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The only spy game from Infocom, Border Zone is a "compartmentalized" game
similar to Shogun, although the chapters don't have to be played in order. The
premise is classic spy intrigue that will be familiar to Raymond Chandler fans,
centered around an attempt to prevent an important assasination in the fictitious
country of Frobnia. In a neat departure from most games, the three chapters are
played from different perspectives: in Chapter 1, you play a businessman, who has
been given a document with the details of the assassination, and your job is to sneak
it out of the country. In Chapter 2, you play the wounded agent who gave the
businessman the document, and your goal is to escape from Frobnia. In Chapter 3, you
play an American double-agent who must prevent the assassination without blowing his
cover. In another departure for Infocom, all three chapters are played in real-time,
i.e. the story will go on without you if you take too much time deciding what to do.
While this adds a lot to the game's atmosphere and realism (after all, James Bond
himself only has split seconds to evade the bullets), this makes for some very
difficult puzzles that you are not likely to solve the first time through. This means
that you will have to restore the game several times before figuring out the right
sequences of moves. Fortunately, the game's on-line hintbook provides gentle nudges
to the right direction, and you can slow down the game's clock by typing SLOW if you
find it too frustrating. Like Plundered Hearts, Border Zone features several
different endings in addition to the "optimal" one. Zork creator Marc Blank does a
great job of creating an interlocking "big-picture": events in each chapter relate
to those in others, and by the time you finish all three, you will gain a complete
understanding of the story. Characters are well-developed, and the quality of writing
is excellent throughout. Highly recommended for all IF fans, but heed the "Advanced"
level on the box - this isn't an easy game you can finish in one sitting. |