The Neverhood (PC)

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dunnace

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When it comes to gaming, I like to consider myself a fan of 'cult' games.
Games with originality and spark - games that excel themselves in areas like story and art - games that fly under the radar for many but are beloved by few.
Games like The Neverhood.
Now it's probably no wonder that most of you have never even heard of the game, this is the gaming equivalent of Gold Dust when it comes to rarity but somehow (thanks to the gods that be) I have a copy of this game and it's truly a sight to behold.
What is so special about this game? Well, it all starts with a lump of clay...


Klaymen learns the hard way, some buttons shouldn't be pressed

The Neverhood was conceived and created by Doug TenNapel, who is somewhat more famous for his work on Earthworm Jim than on this infinitely more intelligent and masterful adventure game, and for a game concept it's brave. Very brave. The entire game is made of clay, that's real clay, as in a Wallace and Gromit film but done for a whole game. Stop motion animation for every movement, every expression, every step and every fall. Truly a terrifying idea for a games company, but somehow, the crew at Dreamworks did it, and as a result, this games graphics cannot age. Why? Because it's made of clay! Nothing has even come close to the ambition here, and despite the amazing amount of work and money spent on the game people haven't even heard of it, let alone played it! Slightly sad isn't it, that something so fresh and creative is ignored... ah well, enough of the morose tale of failure, what about the game itself?

Point and Click adventure is the order of the day here, as you play as Klayman, a man made of... well you can probably guess. He awakens in a room with a leaver in and that's all you get for story to begin with. As you find your way out of this mysterious room and into the open world of the Neverhood, you begin to realise that you are entirely alone. There isn't a single living thing about, just strange buildings and warped scenery. The effect this has on you as a player is fairly harrowing, did this world once live and breath, or was it always this barren? More exploration through the usual point and click methods will take you to places with strange puzzles, the reward for which appears to be strange rectangular lumps, which when placed inside a video player on some of the walls inside the buildings, start to reveal the back story to you in hazy, part missing lumps.

So begins your quest to explore this new world, find the tapes, discover who you are and indeed why you have been brought to exist. Even though this sounds very soul searching and almost philosophical, like all decent point and click games, it's also extraordinarily funny. Doug TenNapel may be famous for Earthworm Jims hilarious antics, but Klayman is by far the more endearing goofball. His curiosity will always land you in a mess, and other friends you meet along the way such as Willie and Bill aren't exactly intellectual powerhouses either, prepare for plenty of prat falling and panic. Oh, and just a little warning, the world isn't entirely empty, there may be a rather hungry weasel waiting for you...

It's difficult to try and tell you more about the story without ruining it for you, but suffice to say those who want heavy back story will find it in the Hall of records, a 100 screen long explanation of how everything has come to be, and you have to traipse through this history to find a cassette so you can beat the game. It can have some rather sadistic streaks this one... That said, it also features some endearing puzzles, making yourself out of dynamite to trick a hungry monster, using shrink potions and size enlargers to explore, pulling the plug on The Neverhood (actually, that's not advised...), the game has plenty to keep you interested, just don't be ashamed if you go running towards a guide with you tail between your legs, it is very, VERY hard. One example is a 8x8 grid matching pairs game, where if you screw up once the whole game is reset. I had to get some paper and a pen to beat that part, oh, and about 2 hours of my life.

But now I want to move away from the gameplay and talk about something that makes this game one of the more tragic losses to the gaming world, the soundtrack. Go youtube it now, find a song and listen. It's amazing, a jazzy, unique and completely original soundtrack make The Neverhood both intimidating and jovial, it's an ambivalence that's hard to come across. It uses a strangely messy and slack use of instruments and feels like the musicians are just playing what comes to mind, and fortunately what comes to mind is brilliant, smooth and chaotic jazz. Marvellous.
The Neverhood isn't perfect. For a game with so many great things going for it, it is far too hard and at times far too wrapped up in its sadistic puzzles to care about the player, but it is also truly unique and we'll probably never see anything of it's ilk again, it's a sad thought but one we must live with. If you ever stumble across a copy, make sure you grab it, not only because it's truly a work of art and something you should undoubtedly enjoy one lazy Sunday afternoon, but also because on eBay this thing goes for some serious cash. Not that you'd ever want to sell it once you had it, but consider it a family heirloom. One made, entirely, of clay.

Recommendation: Well, if you can, buy it, otherwise I'll look the other way while you try and 'find' it. *Ahem*

Bottom Line: A neigh on impossible game made entirely of Clay with a sense of humour to match it's absurd premise, of you haven't fallen in love with it after 10 minutes of play if you have no heart.
 

TheDuckbunny

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Jul 9, 2009
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This sounds amazing. I'm actually listening to the soundtrack on Youtube right now.
You've done some impressive writing here and really made me excited to find out more about this game. Thanks for that! Just too bad that I probably won't be able to find this the legal way.
 

dunnace

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Oct 10, 2008
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Thanks kindly for the praise, and don't be too worried about the 'legal' method, none of the team would ever get a penny if you bought it now, makes me want them to release it on Steam just so I can get it in a more reliable format and so everyone can experience this game. It's by no means perfect, but it does something that the Cliffy B's and Activision's of the day can't do for toffee, make the games lovable.
 

danosaurus

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dunnace said:
When it comes to gaming, I like to conciser myself a fan of 'cult' games.
(this first sentence is a little arbitrary for the introduction. You should be conveying your personality through your writing style, not an opening sentence)
Games with originality and spark, games that excel themselves in area like story and art, games that fly under the radar for many but are beloved by few, games like The Neverhood. Now, it's probably no wonder that most of you have never even heard of the game,(assumptions are best left unsaid, a lot of readers may take offence - maybe try tip-toeing around a direct assumption or wording it differently) this is the gaming equivalent of Gold Dust when it comes to rarity, but somehow, thanks to the gods that be, I have a copy of this game. And (never, EVER start a sentence with 'and') it's truly a sight to behold. What is so special about this game? Well, it all starts with a lump of clay...(I really like this last line, solid ending for an introduction)

Just an example of how this paragraph might be better structured.

When it comes to gaming, I like to consider myself a fan of 'cult' games.
Games with originality and spark - games that excel themselves in areas like story and art - games that fly under the radar for many but are beloved by few.
Games like The Neverhood.
Now it's probably no wonder that most of you have never even heard of the game, this is the gaming equivalent of Gold Dust when it comes to rarity but somehow (thanks to the gods that be) I have a copy of this game and it's truly a sight to behold.
What is so special about this game? Well, it all starts with a lump of clay...


See how breaking the paragraph up a little thins out the ranks of letters? It makes it more appealing to the eye and more readable in terms of structure.


Solid review, you've covered most of the good points of the Neverhood and addressed the shortcomings.
I played this game about 5 years ago and even then I had some serious VGA issues with pink replacing black colours and lots of seizure-inducing flickering (The Neverhood's in serious need of driver-support updates).
Regardless of hardware conflicts//issues, this game is truly a feast for the senses!

I can sense that you've got a shining ray of personal style screaming to be loosed upon your writing but I feel you restrict it when you regress to a more standard style of structure in some paragraphs.

In any case, keep writing and I'll keep reading ^_^
 

dunnace

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Oct 10, 2008
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I re-edited it to your suggestion, I never really think about presentation, just the sentances and such. And thank you, I shall keep writing.
 

Thurmer

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Jul 15, 2009
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I remember this old game, used to always play it at my friends house. Good memories :)
 

megalomania

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danosaurus said:
I'm sure your high school english teacher told you to never start a sentence with a conjunction, however if you do it correctly it is fine. It is usually used to add particular emphasis to the sentence starting with the conjunction, the other use is when writing spoken word or conversation between characters; people very often begin sentences with conjunctions in conversation.

I was trying to find a way to start one of those sentences but I think it would of looked a little forced. And you would think I was a twat. See!

Apart from that I like the rest of what you said. Especially the formatting bit because everybody on the internet is like 'wall of text, oh no!'.
 

danosaurus

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megalomania said:
danosaurus said:
I'm sure your high school english teacher told you to never start a sentence with a conjunction, however if you do it correctly it is fine. It is usually used to add particular emphasis to the sentence starting with the conjunction, the other use is when writing spoken word or conversation between characters; people very often begin sentences with conjunctions in conversation.

I was trying to find a way to start one of those sentences but I think it would of looked a little forced. And you would think I was a twat. See!
Have I just been schooled? How embarrassing *blushes*
I kinda thought there might've been exceptions to the 'And' rule (kinda like that i before e thingy) but I would have imagined it was if you were writing in a more colloquial or informal sense.
Reviews, unless stylised completely informal, are usually meant to be formal pieces of literature. Though I'll admit defeat here as what you said makes sense.

LOL at your example sentence!

Oh and nice Avatar by the way, think I'll chuck on some RJD2 right now ^_^
 

danosaurus

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Mar 11, 2008
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dunnace said:
I re-edited it to your suggestion, I never really think about presentation, just the sentances and such. And thank you, I shall keep writing.
No probs ^_^
Wall of text is a largely prevalent problem in the reviews section and it's so easily remedied as well!
Looking forward to more of your work!
 

Aft3rShock

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May 2, 2008
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OMG I used to play this game as a (little) kid. Nice review. I remember as a kid getting stuck at certain points. I feel that the difficulty curve was a bit off, but that might have just been because of my inferior 8 year old mind.
 

megalomania

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Apr 14, 2009
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danosaurus said:
Have I just been schooled? How embarrassing *blushes*
I kinda thought there might've been exceptions to the 'And' rule (kinda like that i before e thingy) but I would have imagined it was if you were writing in a more colloquial or informal sense.
Reviews, unless stylised completely informal, are usually meant to be formal pieces of literature. Though I'll admit defeat here as what you said makes sense.

LOL at your example sentence!

Oh and nice Avatar by the way, think I'll chuck on some RJD2 right now ^_^
Your right that it generally crops up in more informal and colloquial pieces, but it can be used in 'formal' pieces too, the most common instance in formal writing is probably starting a sentence with 'but', because it can be used to add weight to a point/counter-point argument. I think you were right to call the OP on it though, as I don't really think he used it very effectively.

It took me a few minutes to come up with the example sentence. I'm glad you appreciate the effort!

You're the first Escapist to notice that my avatar is RJD2! I need some new music, do you know of anybody similar to RJD2 that I could listen to?
 

Swaki

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Apr 15, 2009
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great review, i have never played it and since i cant figure out how to get illegal games to work i probably never will and from what ive read here it truly saddens me.

but that is just another compliment, ive never read any review that made me sad for not playing/watching/eating what the critic was reviewing.
 

Swaki

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oh btw you can buy it for only 5 euro at http://www.classicgamingpresents.com/store/neverhood-classic-game-vista-p-145.html?The-Neverhood&gclid=CMT_z_Gdn5wCFYuB3godDEQjdw

EDIT:
sorry for the double post, should just have edited the link into the first comment, but i just realized that as i pressed post.
 

danosaurus

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Mar 11, 2008
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megalomania said:
danosaurus said:
Your right that it generally crops up in more informal and colloquial pieces, but it can be used in 'formal' pieces too, the most common instance in formal writing is probably starting a sentence with 'but', because it can be used to add weight to a point/counter-point argument. I think you were right to call the OP on it though, as I don't really think he used it very effectively.

It took me a few minutes to come up with the example sentence. I'm glad you appreciate the effort!

You're the first Escapist to notice that my avatar is RJD2! I need some new music, do you know of anybody similar to RJD2 that I could listen to?
Similar to RJD2?

Hmmm well for the hip-hop element I'd say have a gander at Unkle again [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbdHi_YQ57c].
Their newer stuff isn't as experimental but it's still incredible, relative to the garbage that's getting pumped out of radio nowadays Unkle - Reign [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uX9yNuUkLKU]

Maybe have a listen to Hermitude [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzLKjfvDG-I] as well, a little more mellow but they're incredible composers!

Also - a bit of a stab in the dark here, try out some Tweaker [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLPjCbQHbaY&feature=related].

RJD2 are fairly niche, it's hard for me to recommend something without being too broad as there's lots of elements to cover but I think Unkle is your best bet.
Name a few other bands you like and I'll see if i can pin-point something a bit more aptly :)
 

dunnace

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I hate to ask, but what do you mean OP? Just for future reference. And yes, I probably should have gone less formal, I like to add a more personal touch to my reviews by referring to the reader directly and make a few assumptions (I know it can backfire... but I write for the majority in the assumptions so sorry if anyone found that part a bit... presumption...) but I'll bear in mind to stay more open to the reader.
 

danosaurus

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dunnace said:
I hate to ask, but what do you mean OP? Just for future reference. And yes, I probably should have gone less formal, I like to add a more personal touch to my reviews by referring to the reader directly and make a few assumptions (I know it can backfire... but I write for the majority in the assumptions so sorry if anyone found that part a bit... presumption...) but I'll bear in mind to stay more open to the reader.
OP = Original Post(er)
i.e you originally posted this Topic, making you the original post(er) :)

Also - for future reference, if you want someone to know you've replied to something they've said on a forum, use the 'Quote' Button, instead of the 'Reply' button.

Using this button not only copies and quotes their original text, it also sends the OP of that text a mail notification to let them know that you've replied to something they've said on the forums.
Just helps keep everyone in the loop!
 

Arqus_Zed

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I'm always open for *the other* kind of games.

I remember reading about this game once, in one of them thick 'history of gaming' books.

I also remember that it immediatly appealed to me.

But... I never found it and eventually I kinda forgot about it.

But reading your article makes me wanna play it, more than ever before.

I think I'll be goin' hunting again...
 

Lukeje

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You forgot to mention that the game saves to the registry thus meaning that it's incompatible with XP / Vista until you've fiddled with it (or bought the version that someone linked to above that claims to be Vista compatible).

I rather enjoyed the game, though the version I had had most of the music cut out (to make the download smaller), but what little of it there was was amazing. The most annoying thing about the puzzles is that most of them seem to designed to artificially lengthen the games by making you traipse all the way from one side of the world to the other and back again. However, the story does drag you in as do the endearing visuals.
 

Captain Pancake

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May 20, 2009
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did Klayman like In Flames?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qNDknB7UpFo
i'm sorry, that was a very bad joke...

*ahem* Anyway, very nice review, i might do a little research on this later. and i noticed you're quite new here, so if nobody else has said it yet, welcome to the escapist!