Description
The Stealth Affair is a graphic adventure game with a point-and-click interface. The player controls the famous secret agent James Bond (John Glames in the European version), whose task is to travel to South America in order to locate and retrieve a newly designed F-19 stealth plane, which was stolen from the Naval Air Station in Miramar, California.
The game is controlled by the same pop-up command menu consisting of six verbs that was introduced in Delphine's debut
Future Wars: Adventures in Time. However, it's been slightly improved and does now allow interaction with the inventory, like examining and combining items. The player can use many typical special agent's gadgets, beginning with a passport forgery kit and ending with explosive cigarettes. Apart from solving puzzles, the player has to make it through some arcade sequences: escape the labyrinth, dive with limited breath, and dodge the evil guy's minions.
Alternate Titles
- "Operation Stealth: Secret Defense" -- French title
- "Operation Stealth" -- European Title
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Trivia
References
There's a reference to Delphine's earlier game
Future Wars in
Operation Stealth. At the beginning of the game in the airport you have to get a newspaper from a newspaper machine similar to the way you had to get one from a newspaper machine in the future subway in
Future Wars. The game displays a message when you do this and says "Don't even think about being in another century."
Special edition
Delphine published a special 1990 Christmas box of
Operation Stealth. Apart from the normal contents, it included an audio CD with the original music from the game.
Version differences
There are three different versions of this game:
It was originally released in Europe as an EGA version under the name of
Operation Stealth.
A few months later, Delphine released a VGA-only follow-up.
For the US market, Interplay got its hands on the official
James Bond license and decided to spice up the game with the famous agent's name. Thus, the game (VGA version) was released as
James Bond: The Stealth Affair. Apart from a few name changes (Glames to Bond, obviously, but also the chief of the research department becomes Q) there were no differences.
Awards
- Amiga Joker
- Issue 01/1991 – #3 Best Adventure Game in 1990
Information also contributed by
Ricky Derocher