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Imogen

Moby ID: 16051
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Description official description

Drunk on power after defeating a terrible dragon, an enchanter's mind snaps and for the good of himself and the community he is imprisoned in an insidious donjon, each chamber containing a more whimsical challenge than the last. Maybe, the villagers hope, by the time he cools off and gathers his senses enough to successfully run the gauntlet, he'll have become sufficiently rehabilitated to reintegrate into human society without posing a threat to anyone - except perhaps the next dragon that comes along.

An enhanced Windows remake of Michael St Aubyn's Micro Power 1986 game of the same name on the BBC Micro B/B+/Master and Electron, this game will keep Jill of the Jungle fans up with 16 levels of polymorphic platform game puzzle-solving; an object-using wizard can shift to the forms of a climbing monkey and a leaping cat to evade foes, cross obstacles and devise unconventional uses for peculiar objects, all toward the goal of recovering the spell fragment at each level's end and, ultimately, escape from the gaol when all sixteen fragments are collected. Like the three specialist-heroes of The Lost Vikings, all these abilities will be called into selective use in every level; where it differs (more akin to Infocom's Arthur) is that as a shapeshifter, only one body manifests at a time.

Experimentation and trial-and-error are the key, but not too much; while it is impossible to die in this game, Imogen the wizard is saddled with a tight limit on the amount of transformations he can undergo (150, across 16 levels) -- and when that well runs dry, there's no replenishing it. A small margin of wiggle room is built in (31, a walkthrough claims), but you may want to replay occasional transformation-expensive reflex puzzles to ensure you'll have enough to not only pass the level, but pass ALL the levels and finish the game.

The levels are played in what amounts to a random sequence, each featuring a wacky or punny name (eg. Baboonacy, Hamster-Jam), so if the player is unsuccessful at solving a particular puzzle, it's still possible to explore the rest of the game. Since there is only one solution for most of the puzzles, replay value is minimal beyond the speedrunning-style challenge of how-few-transformations-can-I-get-away-with-using.

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Screenshots

Credits (Windows version)

6 People

Original game design
Remake created by
Music composed by
Development system
  • Jamagic by Clickteam

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 70% (based on 2 ratings)

Players

Average score: 4.2 out of 5 (based on 3 ratings with 1 reviews)

A Real Hidden Gem

The Good
I remember playing the game originally on the BBC Micro and really enjoying it. I rediscovered it on the PC some years later and everything was still there....the brilliantly devised puzzles, intuitive gameplay and sense of achievement upon completing a level. The game was ahead of it's time on the old Micro but the years haven't touched it and it's still as brilliantlly playable as ever. The game looks simple enough but the actual premise behind the gameplay puts the usual 'collect red key to open door 1' puzzles within platformers to shame. It's also pretty cool to morph in to different animals!

The Bad
The controls on the PC version were perhaps not quite as straightforward and intuitive as those in the original (which i managed to pick up and play without any manual or instructions.)

The Bottom Line
Don't be deceived by it's simple looks. This game has a flash of genius running through it and is even more impressive to think that the version released back in the 80's was almost identical in terms of puzzles and gameplay. Even the main game graphics were only just a little off being on a par with the PC version. Very impressive but more to the point, great fun!

Windows · by Andrew Brudenell (4) · 2007

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Related Sites +

  • Imogen Instructions, original release
    Instructions from packaging of Electron release
  • Imogen Walkthrough
    Thorough (step-by-step) instructions for completing every level.
  • Imogen remake homepage
    Contains not just the full, /free/, download of the enhanced Windows remake, but also a PDF manual and reams of historical material (remarks, used and unused character and level sketches, hand-written code excerpts) from the original designer's development of the game back in the early '80s.
  • Review of Imogen remake
    "aschultz" provides a thorough review of Ovine by Design's remade Windows version of Imogen.
  • Solution for Imogen - level codes and tips
    Vague (most levels get only a sentence or two) suggestions by John Berry toward completing the original BBC Micro release.

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 16051
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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Pseudo_Intellectual.

Game added December 27, 2004. Last modified February 14, 2024.