Happy Halloween! Let's Play Uninvited/ NES/ Jimmy A Plays Series
Happy Halloween and welcome to my new let's play.
We are closing out SPOOKTOBER with NES classic, Uninvited.
*GAMEPLAY RECORDED OFF MY SUPER CONSOLE X
CHAPTERS
START= 00:00
Car Crash and outside the Mansion= 0:53
The magic spells= 2:56
Ghost be gone= 7:05
The spider= 18:00
Exploring the mansion= 20:02
Did Dracan send you?= 24:16
Which Chair???= 28:33
Key 1 and what’s in the closet?= 34:24
The Star= 38:15
Grabbing the GYP Doll= 39:00
Backyard= 42:29
Greenhouse= 44:09
“Dogs! Why did it have to be dogs?”= 48:47
Church and going back for a missed spell= 50:20
The stone maze= 1:03:16
Magisterium= 1:20:44
The cookie= 1:27:33
Key 2 and No spider= 1:28:24
The old man and Dracan in the Ice= 1:29:33
Back in the mansion= 1:33:45
“You will join us…NOW!!!”= 1:36:31
END and Final Thoughts= 1:38:11
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(from wikipeda)
Uninvited is a horror-themed point-and-click adventure game developed originally for the Macintosh by ICOM Simulations released in 1986 by Mindscape.
NES version
As with the other NES MacVenture games, Uninvited, known in Japan as Akuma no Shōtaijō (悪魔の招待状, lit. "The Devil's Invitation"), added music, and elements of the written narration and storyline were altered, including:
In the NES version, if the player uses the phonograph in the Game room (Rec room in original versions), a broken-record version of the main theme from Shadowgate, another NES-ported game in the MacVenture series, will play. (A similar gag appears in another point-and-click game, Maniac Mansion).
The sibling trapped in the mansion is changed from a younger brother to an older sister in the NES version.
The NES version has no time limit unless the player picks up the ruby in one of the bedrooms. Even then, the player can drop the ruby to terminate the time limit.
As with the other NES ports, the game texts were severely simplified, in some cases also adding hints or elucidations for the gameplay. As an example, a hallway picture reads as follows in the NES version: "It's a small, [sic] painting of a young fellow."
In the original game, the address was, "Master Crowley, 666 Blackwell Road, Loch Ness, Scotland". However, at the time the game was released, Nintendo of America had stringent policy necessitating the removal of any remotely offensive material.[2][3] Rather than create a new address, it was simply shortened to "Master Crowley". This is likely a reference to occultist Aleister Crowley, but Nintendo (perhaps unknowingly) allowed the name to remain in the game. Other changes that may relate to censorship issues are pentagrams turned into stars (or, in one case, a ruby) and a cross into a chalice (while another cross that only served as decoration was removed altogether).
Beyond the game texts being simplified for the NES port, some of the death texts were edited or altered due to their rather graphic descriptions.
The NES version was released for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One in a package called "8-Bit Adventure Anthology".