Page last updated: 22/08/2010

'THE MYSTERY OF ARKHAM MANOR'
1987 Melbourne House

Review / Music / Shots / Scan / Back

   
 

Credits
Code -
Alan Malik
Music -
Andrew Craigie
Graphics -
Carl Cropley

   
 
 
 


Rare scan.

 
 
 
 
 

The Mystery of Arkham Manor was one of your more interactive text adventures, using a system commonly seen in the Lucasfilm games Maniac Mansion. Selecting text from some preset words to construct various commands and phrases.

The game got a mixed reception on the Spectrum and Amstrad platforms, but we never got to find out what was thought of the C64 conversion which never appeared.

Normally when a game appears on just the Spectrum and Amstrad, you assume that the C64 version hit problems in the conversion process. The game was no isometric Spectrum hit to convert, but a rather simple concept which had been done before in similiar games by Melbourne House such as Redhawk.

Alan Malik was the C64 developer for the game,  but unfortunately Alan struggled with the C64 architecture after primarily working on the BBC micro platform (Writing the 'Sleuth' debugger).  Mike Lewis (One of the game's original developers on the Spectrum) worked with Alan for around 5 days to try and help finish things off, but unfortunately although the basic code was there, things were quite buggy and after discussion with Melbourne House, the game on the C64 was dropped.  A huge shame that maybe Alan wasn't given a bit more time to adapt to the platform, but we guess that the time slot for the game's appearance had passed.

In early 2010, a breakthrough was made when Andrew Craigie came forward with his unreleased SID tune for the game (Which now you can download for the first time! - Thanks to Ian Coog for tidying up the SID file!). He then gave us the remaining credits. 

As for the game itself,  it seems the best hope of finding something of the game (Which no doubt will be a semi-complete game, nothing full) will be contacting Alan and seeing if by chance he kept any of his development disks.  It seems unlikely, and this one could be lost to time.  Possibly the graphic artist has something also, but its likely his graphics were just straight ports from the Spectrum.  Alan,  if you're out there ... please get in touch.

Do you know anything more of this conversion?...

Frank.
(Additional source credits - Peter Weighill, World Of Spectrum, Andrew Craigie, Ian Coog/HVSC, Richard Hewison, Mike Lewis)

 
 

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