Touché: The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer
Touché: The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer | |
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Developer(s) | Clipper Software |
Publisher(s) | CentreGold, U.S. Gold |
Engine | Touché |
Platform(s) | MS-DOS, Windows 95, all ScummVM platforms |
Release date(s) | 1995 |
Genre(s) | Adventure game |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Touché: The Adventures of the Fifth Musketeer is an adventure game developed by the British software company Clipper Software.
The game takes place in 1562, during the French Wars of Religion, when France was being polarized between the Catholics and Huguenots and expected an assault from the English. The protagonist is Geoffroi Le Brun who is recruited to a company of musketeers (the historical Musketeers of the Guard were not created until 1622) in Rouen. The adventure continues through France including St. Quentin, Le Mans, Amiens and Le Havre.
Plot
As Geoffroi arrives to Rouen, he witnesses the murder of William de Peuple, Compte d'Itee, whose will and testament was stolen. He promises to the dying Compte to find his stolen will and deliver it to Paris, bequathing his castle to the Chancellor. Early on he meets Henri, a crook who stood nearby posing as a beggar during the murder, and hires him as his manservant. He follows the band who murdered the Compte in a tavern but he is hit and the rest escape. During his stay there he falls in love with Juliette, a selfish and promiscuous maiden who is courted by D'Artagnan.
Geoffroi learns that a suspicious man who paid with "Spanish coins" left for St. Quentin. While there, he meets a poet named William Shakespeare, who composes a love poem for Juliette. In the Cathedral of "St. Greavsie" he meets Louis, the "Cardinal of Guise" and is informed that his brother, Francis, Duke of Guise is preparing to lead the French forces against an English assault and de Peuple's castle is to defend the way from Le Havre.
On his way, Geoffroi learns that the murderer never reached St. Quentin as he suffered from food poisoning and stopped in the closest monastery in Amiens. Geoffroi attempts to arrest him but the murderer escapes. Geoffroi reclaims the will, but on his way back to Rouen, he is robbed by a highwayman. Geoffroi traces the criminal to Le Mans, and a florist shop housing an underground network of illegal gambling and prostitution; it ends up that the highwayman lost the will to a card game, and it was in turn stolen by gypsy bandits. Dressed as the highwayman, Geoffroi is captured by the gypsies but manages to trade for the will.
In Paris, Geoffroi finds Le Louvre which houses the office of the Chancellor of France; seeing that he is acquainted with Juliette's sister, he seeks her help to make an appointment with him and deliver the will. But then, Cardinal Louis arrives and claims the will, mainly interested in the magic books in de Peuple's castle. Geoffroi then goes to join with his regiment in Le Havre, trying to hold the English forces, and meets a contact who provides them with maps of the enemy lines.
Geoffroi returns to the Rouen Cathedral and witnesses the Cardinal attempting to start a magick ceremony involving the remains of Charles V of France. Geoffroi switches the lids of the tombs of Charles V and Richard the Lionheart, and when the Cardinal returns, he recovers the remains of Richard. Later Geoffroi meets an inventor, "Michelangelo da Vinci" who claims he is the nephew of Leonardo and helps him complete a steam boat, with which he sails the Seine and arrives to the castle of de Peuple.
Geoffroi finds Juliette serving the Duke of Guise holding a feast and with her help Geoffroi poisons the participants who leave for the restroom. Geoffroi finds a secret passage and confronts the Cardinal who attempts to create an undead army to save France and then rule it, but the ritual fails as he uses the wrong remains. Geoffroi releases Juliette and Henri who are hypnotized, and force the Cardinal and his men to jump into the Seine.
De Peuple's will mentions a lost son who has a strawberry birthmark. At first Geoffroi, an orphan, understands that he is the heir, but Henri reveals he has the birthmark on the correct spot. He inherits the castle and Juliette sticks to him.
Gameplay
Touché is a typical context-based point-and-click adventure game. The player character moves around by clicking on the selected spot on the landscape. Certain objects have their own set of commands (in a kind of combo box) with which Geoffroi can perform an action; for example some flowers display commands like "Examine", "Smell" and "Take", each causing Geoffroi to behave accordingly, while the latter makes the character put the flowers into his inventory. Most puzzles require the combination of an acquired item with an object in the environment.[1]
Technical details
Touché was developed in the "Touché" game engine.[2] It is supported by the ScummVM virtual engine.
It was also released as a CD-ROM version with full voiceover soundtrack.
Reception
German magazine High Score awarded the game a 100/100 comparing it with The Dig and Simon the Sorcerer.[3] Quandary described it an "enjoyable adventure" comparing it to Monkey Island giving it 80/100.[4]
Adventurearchiv praised its humor but criticized the lengthy, uninterruptable travel sequences, and some joke and puzzle quality.[5] Just Adventure praised the "terrific story worthy of Alexandre Dumas".[6] These reviews gave a 76 and 75 score respectively.
Aventura y Cía said that the game could be called "Monkey Island 3",[lower-alpha 1] because of the similarity to the Monkey Island games, remarking that it doesn't reach the quality of similar productions, giving a score of 60.[7]
Reset gave the game a score of 50, criticizing the character creation and the soundtrack, calling the game outdated.[3]
Notes
- ↑ Released in 1995, Touché followed Monkey Island 2, but preceded the release of the actual Monkey Island 3 (1997)
References
- ↑ Game manual
- ↑ http://wiki.scummvm.org/index.php/Touche
- 1 2 http://www.mobygames.com/game/dos/touch-the-adventures-of-the-fifth-musketeer/mobyrank
- ↑ http://www.metzomagic.com/showArticle.php?index=204
- ↑ http://www.adventure-archiv.com/t2/touchereviewe.htm
- ↑ http://www.justadventure.com/reviews/Touche/Touche.shtm
- ↑ http://www.aventuraycia.com/review.php?id=56