Emmanuelle (video game)

Last updated
Emmanuelle
Emmanuellecover.jpg
The cover of the PC version
Developer(s) Coktel Vision
Tomahawk
Publisher(s) Coktel Vision
Designer(s) Muriel Tramis
Composer(s) François Peirano
Platform(s) Amiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS
Release1989
Genre(s) Adventure
Mode(s) Single-player

Emmanuelle is an erotic graphical adventure game from Coktel Vision, originally released in 1989 for Amiga, Atari ST, and MS-DOS. [1] [2] [3] [4] The game was developed by Muriel Tramis (better known from her games in the Gobliiins series, Fascination & Lost in Time), [1] [2] [3] and is loosely inspired by Emmanuelle Arsan's Emanuelle series of novels. [3]

Contents

Story

The character Emmanuelle in the game is a wife of French business man whose job requires constant travelling, thus leaving his wife unfulfilled. Emmanuelle has taken a lover, Marc, but later suffers pangs of conscience, because she still loves her husband. Emmanuelle travels to Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, to escape him, but is followed by Marc. The aim of the game is to augment Marc's erotic potential, so he can seduce Emmanuelle again. [1] [2]

The player's 'erotic potential' is increased by following the three laws of eroticism: law of numbers (seduce as many ladies as you can), law of asymmetry (try to seduce an odd number of ladies) and a law of surprise (seduce preferably concealed/masked ladies). Furthermore, the player should find three erotique statuettes. The game involves no hardcore scenes, though the Marc persona might catch Emmanuelle disrobing, by looking through a certain keyhole. More often, however, Marc sees only an old gentleman who is engaged in washing his feet.

Gameplay

The DOS version supports EGA, CGA and monochrome graphics, [2] [3] while the Amiga and Atari ST versions uses 16 colours. [3] Emmanuelle is a point-and-click adventure, but the DOS version has no mouse support. [3] The game uses multiple-choice dialogues for conversations. [2] [3] The game includes sub-games such as gambling at a casino where the player has to raise money for flight tickets. [2] [3] The player might also end up fighting with angry husbands and smugglers due to their exploits. [2] [3]

Reception

The reviewer of ST-Computer praised the game's graphics, but criticized the lack of sounds and the ease of the puzzles. [1] The PC Power Play review said that the game was boring and only titillating in the casino sequences; it also criticized the poor graphics and the lack of sound. [2] A later issue PC Power Play gave Emmanuelle an "award", as the game with the most idiotic dialogue. [4]

Related Research Articles

<i>Zany Golf</i> Video game

Zany Golf, also known as Will Harvey's Zany Golf, is a fantasy take on miniature golf developed by Sandcastle Productions and published by Electronic Arts 1988. The game was originally written for the Apple IIGS and subsequently ported to the Amiga, Atari ST, and DOS machines. In 1990 a port was released for the Sega Genesis. The game was developed by Will Harvey, Ian Gooding, Jim Nitchals, and Douglas Fulton. Harvey was pursuing his advanced degrees at Stanford University at the time.

<i>Skate or Die!</i> 1987 video game

Skate or Die! is a skateboarding game released by Electronic Arts (EA) in 1987 for the Commodore 64. It is EA's first internally developed game. Ports for the Apple IIGS, MS-DOS, Amstrad CPC, and ZX Spectrum were released the following years. It was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) by Konami, published under the company's Ultra Games branding.

<i>Alien Syndrome</i> 1987 video game

Alien Syndrome is a run and gun video game developed by Sega and released in arcades in 1987.

<i>Abrams Battle Tank</i> 1988 video game

Abrams Battle Tank is a video game developed by Dynamix and published by Electronic Arts in 1988 for MS-DOS. Designed by Damon Slye, the game is a 3D vehicle simulation of the M1 Abrams tank. The 1991 Sega Genesis port by Realtime Games Software was renamed to M-1 Abrams Battle Tank.

<i>Road Runner</i> (video game) 1985 video game

Road Runner is a racing video game based on the Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner shorts. It was released in arcades by Atari Games in 1985.

<i>Roadwar 2000</i> 1986 video game

Roadwar 2000 is a 1986 video game published by Strategic Simulations, Inc. It is a turn-based strategy game set in a post-apocalyptic future which resembles the world portrayed in the Mad Max films.

<i>Might and Magic II: Gates to Another World</i> 1988 video game

Might and Magic II: Gates to Another World is a role-playing video game developed and published by New World Computing in 1988. It is the sequel to Might and Magic Book One: The Secret of the Inner Sanctum.

<i>Badlands</i> (1989 video game) 1989 arcade game

Badlands is a 1989 arcade video game published by Atari Games. It was ported by Domark under the Tengen label to the Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum. The game is a re-themed version of Atari's previous racing games Super Sprint and Championship Sprint with the addition of vehicular combat. Badlands is set in the aftermath of a nuclear war and races around abandoned wastelands with many hazards. Three gun-equipped cars race around a track to win prizes.

<i>Time Bandit</i> 1983 video game

Time Bandit is a Maze shoot 'em up written for the TRS-80 Model I by Bill Dunlevy and Harry Lafnear and published by MichTron in 1983. It was ported to the TRS-80 Color Computer and Dragon 32, but enjoyed its greatest popularity several years later as an early release for the Atari ST. It was also released for the pseudo-PC-compatible Sanyo MBC-55x with 8-color display. Amiga and MS-DOS versions were ported by Timothy Purves.

<i>War in Middle Earth</i> 1988 video game

War in Middle Earth is a real-time strategy game released for the ZX Spectrum, MSX, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, MS-DOS, Amiga, Apple IIGS, and Atari ST in 1988 by Virgin Mastertronic on the Melbourne House label.

<i>Black Gold</i> (video game) 1989 video game

Black Gold is a business simulation game released in 1989 by reLINE Software.

<i>Hostages</i> (video game) 1988 video game

Hostages is a tactical shooter video game developed and published by Infogrames. It was released for the Acorn Electron, Archimedes, Atari ST, Amiga, Apple IIGS, Amstrad CPC, BBC Micro, Commodore 64, DOS, MSX, NES, and ZX Spectrum platforms in 1988. The game was released as Hostage: Rescue Mission in the United States and Operation Jupiter in France; the NES port is titled Rescue: The Embassy Mission.

<i>Mines of Titan</i> 1989 video game

Mines of Titan is a single-player role-playing video game, developed by Westwood Associates, and released by Infocom in 1989 for Apple II, Commodore 64 and MS-DOS.

<i>The Kristal</i> 1989 video game

The Kristal is an action game/adventure game first released in 1989 for the Amiga computer. It was later released for the Atari ST and MS-DOS. It was developed by the UK-based company Fissionchip Software, and published in Europe by Addictive Games and in the US by Cinemaware. Unusually for a video game, the game is based on a play, The Kristal of Konos, written in 1976; the authors of the play worked together with the game developers and the play was never shown in theatres or on film before the game's release. A dialog introducing the setting recorded by Patrick Moore, who introduced both the game and play.

<i>Street Sports Basketball</i> 1987 video game

Street Sports Basketball is a 1987 computer basketball game for the IBM PC, Amstrad CPC, Amiga, Apple II, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum. It was developed by Epyx and published by U.S. Gold.

<i>Rings of Medusa</i> 1989 video game

Rings of Medusa is a fantasy-themed video game developed and published by Starbyte Software for the Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, and MS-DOS in 1989. The game is a hybrid of role-playing, strategy, and trading genres. It received mixed reviews.

<i>Matrix Marauders</i> 1990 video game

Matrix Marauders is a 1990 racing video game. According to Psyclapse, it is a "superfast 3D abstract computer racing game."

Vermeer is a series of strategy and business simulation video games launched in 1987 by Ariolasoft. It contained three individual games between the original launch and 2004: Vermeer (1987), Vermeer: Die Kunst zu erben (1997), and Vermeer: The Great Art Race (2004).

<i>TV Sports: Football</i> 1988 video game

TV Sports: Football is a 1988 video game by Cinemaware for Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, and TurboGrafx-16.

<i>Trump Castle</i> (series) Video game series

Trump Castle is a series of gambling video games published by Capstone Software between 1989 and 1993. The games are named after Trump's Castle hotel-casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and were released for Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Commodore 128, and MS-DOS.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "ST-Computer :02/1989Relax - aktuelle Spiele".
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Kultpower Archiv: Komplettscan Powerplay 2/1989".
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Emmanuelle: A Game of Eroticism (Amiga/ST/DOS, 1989)". theodor.lauppert.ws. Archived from the original on 27 September 2012. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  4. 1 2 "Kultpower Archiv: Komplettscan Powerplay 11/1990".