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The Adventures of Indiana Jones in Wenceslas Square in Prague on January 16, 1989
by Zuzan Znovuzrozený, Jaroslav Švelch, Martin Kouba, and Jana “Yuffie” Kilianová
This satirical game was released anonymously in 1989 as a response to police brutality during the Palach Week protests. In January 1989, several opposition groups organized demonstrations to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of the self-immolation of Jan Palach, a student who set himself on fire to protest the post-1968 political developments in the country. On January 15, thousands of people gathered on Wenceslas Square, a traditional site of public events. Citizens’ efforts to pay respects to Palach and protest the oppressive regime were met with a disproportionate police response, including the use of tear gas and water cannons against peaceful protesters and curious bystanders. Undeterred by the police, people continued to gather for the following four days. The game takes place on the second day of the protests.
By 1989, Indiana Jones had become a popular character in Czechoslovak text adventure games, in part thanks to the popular series of unlincesed homebrew titles by the influential programmer František Fuka. As a result, the famous archeologist appeared even in this activist title. While geographically faithful, the game portrays Wenceslas Square as a battlefield where every careless move is punished by death; where tear gas, water cannons and policemen await on every corner. The game revels in spectacular game over scenes, which serve to highlight and exaggerate police violence. The game was released for the ZX Spectrum platform in the Czech language and spread among the users on cassette tapes, which were the default storage medium for 8-bit computers. Although its author remains unknown, it is possible that they were a participant in the actual demonstration.
How we reconstructed the game
Because the game’s source code has not been preserved, we observed its run-time behavior and documented all its locations, objects, and events. Then we rewrote the game for web technologies (JavaScript, HTML, and CSS) using our own custom engine. All the texts were extracted from the original game's binaries and translated into English. We aimed for a faithful reproduction of all the puzzles and mechanics. There are, however, a few changes made for the sake of accessibility and user-friendliness:
v.11: 27-Aug-2024 22:55 -
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v.10: 27-Aug-2024 22:54 - JTN | |
v.9: 11-May-2021 14:20 - jakomo Changed cross-references | |
v.8: 11-May-2021 13:34 - jakomo | |
v.7: 11-May-2021 13:32 - jakomo Changed cover art, external review links | |
v.6: 11-May-2021 13:17 - jakomo Changed external review links | |
v.5: 10-May-2021 20:55 - jakomo Changed publication date, download links | |
v.4: 10-May-2021 20:46 - jakomo Changed publication date | |
v.3: 10-May-2021 20:40 - jakomo Changed download links, external review links | |
v.2: 10-May-2021 20:32 - jakomo Changed description | |
v.1: 10-May-2021 20:25 - jakomo
Created page |
Ars Technica
How Indiana Jones, Rambo, and others ended up in 1980s Czechoslovak text-adventures: to mock the Communist regime, Czechoslovak kids made illicit video games supporting protests.
See the full review
ROMchip
Indiana Jones Revisits Wenceslas Square
Converting 1980s Czechoslovak Activist Games for Exhibition and Education
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Herni Archeolog
Hra 377: Dobrodružství Indiana Jonese na Václavském náměstí v Praze dne 16. 1. 1989 (1989) [Czech-language review of original ZX Spectrum version]
See the full review