Weird Dreams
Encyclopedia
Weird Dreams is a game by Rainbird Software which was published for the Amiga
Amiga
The Amiga is a family of personal computers that was sold by Commodore in the 1980s and 1990s. The first model was launched in 1985 as a high-end home computer and became popular for its graphical, audio and multi-tasking abilities...

, Atari ST
Atari ST
The Atari ST is a home/personal computer that was released by Atari Corporation in 1985 and commercially available from that summer into the early 1990s. The "ST" officially stands for "Sixteen/Thirty-two", which referred to the Motorola 68000's 16-bit external bus and 32-bit internals...

, Commodore 64
Commodore 64
The Commodore 64 is an 8-bit home computer introduced by Commodore International in January 1982.Volume production started in the spring of 1982, with machines being released on to the market in August at a price of US$595...

 and DOS
DOS
DOS, short for "Disk Operating System", is an acronym for several closely related operating systems that dominated the IBM PC compatible market between 1981 and 1995, or until about 2000 if one includes the partially DOS-based Microsoft Windows versions 95, 98, and Millennium Edition.Related...

. A modified version of it served as the visual component to a phone-in quiz on ITV's Motormouth
Motormouth
Motormouth was a Saturday morning children's television series that was produced by Television South and aired across the ITV network for four series, running between 3 September 1988 and 4 April 1992...

.

Features

The game box comes with a 64-page novella with 19 chapters written by Rupert Goodwins
Rupert Goodwins
Rupert Goodwins is a British writer, broadcaster and technology journalist.He began his career as a programmer for Sinclair Research in the early 1980s, working on the ZX Spectrum ROM...

, featuring the back-story of the game. The novella also serves as a copy-protection mechanism (the game asks the player to type in a specific word from a certain paragraph on a particular page).

There are 15 different enemies/challenges (cotton candy stick, giant wasp, rosebush with teeth, lawnmower, soccer ball with mouth, little girl with steak knife, jack-in-the-box clown, fat dancing ballerina, hopping totem poles, desert creatures (featured on the box), fake doors, bats, roast chicken with jaws, and a large brain with an eye in the middle), 7 different death animations and 5 different musical scores by C64/Amiga musician legend David Whittaker on the Amiga. Barry Leitch
Barry Leitch
Barry Leitch is a video game music composer, responsible for the music in a large number of games spanning multiple consoles and personal computers. Most notable is his work from the Lotus Turbo Challenge, Top Gear, and Rush video game series....

 did the music for the Commodore 64 and PC version.

Game progress is tracked by a time counter and a heart rate monitor of Steve, which goes from 75bpm (normal) to 100bpm (in frightening situations) to 170bpm (shortly before death).

Plot

The background story is told by the novella. Steve is in love with his attractive coworker Emily. Unbeknownst to Steve, Emily is possessed by a daemon
Daemon (mythology)
The words dæmon and daimôn are Latinized spellings of the Greek "δαίμων", a reference to the daemons of Ancient Greek religion and mythology, as well as later Hellenistic religion and philosophy...

 named Zelloripus which was banished to Earth, stripped of most of his powers, and trapped into a human female due to unspecified crimes he did to other daemons.

Emily sees a chance to let someone else suffer and stifle her boredom. She tricks Steve to take three pills, constructed by her, to “heal his flu”. While the pills do cure him, they also grant Zelloripus access to his body and mind. His dreams become both more lucid and strange, each one getting more intense and painful. Steve's psychiatrist does not understand what causes the dreams, and neither does Steve. He refers him to a neurosurgeon
Neurosurgery
Neurosurgery is the medical specialty concerned with the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of disorders which affect any portion of the nervous system including the brain, spine, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, and extra-cranial cerebrovascular system.-In the United States:In...

. After his health dramatically declines, Steve undertakes brain surgery in an attempt to stop the dreams. Under an anaesthetic, he slips into one more dream, possibly his last.

Gameplay

The game starts where Rupert Goodwins' novella ends, with Steve lying on the operating table and slipping into the dream world. Steve is controlled by the player through numerous surreal worlds. He can collect certain weapons and items on these levels, but with a few exceptions, cannot carry them to another level. Steve has no health meter; he immediately dies if he comes into contact with an enemy or an obstacle. He can also die if he remains too long in certain areas such as the Country Garden, where a lawnmower will come and decimate him. When Steve dies, the game returns to the scene in the operating room where the surgeons attempt to save him. There are no save points in the game, and instead of score points the player's progress is stated as a percentage.

Steve can acquire following weapons/items thru the game:
  • Cotton Candy (from the cotton candy machine): Used to distract the giant wasp.
  • Fly Swatter (Fairground): Used for pushing the giant wasp away.
  • Stick (English Country Garden): Used for defeating the rosebush with teeth.
  • Soccer ball with mouth (English Country Garden): Carried by the little girl with the steak knife, but later on swallows her up and becomes an item Steve carries. Later in the game, it can be used to eat a path through the green colored desert (it explodes afterward). It can also be used on the fat ballerina (but ineffectively).
  • Electric Eel (Hall of Tubes): Can harm Steve if not carefully taken; helps to defeat the wasp which breaks into the hall of mirrors later on.
  • Flying Fish (Desert): Caught from the sky in the desert. Used to defeat the jumping totem poles and desert creatures and to destroy the statue which holds an orb, and helps release the orbs orbiting the brain in the last level.
  • Green/Blue/Red Orb: All three orbs need to be collected by Steve in order to win the game. The first one is carried by the giant wasp on the fairground, the second one is hidden inside the statue in the desert and the last one is found in an old pendulum clock on the hall of doors level.

Levels and enemies

  • Fairground: Steve's dream begins at a giant candy floss machine, where he must collect cotton candy on his body and jump onto the rotating stick takes him to the fairground, where he encounters a giant wasp carrying the first orb. He leaves the fairground through a door into the hall of mirrors.
  • Hall of Mirrors: The rest of the game is accessed through the hall of mirrors. Walking through each of the mirrors leads to a different location, including the fairground. Later in the game, the giant wasp breaks into this level.
  • English Country Garden: A green garden on a sunny day. Steve must first defeat rosebushes with teeth and avoid a lawnmower that can shred him to bits if he takes too long. Then he must defeat a little smiling girl wielding a steak knife by repeatedly catching and bouncing back her soccer ball, which can develop a mouth with huge teeth. The background music is Country Gardens
    Country Gardens
    Country Gardens is an English folk tune collected by Cecil Sharp and arranged for piano in 1918 by Percy Grainger.In 2008 was added to the .-Format of renditions:...

    .
  • Desert: A dry desert with flying fish in the sky, hopping totem poles, large desert monsters, and a green statue holding the second orb. Quicksand is used to return to the hall of mirrors.
  • Hall of Tubes: A large hall with lots of tubes everywhere. The floor is made of overlarge piano keys which strike upward, played by a jack-in-the-box clown. There is also a fat ballerina dancing to the Dance of the Sugar-plum Fairy (from Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite) and an aquarium with an electric eel which can be taken and used as a weapon. A rotating tube at the end brings Steve back to the hall of mirrors.
  • Hall of Doors: A hall with a wooden floor, brown wallpaper, and tall doors left slightly ajar (attempting to enter them results in Steve being bitten in half by large mouths). Steve has to avoid flying bats and a roast chicken with jaws.
  • Desert with Tree: Back at the desert, facing a giant brain growing on a tree stump with three orbs orbiting it. The brain has an enormous eye in the middle. By releasing the three orbs, the game ends and Steve wakes up on the operating table, finally free from Zelloripus's attempts to kill him. In the Amiga version of the game, one of the surgeons turns out to be a knife-wielding woman, possessed by Zelloripus who cackles at Steve with a resounding laugh after the player finishes the game.

Development

The general plot was conceived by the developers, and Rupert Goodwins was asked to write the novella included with the game. However, the original plot of the game was simply that the player character was dreaming while under surgery, and if his heart rate increased too far, he would wake up from anaesthesia and be forced to experience surgery while fully awake. Rainbird insisted that this was changed after several real-life incidents of failed anaesthesia in hospitals, and the only of this version is in early magazine previews of the game, some of which showed screenshots of the original game over screen (which showed a scalpel being lowered towards the character's point of view)

The scenarios in the game are not based on Serrano's own nightmares, but are inspired by the paintings of Salvador Dalí
Salvador Dalí
Salvador Domènec Felip Jacint Dalí i Domènech, Marquis de Púbol , commonly known as Salvador Dalí , was a prominent Spanish Catalan surrealist painter born in Figueres,Spain....

, Terry Gilliam
Terry Gilliam
Terrence Vance "Terry" Gilliam is an American-born British screenwriter, film director, animator, actor and member of the Monty Python comedy troupe. Gilliam is also known for directing several films, including Brazil , The Adventures of Baron Munchausen , The Fisher King , and 12 Monkeys...

's cartoon animations for Monty Python
Monty Python
Monty Python was a British surreal comedy group who created their influential Monty Python's Flying Circus, a British television comedy sketch show that first aired on the BBC on 5 October 1969. Forty-five episodes were made over four series...

, and on odd observations. After a visit to the dentist, Serrano developed a phobia of teeth, which is noticeable in the design of the monsters, many of them having mouths with large teeth.

The game took over a year to produce.

Reception

Weird Dreams received mixed reviews. While everyone praised its visual style, there were some criticisms depending on the game platform. Frustrating difficulty, long loading times, and a disappointing soundtrack were common criticisms, albeit not unanimous.

90% - The One for 16-bit Games 9 (Jun 1989)

81% - ST Amiga Format 13 (Jul 1989)

71% - Amiga Action 4 (Jan 1990)

64% - The Games Machine 20 (Jul 1989)

60% - Zzap 60 (Apr 1990)

31% - Computer + Video Games 101 (Apr 1990)

External links

  • Screenshots, Boxcover, Reviews on Mobygames: http://www.mobygames.com/game/weird-dreams
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