Submit | Contests | Top Rated | Reviews | Previews | Guides | Cheats | Screens | Scores | Videos | News | Forums | Blogs | Register | Login | Users | Staff | Links | Meta
HonestGamers: Intelligent gamers wanted... and rewarded!
Arcade :: Dreamcast :: DS :: GameCube :: iPhone/iPod :: Macintosh :: PC :: PlayStation 2 :: PlayStation 3 :: PSP :: Wii :: Xbox :: Xbox 360 :: Retro & Import
Earn prizes and eliminate ads just by contributing content on your FREE user account. Click for details or register today!


Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy Twitter giveaway Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy Twitter giveaway
Just by participating regularly on the site, you can become eligible to receive free stuff like games, systems, gift certificates and more! HonestGamers, where intelligent gamers are wanted... and rewarded!
Icewind Dale video game review Looking for a good read?
Check out a selection from our database of more than 6000 video game reviews! zanzard has written a Icewind Dale review and figures that the game deserves a rating of 5 out of 10. What do you think? Check it out, then be sure to leave feedback or chime in with one of your own!

Systems > PC > S > Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock > Staff Review

Sign into your user account to view or leave feedback for this review. Don't have an account yet? You can click here to open one. It only takes a minute, and it's free!

Review by Gary Hartley
October 28, 2006

I found myself in a familiar office. Next to a rickety door hung a ragged dartboard littered with scars and bulletholes. The crumbling decor of the room sported a similar motif, boasting clear evidence of small-arms fire being a regularity. A large desk sat overflowing with paperwork that could not be crammed into the stuffed filing cabinet, a smaller desk situated but a few feet away, one engraved with infantile carvings and with one rotten leg replaced by a sink plunger. A tied noose hung from the coat-rack and a content goldfish swam around in the water cooler. From somewhere, a phone rang and the scene exploded into chaos as a suited dog and a shark-toothed rabbity-thing scrambled frantically to be the one who answered it.

And straight away, I was back in 1993.

In 1993, Sam & Max: Hit the Road became an instant cult classic. Using the then-popular point 'n' click engine that Lucasarts spearheaded, it presented players with a zany 2D adventure which saw Sam, a hulking dog in a cheap suit complete with kipper tie team up with Max, the aforementioned slightly psychotic snow-white rabbity-thing to do some sleuthing as only such an oddball pairing could. The off-the-wall banter between the two highlighted a comic-book story full of visual gags and belly laughs. Although a sequel was planned by Lucasarts some years later, it was predictably scrapped in order to make way for Star Wars XXVVI: Almost as Many Games as Mario. Series fans sighed regretfully and trudged off to Youtube to watch the trailer of the now nuked game and veg out in front of the Sam & Max animated show.

But it would prove not to be the end. A bunch of talented individuals would get bored of lightsaber spamming and escape Lucasarts via the sewers while their bosses watched the pod racing scene from Episode 1 and formed their own company, Telltale Games. The rights to Sam & Max were bought and a sea of gamers held their breath.

They will not be disappointed.

A lot of fears manifested upon the announcement of Sam & Max: Culture Shock. Would the new 3D graphics engine still maintain the charm of the 2D original? Would the new voice actors live up to what existing fans expect? The answer to both questions is yes; while indeed hearing our twin protagonists wield new vocals may be a bit jarring at first, both roles are pulled off superbly. Sam maintains a deadpan noir voice perfectly slotting into the Bogart parody tribute it's meant to maintain. Max, on the other hand, sounds demented and slightly unhinged -- fitting his profile exactly. A great deal of effort has been put into the presentation of Culture Shock; the graphics engine manages to exhort the same comic-book feel that has served Telltale's other episodic franchise, Bone, and sat so well on the 2D scale with Hit the Road. The laid-back ambience summoned up by a playful jazz score does nothing but aid this.

But it's a sense of familiarity that is both the game's most recognisable strength and biggest drawback. While exploring the office that I still hold fond memories about from all those years ago, I spied a bowling ball. Straight away, I knew that it would be used for some zany scheme, some evil and calculated plot that the pair would delight in that would ultimately conclude in bouncing the ball off someone's skull. I was not to be disappointed in this regard, but I was in the ease in which this was accomplished. The puzzles housed within Culture Shock will rarely challenge the gamer, and when they do, asking Max about the conundrum will often supply you with a thinly veiled answer.

Your enjoyment of Sam & Max: Culture Shock will depend on why you play adventure games: if you play for the genre staple of awesome plots and comic-like presentation, this will not bother you. Flying through the puzzles within will simply allow you to progress more quickly towards the fantastically insane plot and keep the new sight gags and witty on-liners flowing freely. But should you play for a sense of achievement, of working out one's brain by undoing some devious tasks, you may find yourself disappointed in the offerings here. Emphasis has been firmly placed on presentation here, and it pays off. It's just a shame that more effort could not have been ploughed into making the game a bit more of a challenge.

A shame, yes, but far from game breaking. neither is the expected shortness that episodic releases are always going to have. A confident outlook can be realistically suggested based solely on the work Telltale have already accomplished with their Bone franchise. Whereas the first of the series, Out of Boneville, was a little too straight forward and easy to be considered a must-buy, the problems were recognised and fixed in the second offering, The Great Cow Race.

Without the brain-busting puzzles to slow you down, you are left free to dive into a world dripping with a sense of personalty and colour. Retrieve your stolen phone from Jimmy Two-Teeth before strolling outside your office to do some light shopping in Bosco's Inconvenience store, a corner shop guarded possessively by a paranoid conspiracy freak with a hankering for large scale weapon manufacturing. Or maybe Sybil's place across the road will serve you better where you can enjoy a chat with the retired tattoo artists turned psychotherapist. You can find her humble abode right next to the now-closed up Lefty's Tool Hire.

.... remember that time when Max drove a #3 screwdriver into Lefty's eye? Good times.

But even if you don't, you'll still get swept up in a story full of ex-child stars turned vandals, a new fitness craze called Eye-Bo that tones up your opticals and an egomaniacal villain with a buffoon on steroids. Culture Shock is more than just a stepping stone into the second episode of the new Sam & Max franchise; it's an experience that came a lot closer to recapturing the old game than I had dared to hope.

My dog doesn't carry an oversized firearm or wear a kipper tie, and my little sister's rabbit has never shown any desire to employ shark-like teeth in an attempt to gnaw my leg off. With this evidence in mind, I put it to the reader that Sam & Max are officially better than real life. And this game does most things right in capturing that.


Rating
9
It's an easy game; those who fondly remember the challenge of an era gone might find this a sticking point of sorts. The perfectly recaptured atmosphere of Hit the Roads universe will more than make up for this.
Read more about the review rating scale...

Staff reviews represent the opinion of the individual staff member that wrote them and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the site staff as a whole. If you disagree with the contents of this review, you may click to leave feedback on our dedicated forum. Thank you!




HG 2009 Fundraising Progress: $348 / $2500 (14%)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Click to learn about the Fundometer or to advertise.

Game Profile & Content All NA EU JP AU
Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock (PC) game cover art
Staff Score (Avg): 9.0
User Score (Avg): 7.0
Press Score (Avg): N/A
Reviews: 2
Guides: 1
Cheats: 0
Ratings: 1
High Scores: 0
Screenshots: 7
Videos: 0

Title: Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock
Genre: Graphic Adventure
Publisher: Telltale Games
Developer: Telltale Games
Release Date: November 1, 2006

Additional Information:
DEATH FROM ABOVE!


Do you own this game? Register for a free account to track it and other games in your collection!

 Voice Your Opinion...
 Average User Rating (1 rating)
Only registered users can rate this game!
PC discussion forums

 While you're here...

Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis is another PC game in the Graphic Adventure genre that has been attracting activity lately, so you might want to check it out and see what all of the fuss is about!

Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock screenshot
Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock screenshot
Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock screenshot

   

Site Info | User Help | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | Site King
© 1998-2009 HonestGamers
None of the material contained within this site--from reviews, guides, cheats, fiction, and editorials to message board posts--may be reproduced in any conceivable fashion without permission from the author(s) of said material. This site is not sponsored or endorsed by Nintendo, Sega, Sony, Microsoft, or any other such party. Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock is a registered trademark of its copyright holder. This site makes no claim to Sam & Max Episode 1 - Culture Shock, its characters, screenshots, artwork, music, or any intellectual property contained within. No opinions expressed in any review, guide, cheat, fanfic, or editorial necessarily represent the opinion of the staff or any site sponsors.
eXTReMe Tracker