Stunt Island

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Stunt Island
Developer(s) The Assembly Line
Publisher(s) Disney Interactive
Designer(s) Ronald J. Fortier
Adrian Stephens
Platforms MS-DOS
Release date(s)
    [1]
    Genre(s) Flight simulator
    Mode(s) Single-player

    Stunt Island is a flight simulation video game for MS-DOS PCs released in 1992. It was designed by Adrian Stephens and Ronald J. Fortier and published by Disney Interactive. The game, marketed as "The Stunt Flying and Filming Simulation", provides an island which contains a number of different film sets, such as a city, an oil rig, a canyon, and an aircraft carrier. The player can position cameras and props around these sets, and create triggers to start actions including the camera panning and an object moving. The game also has an editing mode where the player can splice together taped footage and insert sound effects. The game has a bias towards airplane stunts.

    Game components

    Game engine

    The game engine for Stunt Island was co-developed by The Assembly Line. It is capable of simultaneously rendering several hundred simple 3D objects on a typical early 1990s PC with 386 processor at 33 MHz with two megabytes of RAM.

    The graphics of the game are rendered in 256 colors at 320x200 resolution and the airplanes are shaded using Gouraud shading.

    Stunt coordinator

    When a player does not wish to create a stunt from scratch, he or she may go to the Stunt Coordinator on Stunt Island. The Stunt Coordinator possesses a built-in list of 32 stunt scenes. If the player is participating in the optional Stunt Pilot of the Year competition, these stunts must be completed to improve ranking.

    Set design

    In set design, a player may place props, cameras, and collideable triggers. Conditional and timed events may also be created to perform particular actions.

    Flight simulator

    While actually filming a stunt, the player's controls are that of a flight simulator. There is an airfield in the game where the player can select a plane and fly around Stunt Island to scout different locations.

    Editing room

    In the editing room the player is able to take previously recorded footage and splice them together into a single movie. Sound effects and music may also be added.

    Theater

    Movies may be watched in this room. Such movies may come with the game, be created by the player, or be downloaded from the Internet. The game also comes with a tool called MAKEONE which may be used to generate a self-contained version of a movie, which may be played on a machine without the game by using the PLAYONE tool.

    Community history

    Soon after the release of Stunt Island in 1992, there was a large amount of activity related to the game in the Flight Simulation Forum on CompuServe. Users of the software posted films they created onto CompuServe, where they could be downloaded and watched by other users.

    Since 1999, Stunt Island activity has centered on the SIFA Yahoo! Group

    Reception

    Computer Gaming World in 1993 praised Stunt Island's graphics, ease of use, editing features, and variety of aircraft, concluding that "it represents the future of simulation products [and] also a step toward a future where films can be created completely on the microcomputer".[2] That year the game received a Critics Choice Award for Best Consumer Product from the Software Publishing Association,[3] and was nominated for an award at the 1993 Game Developers Conference.[4]

    References

    1. Stunt Island at GameFAQs
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    See also

    References

    External links