Radical Castle

Radical Castle is a point-and-click adventure game released for Macintosh in 1986, developed in World Builder and distributed as shareware by Christopher Kent Wigginton.[2]

Radical Castle
Opening title screenshot
Publisher(s)None
Designer(s)Christopher Kent Wigginton[1]
EngineWorld Builder
Platform(s)Macintosh
Release1986
Genre(s)Adventure game
Mode(s)Single player

Players assume the role of the 'Squire', who after mistaking the princess for a serving wench, is given a choice by the King between death and a quest to recover an oracle stolen by a wizard. At one point of the game an area identical to the opening screen of Enchanted Scepters is shown; if the player chooses to go forward a prompt is given encouraging the player to purchase Enchanted Scepters from Silicon Beach Software.

The game was distributed on magazine shareware collection disks, Macintosh user group mail-outs, and pre-Internet online services. Gaming historian Richard Moss described it as a standout amongst early World Builder games, popular with players due to its Monty Python-esque humor.[3]

At the height of its popularity the game made the top 100 downloads on GEnie.[1] It can be played on a modern computer using Mini vMac. Macscene.net featured it as their "Retro game of the week" in August 2010. The review praised the games visuals, sound effects and storyline.[4] MacUser cited Radical Castle as an example of World Builder's "ability to allow authors to design commercial-quality adventure games."[2] In 1987, Macworld selected Radical Castle as a runner-up to Deep Angst as the best World Builder game.[5]

References

  1. "Radical Castle". The Macintosh Garden. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
  2. Shapiro, Neil L. (April 1987). "Custom Built". MacUser. Ziff-Davis Publishing. 3 (4): 109.
  3. Moss, Richard (2018). "Game Development for The Rest of Us". The Secret History of Mac Gaming. Unbound. p. 38. ISBN 978-1-78352-487-7.
  4. "Radical Castle". MacScene. August 16, 2010. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
  5. DeMaria, Rusel (November 1987). "Shareware and Public Domain Game Awards". Macworld. Vol. 4, no. 11. PCW Communications, Inc. p. 165.
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