Save early, save often, and don't overwrite saves.Sierra Entertainment, Inc., more popularly known under their former name,
Sierra On-Line, was an early game developer. The company is credited with various milestones in video game history, such as creating the very first "graphic adventure game" (
Mystery House, essentially
Interactive Fiction with extremely crude line-art drawings), some of the earliest animated games (
Kings Quest), and implementing beyond PC-Speaker sound into a game (
King's Quest IV: The Perils of Rosella). Sierra also was responsible for introducing the Japanese PC games
Thexder,
Fire Hawk,
Silpheed,
Zeliard and
Sorcerian to Western audiences. Sierra's milk and honey days were the mid-80s to the mid-90s: this was the era of
adventure gaming, when games focused more on testing the player's ingenuity than their reflexes.
Sierra's works are gaming classics and Sierra is now commonly associated with three things:
Sierra's games are notoriously difficult. Death is
everywhere and springs up at random, and if you haven't saved your game in a while, too bad, you have to start everything all over. The games are riddled with
Unwinnable situations, and since Unwinnable doesn't mean Unplayable, you often didn't realize the game was moot until you had been playing for hours. Or days. Sometimes weeks.
Sierra's infamous
Copy Protection was a nuisance; their
Guide Dang It moments made you want to scream. Though often their puzzles were well thought-out, equally as often they ventured into
Solve the Soup Cans territory. And it bears repeating: death and unwinnable situations are
everywhere.
Yet, despite all its... quirks, Sierra produced some of the finest games of the 80s and 90s, and easily some of the best ever adventure games. Their work featured hand-crafted oil paintings for backgrounds, elaborate music, professional voice actors and composers, memorable (and loveable) characters, amazing worlds, enjoyable stories, and creative gameplay. Sierra never took itself too seriously; games were loaded with gags, puns and
Easter Eggs. Although deaths were frequent, they were always friendly and most times featured a joke or pun; half the fun of a Sierra game is playing through
to find all the unique ways to die.
Sierra fizzled out in the late 90s, with the decline of adventure gaming. It was bought by
Vivendi Universal, who were cool enough to let amateur game makers create fan games of their series until 2009, when it was transferred to
Activision. There are currently no plans to restart the adventure gaming department.
However, in the recent times,
Tim Schafer's success with crowd funding on
Kickstarter has inspired several of the old Sierra teams to reunite under new banners, and thanks to several successful funding campaigns, many of them has started to work on
Spiritual Successor and
Remake projects.
Compare
LucasArts, their main rival, whose games were decidedly more forgiving.
Notable Games and Series include:
- The Aces series of flight sims (Aces Over Europe, Aces of the Pacific, Aces of the Deep; developed by Dynamix, published by Sierra)
- The Adventures Of Willy Beamish
- Birthright
- The Black Cauldron (yes, based on the movie)
- Codename Iceman
- Conquests Of Camelot
- Conquests Of The Longbow
- Dr Brain
- Eco Quest
- Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist
- Gabriel Knight
- Gold Rush
- Half-Life (developed by Valve)
- Homeworld
- The Incredible Machine
- Impressions City Building Series (Caesar, Pharaoh and its expansion pack Cleopatra, and Emperor; developed by Impressions Games, published by Sierra)
- Jones In The Fast Lane
- Kings Quest (the series that spawned other Quest games and launched Sierra into the mainstream)
- Laura Bow
- Leisure Suit Larry
- Manhunter series (Manhunter: New York, Manhunter 2: San Fransisco)
- Mixed Up Mother Goose (a rather popular Edutainment Game title, notably ironic since it came from a software house most famous for its Nintendo Hard games that are anything but for kids)
- Mystery House
- Phantasmagoria
- Police Quest
- Quest for Glory
- Rama: The Game of the Book Rendezvous With Rama
- The Red Baron series (developed by Dynamix, published by Sierra)
- Shivers
- Space Quest
- Spyro The Dragon
- Torins Passage
Tropes associated with Sierra's work: