Portal (1986 video game)

Portal is a text-driven adventure with a graphical interface published for the Amiga in 1986 by Activision.[citation needed] The writing is by American author Rob Swigart, and it was produced by Brad Fregger. Ports to the Commodore 64, Apple II, and IBM PC were later released.[citation needed] A version for the Atari ST was announced and developed, but not published.[citation needed] Until recently, it was thought that a Macintosh version was similarly developed yet left unpublished. The published Macintosh version was rediscovered in 2021 by a game collector.[1]

Portal
Developer(s)Nexa Corporation
Publisher(s)Activision
Designer(s)Brad Fregger
Writer(s)Rob Swigart
Platform(s)Amiga, Commodore 64, Apple II, IBM PC, Macintosh
Release1986
Genre(s)Interactive fiction
Mode(s)Single-player

Plot edit

 
The computer terminal interface

The player, taking on the role of the unnamed astronaut protagonist, returns from a failed 100-year voyage to 61 Cygni to find the Earth devoid of humans. Cars are rusted and covered with moss, the streets are completely barren, and everything appears as though the entire human race had just vanished suddenly. The player happens upon a barely functioning computer terminal that is tied into a storytelling mainframe, Homer. Through this interface, the player, assisted by Homer who attempts to weave the information into a coherent narrative, discovers information in order to piece together the occurrences leading to the disappearance of the human race. For instance, spending some time in the Medical Records section may unlock a piece of data in the Science section, and through these links the player can finish the game.

Reception edit

Info gave the Commodore 64 version of Portal five stars out of five, describing it as "engrossing, fascinating, and somewhat disturbing ... like a murder mystery, an expedition, and having amnesia all rolled into one".[2] Roy Wagner of Computer Gaming World described the story as "interesting and well-written", but felt the interface was tedious. The Amiga version, using a mouse, was considered superior to that of the C64, and only bothered the reviewer by way of slowing down the reading of the story.[3] The magazine's Charles Ardai agreed that the interface was tedious and hesitated to recommend it because it was not a game, but said that the quality of the writing was very high.[4]

Novel edit

A hardcover novel, titled Portal: A Dataspace Retrieval (1988) and composed mostly of the text from the interactive novel with some new additions, was written by the same author, Rob Swigart, and first published by St. Martin's Press. It takes the form of a series of notes on different subjects, in an order the player would encounter them through Homer. A softcover edition was released by Backinprint.com in 2001.[5]

An eBook was released "under the Creative Commons BY-NC-ND Unported license 3.0". The author has allowed it to be uploaded to the MobileRead forum.[6]

Legacy edit

In April 2012, author Rob Swigart and Subliminal Games launched a Kickstarter fundraising campaign called "Rob Swigart's Portal (1986) Reborn" to recreate the world of Portal as a modern third-person adventure game.[7] Some of the features set to be included were moving backward or forward in time through a simulation of the past and changing the character's appearance for different responses and reactions by virtual non-player characters. On June 5, the project creator cancelled the Kickstarter project having raised only $22,796 of the $530,000 target.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Portal for 68k (no, not that Portal ;) - Macintosh Garden". macintoshgarden.org. Retrieved 2021-06-26.
  2. ^ Dunnington, Benn; Brown, Mark R.; Malcolm, Tom (January–February 1987). "64/128 Gallery". Info. pp. 14–21.
  3. ^ Wagner, Roy (May 1987), "Portal: A Very Novel Game", Computer Gaming World, pp. 32–34
  4. ^ Ardai, Charles (June–July 1987). "Titans of the Computer Gaming World / Part Three of Five: Ardai on Activision". Computer Gaming World. p. 36.
  5. ^ Swigart, Rob (2001). Portal: A Dataspace Retrieval. Backinprint.com.
  6. ^ Swigart, Rob (May 16, 2009). Portal: A Dataspace Retrieval V1.1. MobileRead Forums Science Fiction.
  7. ^ Rob Swigart's Portal (1986) Reborn
  8. ^ "Rob Swigart's Portal (1986) Reborn". Kickstarter.

External links edit