The Even More Incredible Machine - Puzzle 99: "Bumping Up" (1993) [MS-DOS]

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Picking up where The Incredible Machine left off, The Even More Incredible Machine is a challenging puzzle game in which the player must complete "Rube Goldberg" machines: extremely complex systems for doing very simple things. The goal of a level may be something like getting a basketball into a basket, but the goal must be achieved by placing hamster wheels attached to pulleys in order to release balloons, or lighting a flashlight so that a magnifying glass can focus the beam on a cannon that will launch a cannonball at a goldfish bowl. The incredibly imaginative components of the various incredible machines made the game an instant hit with puzzle fans, teachers, and parents. The game uses an odd 640×448 resolution, which is slightly too large to allow 256 colors, so there was no obvious reason not to use 640×480. There are over 160 levels in this game, with only 10 playable in the shareware version.

The Incredible Machine (aka TIM) is a series of computer games that were originally designed and coded by Kevin Ryan and produced by Jeff Tunnell, the now-defunct Jeff Tunnell Productions, and published by Dynamix; the 1993 through 1995 versions had the same development team, but the later 2000–2001 titles had different designers. All versions were published by Sierra Entertainment.

The general goal of the games is to create a series of Rube Goldberg devices: arrange a given collection of objects in a needlessly complex fashion so as to perform some simple task (e.g., "put the ball into a box" or "start a mixer & turn on a fan"). Available objects ranged from simple ropes and pulleys to electrical generators, bowling balls, and even cats and mice to humans, most of which had specific interactions with or reactions to other objects (for example, mice will run towards nearby cheese). The levels usually have some fixed objects that cannot be moved by the player, and so the only way to solve the puzzle is carefully arrange the given objects around the fixed items. There is also a "freeform" option that allows the user to "play" with all the objects with no set goal or to also build their own puzzles with goals for other players to attempt to solve.

The Incredible Machine, the first game in the series, was originally going to be developed by Electronic Arts for the Commodore 64 in 1984, but Dynamix worked on Arcticfox for the Amiga instead and work did not start on The Incredible Machine until the spring of 1993. Kevin Ryan programmed The Incredible Machine in nine months, on a $36,000 budget.




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2016-01-25The Even More Incredible Machine - Puzzle 93: "Cat Boxing" (1993) [MS-DOS]
2016-01-25The Even More Incredible Machine - Puzzle 92: "When Push Comes to Shove" (1993) [MS-DOS]
2016-01-25The Even More Incredible Machine - Puzzle 91: "New Tennis" (1993) [MS-DOS]
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