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Shelter from the Stormby Eric Eve profile2009 Historical TADS 3
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It is set in October 1940. Jack is a newly-commissioned sapper
officer on his way to his first posting somewhere on Salisbury Plain (in southern England) when his car breaks down. The weather is starting to turn nasty, and his first task is to find shelter from the brewing storm. When he finds it, he'll encounter a whole lot more than he bargained for, as it becomes gradually apparent that things are not as they are meant to seem.
v.9: 20-Jun-2009 22:45 -
JTN
(Current Version)
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Changed download links | |
v.8: 25-Dec-2018 06:06 - kgarlow Changed external review links | |
v.7: 19-May-2012 14:18 - Eric Eve Changed download links | |
v.6: 20-Jun-2009 22:45 - Dave Chapeskie Changed download links | |
v.5: 06-Jun-2009 10:29 - Eric Eve Changed version number | |
v.4: 03-Jun-2009 02:51 - Eric Eve Changed external review links | |
v.3: 31-May-2009 13:58 - Eric Eve Changed version number | |
v.2: 31-May-2009 12:58 - Eric Eve Changed cover art, version number, genre, forgiveness | |
v.1: 31-May-2009 09:20 - Dave Chapeskie
Created page |
Play This Thing (review by Emily Short)
Shelter from the Storm: Protagonist vs Player
The story is set during the grim beginnings of the second world war. The protagonist (whether "I", "you", or "he") is a soldier on his way to a posting near Salisbury when, thanks to a storm and some bad luck with his car, he's forced to seek shelter with a bunch of people who aren't what they seem. The result plays a bit like a murder mystery -- everything turns on finding evidence and understanding what that evidence really means, and there are multiple twists before the whole thing stops. Barring a few bits where the player has time to explore at leisure, it's fast-paced, too: the NPCs are all active types and have plenty to say and do. The story never rises above the level of period melodrama, but it does that reasonably well.
But here's the curious thing: by the end of the story, I started to want that narrative voice option again, and I set my narrator to first person past tense because I was more comfortable reading/playing that way.
See the full review