![]() if you only want serious logic then don't play it. But that is sometimes part of the fun of this style of light-hearted game. Most are fairly logical within the context of the game but I must confess that a couple left me scratching my head as I failed to make the connection between a nut, an imitation apple and a pine cone. The introduction leaves you in no doubt that Teenagent is a humorous adventure game and you will need to be imaginative to solve some of the wacky puzzles. Pressing any of the function keys displays the options menu for saving, loading and quitting and you can also set text speed, walking speed etc. Your inventory appears when you move your cursor to the top of the screen. Left or right clicking will move Mark around but only right clicking will get him to walk to a new location. The interface is very easy to use left click to get a description, right click to use or operate. It is very much in the 'traditional' adventure vein with cartoon-style graphics, a point and click interface and inventory-based puzzles. Teenagent is a third person perspective adventure game that may have had a limited commercial release in Europe but has been freely available for download since 1999 (thank you, Metropolis!). If he succeeds in cracking this case Mark will become a bona fide secret agent. But something must have marked him out as the right person for the job otherwise why did the fortune teller pick him? Now Mark isn't stupid, despite his appearance, and rightly asks what's in it for him? The chief of the RGB points out that girls are attracted to secret agents and Mark's eyes light up. Mark Hopper is a teenage male indistinguishable from the rest of the species right down to his baseball cap worn backwards. ![]() ![]() The fortune teller makes an intuitive stab at the local phone book to find a likely candidate to solve the case, and the name Mark Hopper is selected. Even the ultra secret national security agency, the RGB, have had no success in cracking this case.ĭesperate times call for desperate measures so the chief of the RGB calls in a fortune teller for assistance. Security cameras record the event but reveal nothing of the perpetrator. Right before the eyes of onlookers it just ceases to exist. Review by Gordon Aplin (April, 2004) Gold bullion is mysteriously disappearing from banks.
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