Difference between revisions of "CGA Hell"
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An experimental offshoot of the ''[[Mister Spiff]]'' series. Expanded from a couple of bonus stages in ''[[Mister Spiff IV]]''. | An experimental offshoot of the ''[[Mister Spiff]]'' series. Expanded from a couple of bonus stages in ''[[Mister Spiff IV]]''. | ||
− | + | Interesting thing is, it genuinely feels like a game developed in the 1980s for a CGA display. | |
Revision as of 16:53, 28 February 2016
Release type: Freeware
Release date: August 24, 1995
Levels: 5
Author: Adam Tyner
Website: DummyDuck.com
Related games: Mister Spiff I, Mister Spiff II, Mister Spiff III: Freeze! Mother! Freeze!, Mister Spiff IV
An experimental offshoot of the Mister Spiff series. Expanded from a couple of bonus stages in Mister Spiff IV.
Interesting thing is, it genuinely feels like a game developed in the 1980s for a CGA display.
Contents
Story
CGA HELL!
Ever wonder what happens to video game characters when they run out of lives and continues? Well, the good ones go to SVGA Heaven. Unfortunately, Mister Spiff didn't pay a traffic ticket and was sent to -- (gasp) -- CGA HELL!
Now you must escape CGA Hell armed only with your CGA Ray. Fight off CGA monitors, ghosts, and chompas, zombies, and CGAFlizzums!!! If you die too many times, you must stay in CGA Hell FOREVER!
This game is near 'bout impossible, so go ahead and quit. Without knowing where the level select is, you'll never beat level two!!!!!!
Instructions
CGA HELL!
The control, like CGA graphics, is very simple. Use the numeric keypad to move and ENTER to fire. If your joystick is enabled (press F8 during game play to enable it), the use the stick to move and any button to fire.
2 Cool!
-NOTE-
There is a level select; you'll need it!!!!!!
Credits
CGA HELL!
by Adam Tyner
This game is dedicated to Jessica Setzler, because she got really mad at me the other day!!!!!
Background
The Making Of "CGA Hell" A 13-minute video of the great On Target Game Only on PCs!
Hi! I'm Adam Tyner, editor of "On Target Power," the crappy magazine that gives you insight into our hellish little world. Right now, we're going to talk to one of the programmers of the game we hope'll be our new hit, "CGA Hell."
Let's meet Don Keith Kahng. He did some of the stunning graphics in "CGA Hell," as well as most of the gameplay. Don Keith Kahng is one of the best programmers in the COUNTRY!
ME: Hey Don! Tell us about the design of "CGA Hell."
DON: Twenty-five other programmers and I toiled for hours on Silicon-Graphics workstations creating the characters, backgrounds, and monsters.
ME: Aren't those the MILLION-dollar computers used for the dinosaur effects in "Jurassic Park"?
DON: I think so. We here at On Target Programming are opposed to any non-G rated movie. It's too violent.
ME: I agree. How did the graphics turn out, Don?
DON: Well, the 256-color high-res SVGA graphics were fabulous. But there was a power failure 20 minutes before the final version was due. So we slapped this 4-color game together and pretended like it was supposed to be this way.
ME: That's very interesting. Tell us about the story behind "CGA Hell."
DON: Sure! I'm all for shameless self-promotion. You play Mister Spiff...
ME: Isn't that the hero in the great Mister Spiff games?
DON: It sure is. Anyway, you are doomed to CGA Hell because you didn't pay a traffic ticket.
ME: NOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!! I'm sorry, I left it in my glove box and--
DON: HA! No silly, I mean the character you play in the game!
ME: Umm...yeah. I know. Jus' kidding. Heh-heh...........
DON: I...uh...CGA Hell is sort of like the hell depicted in most religions, but CGA Hell is only for EVIL video game characters.
ME: Is this the right forum for a religious discussion?
DON: If it'll hamper sales, then "no."
ME: Anyway, what is CGA Hell like?
DON: It's sort of like real life, only more dangerous. Oh, and there are only four colors.
ME: This must have taken a long time to make, with 4 mind-boggling colors. You don't have to buy a special adapter to play it either, like our competitor (rhymes with "mega," as in "mega cool", "mega power").
DON: You can even play it on a 286, if you don't mind tons of slowdown.
ME: How many action-packed levels are there?
DON: One for each color. The original version had 256 levels, but we only had time for four when everything got erased.
ME: What are some of the enemies in "CGA Hell"?
DON: You must fight chompers (take it from the chomper, the chomper yeah that's me. Exercise your chompers gotta chew, chew, chew! Exercise your chompers with some good hard food!), zombies trapped between color TV and black and white TV, ghosts, and CGAflizzums. The deadliest enemy is the dreaded CGA MONITOR!
ME: Excuse me?
DON: See, the first color monitors only had 4 colors and were called CGA. The 4 colors these monitors had are the same 4 in the game.
ME: Incredible!
DON: Want a CGA monitor?
ME: No, that's okay--
DON: Banana, then?
ME: No, I'm fine, really--
DON: Go on, have a banana.
ME: Don, you're scaring me. Do you have any advice for gamers?
DON: Yes; play it loud!
Availability
This game is not known to have been distributed in any form, prior to its addition to the Archive.
Archive History
After an earlier wave of rediscoveries, on July 13 2011 Alan Caudel provided another archive of previously missing Game-Maker material, including the following:
- Alan!
- Alan B-Day
- Alan '95
- Alan '96
- Bear Fun Show
- Benny
- Bone!
- CGA Hell
- Doom
- Off The Page
- DD4: Canadian Boxing Day
- Godzilla
- Jon '95
- Kozmo Kat
- The Legend of Budd
- Mr. Berkel Derkel!
- Mister Spiff IV
- Ninja
- Palladia: The Game
- Power Budd!
- Power Flux
- Robo-Wars
- Ski
- Star Avenger
- Star Avenger III
- Star Avenger 4
- Star Wars
- Stickman!!! Die
- Trees
- Twister, argh!
- What the...?!?
Links
Downloads
- CGA Hell (91 kB)