Gaming on AmigaOS 4.1: Flight of the Amazon Queen (ScummVM) – Review

Screenshot by Old School Game Blog
Screenshot by Old School Game Blog

Hi everyone,

It’s Thursday evening and the weekend is approaching. It’s therefore time to warm up with some nostalgic point-and-click gaming through ScummVM.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with ScummVM, it’s basically an application that lets you run certain old adventure and role-playing games on systems they were never designed for. Examples are legendary titles like The Secret of Monkey Island, Maniac Mansion, Full Throttle and Sam and Max Hit the Road.

AmigaOS 4 does have a port of ScummVM and it works great. The current version is 1.8.1 and was released on the 27th of May 2016. The AmigaOS 4 maintainer is, as far as I can see, a developer by the name Raziel.

Having ScummVM on AmigaOS 4 opens up great possibilities, since you can run stuff that never came out for the Amiga. A very popular example is the awesome Monkey Island 3, which I will be testing in the future.

Flight of the Amazon Queen

Even if it does look like I’m only going to write about ScummVM, I’m actually looking into the point-and-click classic Flight of the Amazon Queen.

To get the game up and running on your system, you first need to download ScummVM if you haven’t installed it yet. It is available for download here:

http://os4depot.net/share/game/adventure/scummvm.lha

Once it has finished downloading, unpack it to a directory of your choice (right-click icon, choose “extract to”).

Before you start-up ScummVM, you’ll need some games. The easiest place to grab a few is on the official website:

http://scummvm.org/games/

You can choose the floppy or CD version of FOTAQ (short for Flight of the Amazon Queen). I went for the floppy version. The CD one has speech throughout the game, but I like reading.😉

When you’ve gotten hold of the games you want, you can start adding them to ScummVM.

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Screenshot by Old School Game Blog

To add, click on “Add Game” and select the directory where it resides. There’s not much more to it than that. Afterwards you are ready to start playing. As you can see from the screenshot, I’ve only got two games listed, but you can have many, many more.

Gameplay

FOTAQ is, as mentioned, an adventure game in the style of Monkey Island. It was originally released for the Amiga and PC/MS-DOS back in 1995. It was then re-released as freeware in 2004 for use with ScummVM. I’ve heard that it was developed with AMOS, but can’t confirm that this is true.

In the game you play the character Joe King, who is a pilot for hire. He was hired to fly a famous actress to a gig, but crashed deep in the Amazon Jungle. Here he uncovers a sneaky plot by a mad scientist to take over the world by creating an army of dinosaur women made from Amazon women.

The story of the game sounds pretty weird, but also cool I think.🙂

The game kicks off with a nice intro. You are captured together with the actress, but are rescued by Sparky the Mechanic. Later on your locked in a hotel room, unable to get out, and must find a way to escape.

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Screenshot by Old School Game Blog

Since I’m not new to the game, I know what you’ll have to do to get out.

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Screenshot by Old School Game Blog

Pick up the sheets, tie them together and hook the “rope” onto the radiator. You can then slide down the hatch.

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Screenshot by Old School Game Blog

You’ve managed to escape the room, but now what? I won’t get into details here, as discovering it is all the fun!

As is customary with these point-a-click games, you have an interface at the bottom of the screen. Here you can choose to “pick up” objects, “open” doors and so forth. You also have icons of items on display. These you can combine with on-screen items or characters. You use the mouse to click on where your character should go and what to do.

There are several options as well:

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Screenshot by Old School Game Blog

It’s worth mentioning that you can press “Escape” to skip cut scenes. Sometimes this is handy if you’ve already viewed it several times.

So, is it any fun?

That’s a good question, but the answer is short… FOTAQ is VERY fun. It has great humour, jokes and a cool story. You’ll encounter many absurd situations and characters, but I won’t disclose any of that here. If you enjoy adventure games, you’ll have a great time. The graphics looks really nice as well, which is a big plus.

To sum it up, I highly recommend getting ScummVM for your AmigaOS 4 setup. It is so worth it! You’ll get access to many superb games free of charge! Once ScummVM is up, do yourself a favor, grab the talkie version of FOTAQ and get cracking.😉 Enjoy and thanks for visiting my blog. See you soon!

PS: There are several ways to run this game on AmigaOS 4. You can also run it through RunInUAE for example if you favor that. Just mentioning it in case some of you prefer such an option.🙂 If you do, then you need the ADF’s of the game. Here you can find them. Cheers!

This post was previously published on my other blog, Gaming on AmigaOS 4, which I have not maintained for a while. I’m focusing my energy on this blog at the moment, but time will show what happens with the other one.

5 comments

    • Hi Jeffrey and thanks for commenting. 🙂 AmigaOS 4.1 can run 68k software through a built-in JIT-emulator (Petunia), but it can not run games, demos and such that “bangs the hardware”. That means that a lot of old Workbench utilities and other system friendly application can work, but not games like Chaos Engine and Flashback. There is a tool, however, called RunInUAE, that let’s you double-click icons of classic Amiga games and they’ll load like they used to. The trick is that UAE (emulator) is running the background. 🙂 My advice is to try AmigaOS 4.1 through emulation on a PC to see if it is something you enjoy using. It costs like £25-£29 and you get get it as a download as well. 🙂 It works pretty good in emulation, but is of course not as good as it running on a X1000 or X5000. Hope this was of help and have a good weekend! 🙂 Cheers!

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    • Hi Kieron and thanks for the info. 🙂 I see from HOL that it was originally written in AMOS and then converted to C. Doing that must have made it easy getting it over to the PC as well. 🙂 Goes to show that AMOS can do pretty good, just like Blitz Basic (Skidmark games and Worms). Have a good weekend and thanks for leaving a comment. 🙂

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