Police Quest is a series of computer games produced and published by Sierra On-Line between 1987 and 1993. The original series was composed of three adventure games designed by former policeman Jim Walls, and a fourth title designed by Daryl F. Gates. In addition, Daryl F. Gates' Police Quest: SWAT was released in 1995, but was a tactical simulator rather than a graphic adventure. Although both SWAT and the tactical RTS SWAT 2 still carried the Police Quest name, it is generally agreed that these belong to the SWAT series instead.
The game is the most realistic of those developed by Sierra by the late eighties (when compared to Leisure Suit Larry, King's Quest or Space Quest), and featured many puzzles where proper police procedure is required to succeed. It was released for the IBM PC, Apple II, Amiga, Atari ST and Apple IIGS. A SCI 1.1 enhanced version in 256 color VGA was released in 1992.
The 1989 sequel, developed with Sierra's new SCI engine, focused more on detective and forensics work than the traffic-cop beginning of the original, while keeping the same realistic setting. The proper procedures for collecting and handling evidence are the main focus of many of PQ2's puzzles. It was released for the IBM PC, Amiga and Atari ST.
Sonny must deal with a partner with questionable ethics as well as find patterns in crime to find his next lead. The Bains family also plays a role in this game.
Released in 1991 for SCI version 1, PQ3 is completely mouse-driven. It was only released for the IBM PC and the Amiga. After this game, Jim Walls left Sierra for reasons that have still not been publicly explained, and SWAT founder Darryl F. Gates was named to take over of the Police Quest series.
Numerous mature themes are depicted in the game, including hate crimes, Neo Nazis, and African American celebrities and youth involved in crime. As you progress in the game you learn that your police partner had a double-life as a cross-dresser and in a first for a computer game, Carey's investigation leads him into a transgender nightclub in West Hollywood.
Using the final SCI32 version, the biggest difference visually is the use of scanned photos as backgrounds (unlike the hand-drawn scenery used before) and character sprites of higher quality. It was released in 1993, for both IBM PC and Macintosh. The game is generally incompatible with Windows 95, and later editions, except the game may crash at certain points in the game, i.e. the shooting gallery.
Although the Police Quest series lived in name for two more games, these releases were actually part of the SWAT Series and in a different genre altogether. In the most recent incarnation of the SWAT games, SWAT 4, the instructor of the tutorial introduces himself as Sonny Bonds.
Adventure games | Sierra games | Computer and video game franchises | Atari ST games
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"Police Quest".
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