure award is only given to the very best adventures written using the Graphic Adventure Creator.
Having studied and practised Anthropology for over ten years, you had all but given up on your dreams to make some great discovery that would put your name in the history books. Until, that is, you received a Telex from your Russian Archeologist friend, Sergio Kirov, currently working in Tibet. In it, he claimed to have discovered evidence of a civilisation that had advanced at exacty the same rate as the rest of Mankind, yet totally independent of it.
Sergio requested that you come to Tibet as quickly as possible to give your expert advice. Naturally, you booked a flight as soon as you could.
Landing at Lhasa airport you found that Sergio was not there, but one of the locals told you that he had left a message telling you to meet him at the dig site. As this was on the lower slopes of the Himalayas - easily accessible by aircraft - and you being a competent pilot, you hired a run-down Cessna from a small airfield and set off, following Sergio's instructions on how to find the dig.
You were, however, in too much of a hurry to check the weather forecast and you soon became caught in a freak snowstorm that took you higher and higher into the mountains. The tiny plane's engine could not cope with the altitude and soon gave up, leaving you flying blind with no engine. Your Mayday calls went unanswered, so you decided to try and land, hoping and praying that you were above flat land.
Breaking through the dense cloud cover, you were relieved to see a dazzling white snowfield spread below you. Desperately preparing for a crash landing, you were distracted by a glint of sunlight on glass - a building! Could this be the lost civilisation?
Your attention however, was drawn back to the ground hurtling towards you...
Upon loading, the computer will show your current predicament and ask you what you wish to do. You can then enter your instructions.
Example commands:
Some commands can be abbreviated, e.g. N for NORTH, INV for INVENTORY, etc.
Winter Wonderland incorporates a parset which enables you to enter multiple commands separated by AND, THEN, a comma or a full stop.
The word IT will be interpreted as the last noun entered, e.g. in the above example - IT = the box.
LOAD"" (ENTER)
128K users should use 48K Basic mode and load as directed above.
This game was mentioned in the following articles:
The following utilities are also available to allow you to edit the supplied screens of this game:
A digital version of this item can be downloaded right here at Everygamegoing (All our downloads are in .zip format).
Download | What It Contains |
---|---|
A digital version of Winter Wonderland suitable for ZXSpin (PC (Windows)), Nutria (PC (MS-DOS)) |
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