Burn:Cycle: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:burncycle_sol_7204.jpg|frame]]
[[File:burncycle_sol_7204.jpg|frame]]
{{quote| ''"It ain’t easy bein’ a two-bit thug in an eight-bit town."''}}
{{quote|''"It ain’t easy bein’ a two-bit thug in an eight-bit town."''}}


A first-person [[Cyberpunk]] [[Adventure Game]] which incorporates puzzles and [[Full Motion Video]], similar to that of ''[[The Seventh Guest]]''. Regarded by retro gamers as a [[Cult Classic]] and one of the [[Damned By Faint Praise|best games]] on the [[Philips CD-i]].
A first-person [[Cyberpunk]] [[Adventure Game]] which incorporates puzzles and [[Full Motion Video]], similar to that of ''[[The Seventh Guest]]''. Regarded by retro gamers as a [[Cult Classic]] and one of the [[Damned By Faint Praise|best games]] on the [[Philips CD-i]].
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* [[Camera Abuse]]: Dealey shoots out the camera after delivering his final ultimatum to Sol.
* [[Camera Abuse]]: Dealey shoots out the camera after delivering his final ultimatum to Sol.
* [[Casual Kink]]: When Gala and Sol arrive at his old hotel room, she peeks into the minibar to look for drinks. Instead, she finds a chainmail harness. Sol's nonchalant response is priceless.
* [[Casual Kink]]: When Gala and Sol arrive at his old hotel room, she peeks into the minibar to look for drinks. Instead, she finds a chainmail harness. Sol's nonchalant response is priceless.
{{quote| "Don't touch those! I get charged for what I use."}}
{{quote|"Don't touch those! I get charged for what I use."}}
* [[City of Adventure]]
* [[City of Adventure]]
* [[Coincidental Broadcast]]: The announcement of NAMO's hacker attack.
* [[Coincidental Broadcast]]: The announcement of NAMO's hacker attack.

Revision as of 09:33, 7 August 2014

"It ain’t easy bein’ a two-bit thug in an eight-bit town."

A first-person Cyberpunk Adventure Game which incorporates puzzles and Full Motion Video, similar to that of The Seventh Guest. Regarded by retro gamers as a Cult Classic and one of the best games on the Philips CD-i.

You play Sol Cutter, a small-time thief who ferries stolen data inside of his brain (à la Johnny Mnemonic). While he's robbing Softech Industries, a deadly Computer Virus known as Burn:Cycle is downloaded into Sol's mind. It's dormant now, but if Sol doesn't get that virus out of his head within two hours, his brain is yogurt. This countdown occurs in real time, essentially boiling down the game to one big Timed Mission, but there are enough save opportunities to see gamers through.

Despite having decent graphics for the time and comparably-good acting, Burn:Cycle is infamous for both its kitschy aesthetic and nutty (yet oddly straight-faced) storyline. Sol's hard-boiled narration riffs on Blade Runner, and the colorful characters he meets along the way are arguably the game's biggest strength.


Burn:Cycle contains examples of:

"Don't touch those! I get charged for what I use."