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1992 video game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KGB is a video game released for the Amiga and IBM PC compatibles in 1992. Set in the decadent final days of the Soviet Union, KGB is considered to be quite difficult, even for experienced gamers, since it relies on a real time clock and correct/wrong answers which can end the game immediately or after an event needed to be triggered; also, players may make errors which they will notice only hours later in-game. The game engine, graphics and interface have plenty of similarities with Cryo's Dune.
KGB Conspiracy | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Cryo Interactive |
Publisher(s) | Virgin Games |
Director(s) | Yves Lamoureux |
Producer(s) | Jean-Martial Lefranc |
Designer(s) | Johan Robson |
Programmer(s) | Yves Lamoureux |
Artist(s) | Michel Rho Didier Bouchon Sohor Ty |
Writer(s) | Johan Robson |
Composer(s) | Stéphane Picq |
Platform(s) | MS-DOS, Amiga |
Release | 1992 |
Genre(s) | Adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
KGB was also released on CD under the title Conspiracy, which included clips of Rukov's father played by Donald Sutherland giving advice. In the CD version, all references to "KGB" within the game and manual were changed to "Conspiracy".
The game is set in the summer of 1991.[1] The protagonist, Captain Maksim Mikahilovich Rukov, recently transferred to the Department P from the GRU after three years' duty, is ordered to investigate possible corruption inside the KGB after a former agent turned private eye was found murdered. Rukov finds himself investigating a party hardliner anti-perestroika plot that threatens the life of General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev.
Publication | Score | |
---|---|---|
Amiga | DOS | |
Adventure Gamers | [2] | |
Amiga Computing | 87%[3] | |
Amiga Format | 91%[4] | |
Amiga Power | 90%[5] | |
Computer and Video Games | 73%[6] |
Computer Gaming World said in February 1993 that KGB "was very much in the John le Carré mold, with lots of hidden intrigue, deep subterfuge and criss-crossing plot lines. One almost expects George Smiley to turn up". The magazine praised the game's graphics and "unusual feel", and concluded that it was "an engrossing and atmospheric product with more depth and attention to detail than offered by most of the latest graphic adventures".[1] In April 1994 the magazine said of the CD remake, Conspiracy, that although Donald Sutherland's acting was "first-rate" the addition of his scenes to the original game was "a bit strained", concluding that "The novelty of seeing a Big Screen actor in an adventure game is about the only thing going for it".[7]
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