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Populous Information

Populous is a computer game developed by Bullfrog in 1989 and is regarded by many as the first PC God game.[1] In 1991, Populous won the Origins Award for Best Military or Strategy Computer Game of 1990 as well as 1990 Computer Game of the Year in American video game magazine Video Games & Computer Entertainment. It was the first game in the Populous series, preceding Populous II and Populous: The Beginning.

Contents

Synopsis

In this game, first developed for the Amiga, Atari ST and PC, the player adopts the role of a deity and assumes the responsibility to shepherd people by direction, manipulation, and divine intervention. The player has the ability to shape the landscape and grow their civilization with the overall aim of having it conquer an enemy force, which is led by an opposing deity.

Expansion packs

An expansion pack called Populous: The Promised Lands was made available, which added five new types of landscape. In addition, another expansion disk called Populous: The Final Frontier added a single new landscape-type and was released as a cover disk for The One.

Reception

Populous was extremely successful and spawned a number of sequels of increasing complexity.

The game was reviewed in 1989 in Dragon #150 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 5 out of 5 stars.[2]

Populous: The Promised Lands was reviewed in 1990 in Dragon #156 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 5 out of 5 stars.[3]

Biff Kritzen of Computer Gaming World gave the game a positive review, noting, "as heavy-handed as the premise sounds, it really is a rather light-hearted game." The simple design and layout were praised, as were the game's colorful graphics.[4]

Development

Peter Molyneux led development and mentioned in an interview that the reason the player could manipulate terrain was that he was too lazy to design the many pre-defined maps that would have otherwise been required.[citation needed] The 2001 game Black & White, also led by Molyneux (but this time at his company Lionhead Studios), has been called the "spiritual descendant of Populous."

Bullfrog prototyped the game-play as a board game using Lego, over the course of a few days.[4]

Spin-offs

Bullfrog offered Powermonger, a combat-oriented game, based upon the Populous engine.

A new version of the game (published by Xseed Games in America and Rising Star Games in Europe) was developed by Genki for the Nintendo DS and released November 11, 2008.[5] The game allows the user to shape the in-game landscape using the DS's stylus. It also features a multiplayer mode allowing 4 players to play over a wireless connection.[6]

References

  1. ^ Edge Staff (2007-11-01). "50 GREATEST GAME DESIGN INNOVATIONS". Edge. http://www.edge-online.com/features/50-greatest-game-design-innovations?page=0%2C3. Retrieved 2008-12-28. ""IGN Hall of Fame: Populous". IGN. 2008. http://games.ign.com/halloffame/populous.html. Ernest Adams (2008). "What's Next for God Games". Designer's Notebook. http://www.designersnotebook.com/Lectures/God_Games/god_games.htm.
  2. ^ Lesser, Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk (October 1989). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (150): 68–73, 95.
  3. ^ Lesser, Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk (April 1990). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (156): 89–95.
  4. ^ a b Kritzen, Biff (August 1989). "And On The Eighth Day...". Computer Gaming World: pp. 16–17
  5. ^ IGN: Populous DS
  6. ^ IGN: Populous DS Preview

External links

Bullfrog video games
Populous series Populous · Populous II · Populous: The Beginning · Populous DS
Syndicate series Syndicate (American Revolt) · Syndicate Wars
Magic Carpet series Magic Carpet · Magic Carpet 2
Theme series Theme Park · Theme Hospital · Theme Aquarium · Theme Park World (SimTheme Park) · Theme Park Inc (SimCoaster) · Theme Park DS
Dungeon Keeper series Dungeon Keeper · Dungeon Keeper 2 · Dungeon Keeper 3 (cancelled)
Other games Fusion · Powermonger · Flood · Hi-Octane · Genewars
See also Peter Molyneux · Mucky Foot Productions · Lionhead Studios

Categories: 1989 video games | Acorn Archimedes games | Amiga games | Atari ST games | Bullfrog Productions games | DOS games | Electronic Arts games | Game Boy games | God games | Mac OS games | NEC PC-9801 games | Origins Award winners | Populous | Real-time strategy video games | Sega Mega Drive games | Sega Master System games | Super Nintendo Entertainment System games | TurboGrafx-16 games | Video games with expansion packs | Video games with isometric graphics

 

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7 comentarios El caso de Populous es el de unos de esos juegos de autor con el nombre de su creador avalando la creacion Y es que cualquier cosa a la que Peter Molyneaux haya puesto su nombre

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Wed Mar 23 07:10:29 2011