Cutthroats, by Michael Berlyn, Jerry Wolper Form 27b-6's rating: Average member rating: (23 ratings) You're about to get yourself into very deep trouble. You're a backwater island's top diver and foremost expert on local shipwrecks. Which makes you perfect for the job a band of the island's shadiest... |
The Dallas Quest, by James Garon, Louella Lee Caraway, Phyllis Wapner Average member rating: (8 ratings) An adaptation of the TV series, handily employing implausible soap opera plot conventions as excuses for preposterous adventure game puzzles. |
Galatea, by Emily Short Average member rating: (349 ratings) Emily Short's description: A conversation with a work of art. "47. Galatea. White Thasos marble. Non-commissioned work by the late Pygmalion of Cyprus. (The artist has since committed suicide.) Originally... |
Gateway 2: Homeworld, by Mike Verdu and Glen Dahlgren Average member rating: (18 ratings) In the early twenty-second century, an immense alien spacecraft, dubbed the "Artifact," arrives in the Earth's solar system. The Artifact ignores all attempts at communication; no one knows whether its... |
Planetfall, by Steve Meretzky Form 27b-6's rating: Average member rating: (123 ratings) "Join the Patrol, and see the Galaxy!" You took the poster's advice, bait and all, and marched right over to the recruitment station near your home on the backwater planet of Gallium. Images of exotic... |
Shade, by Andrew Plotkin Form 27b-6's rating: Average member rating: (424 ratings) "A one-room game set in your apartment." [--blurb from Competition Aught-Zero] |
Trinity, by Brian Moriarty Form 27b-6's rating: Average member rating: (107 ratings) You're neither an adventurer nor a professional thrill-seeker. You're simply an American tourist in London, enjoying a relaxing stroll through the famous Kensington Gardens. When World War III starts and the... |
Wishbringer, by Brian Moriarty Form 27b-6's rating: Average member rating: (111 ratings) It's an ordinary day in your ordinary little town, and you've been performing your ordinary mail clerk's duties in an altogether ordinary way. But there's something quite extraordinary in today's mail. It's... |