Indiana Jones & The Last Crusade 1989
Coinciding with the release of the movie, LucasFilm Games released Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade - The Graphic Adventure for IBM PC MS-DOS in July of 1989.
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade is a graphics adventure game and successor to LucasFilm Games' Zak McKraken of 1988 and the predecessor to LucasArts' Indiana Jones of 1992.
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade is based on Steven Spielberg's 1989 film of the same name. The player assumes the role of the archaeologist, Indiana Jones (Indy), who is in search of the Holy Grail.
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade incorporates arcade-action sequences such as boxing bouts.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was designed and scripted by Noah Falstein, David Fox and Ron Gilbert. Mike Ebert, Steve Purcell and Martin Cameron drew the graphics. Based on Maniac Mansion of 1987 on the Commodore 64, the SCUMM Story System was created by Ron Gilbert and Aric Wilmunder.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was distributed on 6x 5.25" 360kB floppy disks. The hard disk drive install size of the original EGA version (v.1.0) is 2 megs (99 files).
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade displays in 4-color CGA or 16-color EGA, MCGA or Tandy 320x200.
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade audio supports AdLib.
- Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade - The Graphic Adventure Manual: 11 pages
- Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade - The Graphic Adventure Hint Book: 67 pages
- Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade - The Graphic Adventure Grail Diary: 63 pages
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade - The Graphic Adventure copy protection: Translation Table (Section, Row, Column).
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade - The Graphic Adventure DOSBox Run-time error - integer divide by 0: Set cycles to 3000.
cf.
- Chronological List of Graphics Adventure Games IBM PC MS-DOS
- Early 1990s IBM PC Games that made Amiga owners jealous
- 1980s IBM PC Games that made Atari ST and Amiga owners jealous
- History of Computer Games 1976-2024
- History of 1990s Computer Games
- History of Shoot 'em Ups 1976-2000
- Western Computer-game Machines
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