![]() LucasArts are promising better puzzles, graphics, action and yams. But this is no pedestrian rehash of that game -it's a different kettle of whips altogether. Fair dues, really, when you consider how much Tomb Raider 'borrowed' from the Indy movies. Of course, it's all quite reminiscent of a certain popular 3D platform game. ![]() This time around, in place of point-and-click storytelling quirkery, LucasArts are offering real-time 3D action adventure. Of course, the bestubbled derring-do boy has made it on to the PC before, in Indiana Jones And The Fate Of Atlantis, an acclaimed Monkey Island-style graphic adventure which I once got horribly stuck in and never finished. And now there's this: Indiana Jones And The Infernal Machine, a gorgeous-looking computer game from LucasArts, the software house with a track record most developers would kill for. Still, the combination of an unlikely first name and a common-as-muck surname has served this particular fictional hero well -the original triumvirate of Indiana Jones adventures figure highly in Hollywood's all-time Top 20, and rumours of a forthcoming fourth instalment are flying around the Internet. ![]() Would you go to see a film called Utah Sidebottom And The Temple Of Doom? Of course you wouldn't. ![]()
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