Fish! is a text adventure game by Magnetic Scrolls released in 1988.[2][3] The game was designed by John Molloy, Phil South and Peter Kemp with contributions by Rob Steggles.

Fish!
Cover art
Developer(s)Magnetic Scrolls
Publisher(s)Rainbird Software
Platform(s)Amiga, Amstrad PCW, Apple II, Acorn Archimedes, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Macintosh, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum.[1]
Release1988
Genre(s)Interactive fiction
Mode(s)Single-player

Plot

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According to the game scenario, the Inter-Dimensional Espionage sends operatives throughout the dimensions to fight evil. This is done by possessing someone's body and controlling his actions.

The player is Agent 10 who enjoys his leave of absence in the body of a goldfish. He learns that an inter-dimensional terrorist group named the Seven Deadly Fins have stolen a focus wheel. In the first part of the game, the player can visit three dimensions (a forest with a smithy, a hippie van near an abbey and a recording studio).

Once the three parts of the wheel are gathered, he learns that the Fins are threatening to take over the water-world of Hydropolis by evaporating the ocean of that planet. The player must warp to Hydropolis to foil the Seven Deadly Fins. The player possesses Dr. Roach, who is in charge of the Project that will transfer water from another dimension to keep Hydropolis alive.

Gameplay

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The game is a standard text adventure with static graphics in some versions.

The game was re-released as part of the Magnetic Scrolls Collection, featuring a GUI with an auto-map system, inventory, and pop-down menus.

Reception

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The game was voted Best 16-bit Adventure Game of the Year at the Golden Joystick Awards.[7]

Keith Campbell of Computer and Video Games wrote that Fish! was "like no other adventure I've played before", and that it is "the most pun packed adventure ever." He praised the humor and cited the game as another example of Magnetic Scrolls "cleaning up on the adventure scene this year."[4] Reviewing Fish in Zzap!64, Kati Hamza wrote, "Every Magnetic Scrolls adventure gets praised to the skies, wins a thousand awards and gets an incredibly high mark in all the magazines. You'd think they could produce a dud once in awhile just for variety's sake". She remarked that Fish is "slick, subtle and sparkles with subaquatic humor", and that its "parser is up to Magnetic Scrolls usual high standards".[5]

In 1992, Charles Ardai of Computer Gaming World wrote when reviewing Magnetic Scrolls Collection that Fish! was "just a shade too crazy. Unpredictable is good; incomprehensible is not", but "if nothing else, this makes the game original" and had "the most clever gags of the three games".[8]

References

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  1. ^ Meier, Stefan. "Magnetic Scrolls Fact Sheet". Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  2. ^ Andrew Rollings, Ernest Adams Andrew Rollings and Ernest Adams on Game Design 2003 p155 "... writing correspondingly improved with the increasing capabilities of the target machines. Games such as The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy from Infocom (publishers of the original Zork series of games) and Fish! from Magnetic Scrolls are ..."
  3. ^ Nick Montfort Twisty Little Passages: An Approach to Interactive Fiction 2005 -p188 "The capable parser did allow Magnetic Scrolls to surpass some of its competitors who had started out producing works ... A different conflation of influences could be seen in Fish!, a work by multiple authors that has been called "something like ...""
  4. ^ a b Campbell, Keith (October 1988). "Fish Exclusive Review". Computer and Video Games (84): 82, 83.
  5. ^ a b Hamza, Kati (as Chuck Vomit) (December 1988). "Fish". Zzap!64 (44). Ludlow: Newsfield Publications: 132, 133. ISSN 0954-867X. OCLC 470391346.
  6. ^ Game review, Crash magazine, Newsfield Publications, issue 63, April 1989
  7. ^ "Golden Joystick Awards 1989". Computer and Video Games (92). Future Publishing: 62–63. June 1989.
  8. ^ Ardai, Charles (November 1992). "Virgin Software's Magnetic Scrolls Collection". Computer Gaming World. p. 64. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
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