Back to the Future the Game Wii Box Art

2010 video game

Dorsum to the Future: The Game
Back to the Future The Game.PNG
Programmer(s) Telltale Games
Publisher(s) Telltale Games
Director(s) Dennis Lenart
Peter Tsaykel
Eric Parsons
Dave Grossman
Producer(s) Brett Tosti
Designer(s) Mike Stemmle
Andy Hartzell
Dave Grossman
Jonathan Straw
Programmer(s) Randy Tudor
Keenan Patterson
Artist(s) Derek Sakai
Peter Tsaykel
Writer(southward) Mike Stemmle
Andy Hartzell
JD Straw
Composer(s) Jared Emerson-Johnson
Series Back to the Future
Engine Telltale Tool
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
Os 10
PlayStation 3
PlayStation 4
Wii
Xbox 360
Xbox One
iOS
Release

Episode 1

    • WW: December 22, 2010
    • EU: January 20, 2011 (PS3)
    • NA: Feb xv, 2011 (PS3) [1]
    • WW: Feb 17, 2011 (iOS) [2] [3]

Episode 2

    • WW: February 16, 2011
    • NA: March 29, 2011 (PS3)
    • EU: March 31, 2011 (PS3)
    • WW: April 20, 2011 (iOS)

Episode three

    • WW: March 29, 2011
    • Eu: April 14, 2011 (PS3)
    • NA: May 3, 2011 (PS3)
    • WW: May 26, 2011 (iOS)

Episode four

    • WW: Apr 29, 2011
    • WW: June 2, 2011 (iOS)
    • EU: June 2, 2011 (PS3)
    • NA: June 7, 2011 (PS3)

Episode 5

    • WW: June 23, 2011
    • WW: July 21, 2011 (iOS)
    • NA: July 26, 2011 (PS3)

Consummate pack
(Retail)

    • NA: September 29, 2011 (PC)
    • NA: October 25, 2011 (PS3 & Wii)
    • European union: May 4, 2012 (PC, PS3 & Wii) [4]
    • NA: October 13, 2015 (PS4, X360 & XONE) [5]
    • EU: Oct xvi, 2015 (PS4, X360 & XONE) [5]
Genre(s) Graphic adventure
Manner(s) Single-player

Dorsum to the Hereafter: The Game is an episodic graphic adventure based on the Dorsum to the Hereafter film franchise. The game was adult and published by Telltale Games equally role of a licensing bargain with Universal Pictures. Bob Gale, the co-creator, co-writer, and co-producer of the film trilogy, assisted Telltale in writing the game'southward story. Original actors Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd allowed the developers to employ their likenesses in the game for the lead characters Marty McFly and Medico Dark-brown, respectively. Although Lloyd reprises his function as Physician, A.J. Locascio plays the role of Marty, while Fox later appeared to vocalisation two cameo roles in the terminal episode, reprising his role every bit hereafter versions of Marty McFly in addition to playing his forefather William.[six]

The game is split-upward into five episodes available on multiple gaming platforms, the first episode released for Microsoft Windows and Bone Ten on Dec 22, 2010. PlayStation 3 and iOS versions followed in February 2011. Episodes 2 through 5 were released throughout Feb to June 2011, with the final episode released on June 23, 2011. Telltale published the series every bit retail products for the PlayStation 3 and Wii consoles for North America.[7] Deep Silvery published the retail PlayStation 3 and Wii versions for Europe on May 4, 2012. To commemorate the films' 30th anniversary, Telltale Games released the game on PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, and Xbox 1 on October 13, 2015. The ports feature updated voice work from Tom Wilson, who played Biff Tannen in the films (Biff was voiced by Child Beyond in the original release).[v]

Gameplay [edit]

Dorsum to the Future: The Game is a graphic chance played from a third-person perspective. The player controls Marty to explore the 3D environments using either the keyboard, mouse or game controller to movement around. The role player can have Marty examine objects, talk to non-player characters (initiating dialog through chat trees), and perform specific actions in society to solve puzzles and progress the game. Some items can exist picked up and stored in Marty'southward inventory, and so tin exist used later to collaborate with other characters or objects. The game provides a list of current goals for the actor to complete to accelerate the game. The player can access a hint system, revealing one inkling at a time from a number of cryptic clues for how to solve a specific puzzle.[eight] [nine]

Plot [edit]

It has been six months since Marty McFly witnessed Dr. Emmett Dark-brown disappear into an unknown time.[Northward 1] The banking concern has begun foreclosing on Doc's home. On May fourteen, 1986, while helping his begetter George clear out Physician'south possessions, Marty is shocked to see a DeLorean time machine (afterward revealed to exist a temporal duplicate created by the lightning strike in the 2d film) appear outside the business firm, having previously witnessed its destruction. Inside is Einstein, Doc's dog, and a tape recorder with a bulletin from Doc explaining how the DeLorean would return to this present should Doctor fall on hard times. Einstein helps rail down Edna Strickland, the elderly sister of Marty's schoolhouse disciplinarian and a former reporter for Loma Valley's newspaper. Reading her paper drove, Marty learns that Doc, who was disguised under the alias "Carl Sagan" to hibernate his true identity, was arrested in 1931 and killed by Irving "Child" Tannen, Biff Tannen'south begetter. Marty recalibrates the DeLorean to accept him to just before Doc's murder.

Marty arrives on June 13, 1931, and learns that Doc was accused of arson upon Kid'due south illegal speakeasy and thus needs to pause out of jail. Doc tells Marty to seek the aid of his younger self, Emmett, who at this point in time assists his male parent, who staunchly resents Emmett's dream of a career in scientific discipline, at the courthouse. Along the style, Marty encounters his grandfather Arthur "Artie" McFly, Officer Danny Parker (his girlfriend Jennifer'southward grandfather), and a young Edna. While convincing Emmett to help, Marty delivers a amendment to Artie, who serves every bit Kid's accountant, persuading him to testify against Kid and help prove Doc's innocence. Believing all has been fixed, Doc and Marty prepare to return to the present when Marty starts to fade abroad. Doc discovers Artie would exist killed the next solar day for testifying, thus erasing Marty'due south existence. Travelling dorsum in fourth dimension, they convince Artie to lay depression after testifying while avoiding their past selves.

Returning to May 15, 1986, they realize that their actions in the past take prevented the arrest of Kid Tannen, allowing him to expand his criminal operations. Every bit a upshot of this, the Tannen family became the 5th-most-dangerous crime family in California, owning all of Hill Valley. Marty and Doc travel to August 25, 1931, the twenty-four hours Kid was supposed to be arrested. The duo find another selection: they convince Trixie Trotter, Child'south moll who has a soft-spot for Artie, to testify instead. The cop (Danny Parker) who was meant to abort Kid has been demoted because of Marty and Doc's tampering, causing his girlfriend Betty (Jennifer's grandmother) to dump him and he now works for Kid to earn some extra coin. After Marty restores his confidence, Parker decides to turn against Kid to win back Betty. Kid and his gang are jailed, and all appears to exist in-order. Doc reveals that this is as well the nighttime that motivated him to cease his rocket car experiment for the Hill Valley Science Expo. He went to see Frankenstein when he was stressed and was inspired, even keeping the ticket stub until 1986. Marty and Md return to the future unaware that their actions have acquired Edna to autumn in love with Emmett, and their relationship causes Emmett to surrender on his scientific inventions. The ticket stub starts to fade out of existence as Dr. realizes that Edna stopped him from seeing the film.

When they return to 1986 once again, Doc and Einstein disappear, and Marty discovers that Hill Valley is at present a totalitarian walled society, run past "Denizen Brown". Sneaking inside, Marty learns that Edna has brainwashed Emmett and used his intelligence to arts and crafts a perfect social club in her eyes. Marty gets close to Citizen Brown and shows him a notebook he recovered from 1986 with the offset drawing of Doc'southward flux capacitor. Citizen Dark-brown is flooded with memories and decides to turn against Edna to fix history. He helps Marty repair the DeLorean and the two travel back to 1931 to attempt to undo their previous mistakes. However, the harm causes the DeLorean to arrive in October instead of August, when the Scientific discipline Expo is near to brainstorm and Edna and Emmett'due south relationship has strengthened. Marty is prepare to take whatever steps are needed to terminate it, merely Citizen Brownish becomes worried about what will happen to Edna and angry that Marty does not care about her feelings, and drives off lonely in the DeLorean to assess the state of affairs.

Marty, with assistance from Trixie, ends Edna and Emmett'due south relationship, only Emmett is withal reluctant to return to his scientific roots. Marty tries to force Emmett to see Frankenstein to help him, leading to an argument about Emmett'southward disability to affirm himself. A lightning tempest erupts, causing Emmett to realize that rockets cannot make the car wing. This memory acts equally a replacement for Emmett seeing the creature electrocuted in the pic as in the original timeline. The respond is static electricity and Marty helps Emmett convert his rocket car to a new propulsion system in time for the Science Expo. Meanwhile, Edna is picked up by Citizen Brownish, and when she explains what Marty has done, Brown decides to assist her thwart Marty'due south plan. At the Expo, Edna and Brown endeavour to sabotage Emmett'southward project, but Marty discovers them in time. During this, he happens to acquire that Edna was responsible for the arson of Kid's speakeasy. During the Expo, Emmett successfully demonstrates his flying motorcar, only as Approximate Brown arrives. Marty helps Emmett to stand up for his choices. Judge Brown and his son settle their differences, with Emmett's father now accepting his son's scientific views.

Edna is incensed as her plan has been foiled, and when Citizen Brown refuses to help her further, she runs him over with the DeLorean and inadvertently activates the fourth dimension automobile. Equally he dies and disappears (due to Marty fixing Emmett's timeline), Denizen Brown tells Marty he was right virtually Edna. Marty gives Emmett a sealed notation with instructions to exist opened in the futurity. Shortly after, a second DeLorean appears with Doc at the cycle, having been summoned from 1986 past the annotation. As they talk about events, the town of Hill Valley disappears around them. They find, from Marty's great-grandad William "Willie" McFly, that the town burned down shortly after its founding in 1876 with Mary "Scary Mary" Pickford (in fact Edna Strickland) its only remaining inhabitant. Travelling to July 17, 1876, Marty and Physician discover a crazed Edna has travelled there and attempted to burn downward the saloon run by Beauregard Tannen, inadvertently taking the residuum of Hill Valley with information technology. They finish Edna before she can commit the act while simultaneously saving her from Tannen's shotgun, returning her and the first DeLorean to the restored Loma Valley of 1931. Edna is apace arrested, having previously been recorded confessing to arson against Kid's speakeasy. The alternate DeLorean then disappears, having been erased from history. As Marty and Doc are preparing to return, Marty spots Artie and Trixie, having fallen in love with each other, and worries well-nigh his futurity since Artie was to be midweek to his grandmother Sylvia. She reveals that "Trixie Trotter" is a phase name and that her name is really Sylvia Miskin.

Doc and Marty return to 1986 and find that in this new post-time-travel timeline, in that location was no manor sale because Doc'south reconciliation with his father immune the Browns to stay role-time in Loma Valley. They find that Edna and Child had fallen in dearest while in jail, and afterwards married and both became much happier and friendlier since. Doc reveals his previous absenteeism to Marty; he had been compiling a history of the McFly family to nowadays to Marty every bit a graduation gift only found information on his grandmother challenging to see (as she was working under the name Trixie) and thus had travelled to 1931 to attempt to obtain enquiry commencement-hand. All of a sudden, three divide DeLoreans announced, each with a different hereafter version of Marty driving them. They approach Marty and Medico and insist they come to help assure that their respective futures occur as they are supposed to. Doctor and his Marty get out the Marties arguing with each other, saying the futurity tin wait until after they have enjoyed the present for a while; they then depart to an unknown time.

Development [edit]

Back to the Future: The Game was announced by programmer Telltale Games in early June 2010, as part of a licensing deal to create video games based on Universal Pictures' Back to the Time to come and Jurassic Park film series.[10] [11] The title is divide-upwards into 5 episodes and was available for Microsoft Windows, OS X, PlayStation 3, Wii (as a single retail release) and iOS.[12]

An in-development screenshot showing the elementary user interface and the character designs for Marty McFly and Dr. Dark-brown. Both Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd immune the developers to apply their likenesses within the game.

The evolution team sought input from fans on various scenarios past means of an online survey[13] and brought in trilogy co-creator, co-writer and co-producer Bob Gale as story consultant.[xiv] [xv] Several concepts he and director Robert Zemeckis had originally conceived for Function II, such as the exploration of the Prohibition era and Doctor's family history, were reworked into the game.[16] Telltale Games institute adhering to the films' established timelines to be one of the greatest challenges regarding the development of the script.[17] Many ideas had to be scrapped due to conflicts that would have acquired paradoxes with the stories of the films.[17] Gale stated that although the game is not part of the series catechism,[16] [18] [xix] it is possible that it could take place in alternate timelines.[xx]

In September 2010, the team revealed the first slice of concept art for the protagonists, created by creative person Ryan Jones and based on actors Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd, who immune their likenesses to be used for the in-game characters.[fifteen] Season designer and writer Michael Stemmle emphasized that the game's graphics would accept a less realistic and more stylized approach while trying to stay true to the feel of the trilogy.[21] The puzzles were designed to rely on applying items in the inventory to characters and objects as the developers did not think of Marty as a protagonist that would build a gadget from various parts.[21]

Sound [edit]

Equally Michael J. Pull a fast one on was unavailable to reprise his office every bit Marty for the game, newcomer A.J. Locascio voiced the grapheme instead,[22] though Fox later provided voice work for Marty'south cracking-grandfather William in the fifth and terminal episode of the game, also as for the iii futuristic versions of Marty who appear in the game'south final cutscene.[6] [23] [24] Locascio was able to go the part when his audition sample ended up in the email inbox of voice director Julian Kwasneski, and managed to impress both Gale and Lloyd with how closely information technology resembled the sound of Flim-flam's voice during the time the trilogy was filmed.[22] Lloyd returned to voice Physician Brown and began his starting time recording session for the game in late September 2010.[25] Later, Claudia Wells joined the bandage, reprising her role equally Jennifer Parker from the first film.[26] Kid Across provided the voice for Biff Tannen in place of actor Tom Wilson in the game's original release;[27] however, Wilson returned to vocalization the graphic symbol for the 30th anniversary re-release.[28] James Arnold Taylor voiced the younger Emmett Chocolate-brown.[29] Though the game features other returning characters including George and Lorraine McFly, voicework for these characters are provided by a variety of voice actors in the Bay Expanse. The song Back in Time by Huey Lewis and the News, which was written for the first film, appears in the game.

The full voice cast for the games is listed beneath:

  • A.J. Locascio - Marty McFly/Leech
    • Michael J. Fox every bit William McFly/Time to come Marty McFly
  • Christopher Lloyd - Dr. Emmett Brown/Citizen Brown/Jacques Douteux
    • James Arnold Taylor as Immature Emmett Dark-brown
  • Kid Beyond (original release) / Thomas F. Wilson (2015 re-release) - Biff Tannen
    • Owen Thomas - Kid Tannen/Beauregard Tannen
  • Michael X. Sommers - George McFly/Arthur McFly
  • Aimee Miles - Lorraine Baines McFly
  • Claudia Wells - Jennifer Parker
  • Melissa Hutchison - Trixie Trotter
  • Rebecca Sweitzer - Edna Strickland
    • Shannon Nicholson - Young Edna Strickland
  • Mark Barbolak - Detective Danny Parker/Detective Danny Parker, Jr.

Promotion [edit]

To promote the championship, Telltale brought a replica of the DeLorean time car as part of their berth display at the 2010 Penny Arcade Expo which occurred shortly after the game's proclamation.[xxx] [31] Prior to the game's release, Telltale Games published their first Facebook game, Back to the Future: Blitz Through Time, with mechanics similar to Bejeweled Blitz, to tie in with the episodic series.[32] [33] It has been taken downwards as of 2012.

A voucher for a costless copy of the kickoff episode of the series was included in the 25th Anniversary Blu-ray release of the Back to the Future trilogy on October 26, 2010.[34] A promotional offer was made on Telltale's web site to download a free copy as well.[35] Via this promotion, however, the first episode began distribution on February 16, 2011.[36] As of April 2011, Telltale offered the offset episode for free for anyone with a registered account at their website.[37] Equally a pre-order bonus, Telltale offered buyers a free copy of Puzzle Amanuensis, access to a pre-release insider forum on their spider web site, and stated that they would donate one dollar to the Michael J. Fob Foundation for Parkinson's Research for each pre-order.[38] [39]

Release [edit]

The first episode of Back to the Future: The Game was released for free on via Telltale Games' website, for both PC and Os Ten on Dec 22, 2010,[40] with a later release for the PlayStation three, also made complimentary on the PlayStation Shop, on February 15, 2011,[41] and iOS two days after.[2]

Subsequent episodes were afterward released for each of these platforms on the following dates:

  • Episode 2 was released on PC and Os X on February 16, 2011;[42] on PlayStation 3 on March 29, 2011;[43] and on iOS on April 20, 2011.[44]
  • Episode 3 was released on PC and Os 10 on March 29, 2011;[45] on PlayStation iii on May 3, 2011;[46] and on iOS on May 26, 2011.[47]
  • Episode 4 was released on PC and OS 10 on April 29, 2011;[48] on PlayStation 3 on June 7, 2011;[49] and on iOS on June two, 2011[l]
  • Episode v was released on PC and Os 10 on June 23, 2011;[23] on PlayStation three on July 26, 2011;[51] and on iOS on July 21, 2011.[51]

A total retail version consisting of all five episodes for PC was released on September 29, 2011, and on PlayStation 3 and Wii on October 25, 2011, beyond N America;[4] Eu versions for all iii platforms were released the following yr. Boosted releases for PlayStation iv, Xbox 360, and Xbox 1 were released globally in October 2015.[5]

On January 3, 2012, the game was free for PlayStation Plus.

The game was delisted from all digital storefronts past the cease of 2018, following the closure of Telltale Games.[52]

Reception [edit]

Dorsum to the Future: The Game received generally positive reviews. The first episode, "Information technology'due south About Time", was praised by several reviewers every bit an effective start to the serial. IGN'due south Greg Miller gave the episode a score of viii.five/ten, writing, "it's a movie-inspired game that doesn't suck. Instead, it pushes the characters in interesting directions and whips upwards a good story." Miller praised Telltale Games for recreating the Dorsum to the Future universe with attention to detail and for the iteration'south witty dialogue.[63] Nathan Meunier of GameSpot gave the episode a 7.5/x score, saying the series "shows a lot of promise with its debut installment". The review added that "The entertaining story that follows is enhanced by believable character interactions, imbuing the run a risk with a great sense of actuality." Meunier did notation that the installment was "surprisingly light on challenge and content."[64] Ben PerLee from GameZone summarized his praise of the game by saying information technology is a "feel good cinematic experience that whatsoever fan of Back to the Future will desire to check out, and anybody else would exercise well to check information technology out."[65] PALGN gave the installment a seven/10, saying that fans of the films "will find enough to love with all of the callbacks and cornball moments", but calling the game'due south pace tedious and the 1930s setting uninspiring. The review concluded, "Fans volition delight in the more nostalgic and clever moments of "It's About Time", just it'southward a brusk, easy and somewhat bland introduction to the series, which we hope still has fourth dimension to get a lot amend."[66] In a 2/5 stars review, The Escapist said the outset episode of the game "doesn't quite go the tone [of the films] right and fails to offer upwardly much compelling gameplay." The reviewer called the setting, situations, and characters "banal", further describing the characters as "cardboard nobodies", and did not review the rest of the serial.[67] The consensus amidst critics was that the vocalisation interim was infrequent, with particular praise directed at A.J. Locascio'southward impersonation of Michael J. Fox equally Marty McFly. Nearly reviewers were critical of the episode's puzzles as beingness likewise simplistic and easy.[63] [64] [66] [67] Review aggregator Metacritic assigned the episode an boilerplate review score of 74/100.[53]

Official Nintendo Mag gave the Wii version of the game 78%.[ citation needed ]

Dorsum to the Future: The Game was Telltale's nigh successful franchise prior to the release of The Walking Dead: The Game.[68] [69]

The game reached number 3 in the PS3 sales charts.[seventy]

Reviews [edit]

  • SF Site [71]
  • SF Site [72]

Other media [edit]

In 2016, IDW Publishing released Dorsum to the Future: Citizen Brownish, a comic book of the game and adjusted by Bob Gale and Erik Burnham. Information technology was released over five issues from May to September 2016.[73] [74] The comic follows the story of the game albeit with some minor changes, which co-ordinate to Bob Gale: "...I convinced IDW to become back in time with me to correct a few mistakes we made the first time around, as well as to prepare up some things that pay off cleverly in true BTTF style."[75]

References [edit]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ As depicted in the 1990 film Back to the Future Part III.

Sources [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Dorsum to the Time to come: The Game at Telltale Games

bryantmorly1967.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_to_the_Future:_The_Game

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