Devo Presents Adventures of the Smart Patrol | |
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Developer(s) | Inscape |
Publisher(s) | Inscape |
Writer(s) | Gerald V. Casale, Mark Mothersbaugh |
Platform(s) | Macintosh, Windows, Windows 3.x |
Release | 1996 |
Genre(s) | Adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Devo Presents Adventures of the Smart Patrol is a CD-ROM video game developed and published by Inscape and co-created by American new wave band Devo. It was released in 1996.
Set in the fictional universe of Spudland, Devo Presents Adventures of the Smart Patrol has the players travel from various places with the members of the Smart Patrol. The player has twelve in-game hours to capture Turkey Monkey, "an insane, horrible freak mutant, the result of a rogue recombinant DNA experiment", [1] and find the cure for osso bucco myelitis, a bone-dissolving disease that forces its victims to walk around in skeleton-like suits. Meanwhile, the player must face off against antagonists such as the health care provider Universal Health Systems and entertainment corporation Big Media, who are suppressing the cure, as well as right-wing fundamentalists known as the Pilgrims. Helping the Smart Patrol are the scientists Sun Wang Pin and Dr. Byrthfood, as well as General Boy and his son Booji Boy. [1] [2]
Devo Presents Adventures of the Smart Patrol was developed and published by Inscape. Devo's founders Gerald V. Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh co-wrote the story to the game. [3] The band was also involved with composing the music and overseeing the graphics. [2] Casale approached Inscape president Michael L. Nash on his idea for a video game. Nash liked the idea and backed the project for development. [4] The game was showcased at Inscape's booth during E3 1995. Casale described the game as "Devo: The Next Generation". It was planned for release on October 17th, 1995. [5]
A soundtrack album was released, featuring the tracks from the game.
Publication | Score |
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GameSpot | 2.8/10 [6] |
Entertainment Weekly | D+ [2] |
The Indianapolis Star | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Reception to Devo Presents was negative upon release. Ty Burr from Entertainment Weekly considered the game to be "a major disappointment on all counts", citing its visuals, gameplay, and buggy navigational controls. [2] Joe Hutsko from GameSpot criticized the game for being impossible to beat.
"To think of the trees felled for this game's packaging, the miles of videotape run through, lines of dialog written and hopelessly rewritten, code keyed in and compiled and recompiled, marketing hype worked up and spun out, and raw energy wasted in producing the however many thousands of CDs Inscape agreed to permanently burn this trash into, one can only walk away feeling pity for all of the resources, human or otherwise, that were inexorably drawn into the band's distressing foray into computer gaming."
— GameSpot's Joe Hutsko. [6]
The game was a contender for GameSpot's "Worst Game of the Year", losing to Catfight . [8]
Conversely, Ralph Lombreglia of The Atlantic praised the game, calling it "wonderfully well-conceived and well-written", and "one of the best pieces of interactive multimedia I've ever seen, period." [9] In 2002, Jeff Green for Computer Gaming World called "Devo Presents" a forgotten classic, noting the games irony and social satire on media. [10] The game has since been on lists of the weirdest video games based on musicians. [11] [12]