Alanah is suddenly obsessed with Myst | Play, Watch, Listen
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- Опубліковано 1 лип 2024
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"[Myst] was [released] the year I was born", damn Alanah - way to burn Mike (and me). Lol.
The most groundbreaking thing in Myst, imo, were the audio puzzles. It used then-advanced sound hardware to create realistic sounds, but it also has cleverly designed audio clues that the player must rely on to solve the puzzles. The most memorable one is the maze you have to find your way through by listening to the audio tones from your vehicle. I had never seen a maze puzzle done that way before, and maybe haven't since.
Oh sick. Alanah is Riven ready.
Thank you to everyone on the podcast, Alanah, Mustache Mike and Austin. also Troy. This podcast really helps me, the conversations are always super interesting and engaging , it is my favorite podcast. i have Schizophrenia and i trouble socializing but watching people converse like this really helps me get into gear to (try) do it myself. you guys are awesome, i have your t-shirt. please keep this going as looooong as possible!
11:39 7th guest also has a sequel, the 11th hour. Also another fun slideshow puzzle game with random cartoon ghosts: shivers
As a kid I spent so much time exploring Myst and Riven. I also spent an inordinate amount of time in The Journeyman Project 3. Never got anywhere but I enjoyed it anyway.
Journeyman was legit
I enjoyed the heck out of the demo disc for Journeyman Project 3 that came with Riven!
So crazy that you make an episode on Myst just when the Riven remake comes out, and even more crazy to me, since I worked on the LATAM Spanish translation of that remake 🥹
Although Myst wasn't quite Cyan and the Miller brothers' first game, it's still amazing how they revolutionized game design with it. It's even more amazing how they perfected the game design with the sequel Riven. It's not just Myst++, it's a completely different approach to the puzzles and how they are integrated with the world and the story.
I love Myst for the nostalgia but I absolutely adore Riven. I just finished playing the remake, and apart from some CG characters that can be improved upon it's amazing. It's even more coherent, (a little) less frustrating, and even richer in environmental storytelling.
Myst in the title gets an immediate listen! Myst and Riven are two of my favorite games from the early PC days.
This episode is not to be Myst.
(I'll see myself out)
The Starship Titanic game was written by Douglas Adams if Hitchhiker's Guide fame, and the Starship Titanic novel was written by Terry Jones of Monty Python fame
Fifteen-year-old me is high-fiving you so hard right-now!
The 7th Guest was also remade in 2019 -- the remake is called "The 13th Doll," and it has freedom of movement, modern graphics, and FMV. I consider Myst a cut above The 7th Guest because of the "out-of-the-box" puzzle design. In 7th Guest, nearly all the puzzles are derivative of traditional ones like sliding puzzles, Othello, chessboard puzzles, mazes, etc.
7th Guest just got remade for VR. It has FMV ghosts that walk around the mansion.
Yes. Holograms of real actors in VR except they're 3D, I can move around them and the angles change, it's not flat FMV video projected on a plane.
Right there with you Mike. I was one of those cool kids making stuff in TrueSpace, fighting off all the attention.
Bodycam is an asset flip prior to the original releasing. It's ripping off UNRECORD, a game that showed up on Twitter last year. UNRECORD is still in development, whereas Bodycam was made by two people who went as far as getting the same environment assets UNRECORD was using temporarily in their first demo videos on Twitter.
Oh wow, I didn't even notice someone did that. I thought it was the same game...
One of the best Myst clones is Quern (2016), which copies a lot of the same recurring elements in the Myst series: rotating towers or rooms, exotic machinery, exotic fauna and flora, audio puzzles, etc. Even Cyan has made a couple of Myst clones: Obduction (2016) and Firmament (2023).
Woaah! New quality, new logo?? I'm loving these changes. Especially the audio quality, it was really hard to listen to in the background before, this is awesome!
Mike is really aging like fine wine. That’s all i have to say
The 7th Guest was my favorite game in the 90s. They just released a VR version with a different story, but similar mechanics. The sequel, The 11th Hour, didn't hit as well and looked very campy, but was ok. Another game in the same vein, created by the design team behind Kings Quest, was Phantasmagoria.
Also, the Bowie game Mike mentioned is called Omicron: The Nomad Soul. That was interesting because the main mechanic was that you could jump between characters you've identified as a playable character, but if a character "dies" they're inaccessible for the rest of the game. If you died without discovering any other playable characters your "soul" would jump to an as yet unidentified character.
Amazing time to be getting into Myst!! I wasn’t in love with the recentish Myst remake, but the Riven Remake is a whole other story: it’s phenomenal! I think it’ll just play like a fantastic game to new players, and for returning players there is so much joy brought to being able to more freely explore the world and some surprise additions/modifications to puzzles and world elements
Myst was one of the first games I ever played. Used to play it with my Dad, we spent ages trying to complete it but never got there. Just bought the 2021 version, looking forward to playing it again.
When you said Quicktime..a memory flashed in my age raddled head on how videos use to play in games. I remember so many games a box would pop up and play their video, border and all. All the old grainy videos and I was amazed by them
Hahaha I had the same reaction when I heard her say that too.
I worked for Trilobyte Video Games as their social media intern while I was in high school in Oregon. They made me play through the 7th guest to make a UA-cam video of all of the puzzles and make a full play through, because they didn’t have one.
I used to love the Myst Novels growing up! Especially the first two. Riven, Myst 3 and 4 were my favorites. I don’t remember enjoying Myst 5 and Uru was an unfinished project that never saw its potential realized but the lore is interesting.
As a newly christened PC player I did in fact go a buy a bunch of Mike's games (been meaning too but there's just so much to wishlist/play). Let my meager funds fuel your Remedy Games binge vacation
I’m so excited for past you, Alanah! I remember getting Riven for Christmas that year and playing it for hours. I recently realized the remakes just came out and am loving diving back in. Might even see if I can find the Myst novels they made. I was so cool.
For anyone interested, there’s a Myst book a while back that I read many years ago. Was an interesting read.
I played Myst a couple of years after it came out as a little kid and it literally took me maybe 5 years to figure out there were different ages you visit. I thought the whole game was on that one island and I thought it was the hardest game ever because I obviously couldn't solve anything lol.
I remember "playing" Myst (and a bunch of other puzzleventure games) when it came out with my parents. That whole series was both of my parent's favorite game series, and they played all of those games together. One of my favorite childhood memories of them.
Loved Myst and all the subsequent Cyan World games. Myst was designed in HyperCard on the Mac. So that is why it was 2d images with minimal interaction. Story and puzzles was most important. My wife & I played together when it first came out, was great because it was not a shooter killing game.
Just finished the Riven remake. Simply amazing.
14:25 It's strange to me that Bryce3D and Myst seem to have a shared history - possibly because they came out around the same time. It's pretty common to find those that played Myst in the early days that have also played around with Bryce.
I recall trying to make my own Myst-like game with it. Of course, it was just a bunch of basic shapes that I was trying to pass off as doors. structures, and the like since - if I recall correctly - Bryce by itself didn't offer much for 3d modeling within the software except for basic Boolean operations and grayscale map landscapes. I think it was possible to import objects from other more robust 3d modeling software, but that was well beyond my skill as a tiny kid. I remember renders taking forever to finish as the pixelated image slowly filled itself in. Nothing real came from my attempts at making a Myst game, but it was my first foray into 3d art so I'll forever have a fondness for Bryce.
I really wish they would do a proper remaster of The Journeyman Project series for the modern era. It was a similar Mystlike game, had educational elements without getting heavy handed, a great story about saving time, a usually pretty funny sidekick. Was one of the best of the genre but it didn't get quite the same hype as Myst (pretty much nothing did to be fair). Hopefully these Myst series remasters will inspire some of the others to do something.
I've been playing riven all this week. Remake is so good. Its beautiful
It's mindblowing going back to it and having it look so good, the original I played when I was 6 years old 24 years ago. And I grew up looking at this game.
Because my dad was really into pc games in the 90s. So 7th guest, 11th hour, all the Lucas art point and click adventure games, little big adventure. All great 90s pc games I ended up growing up with
You should read the 3 myst novels. It definitely adds to the lore
I was 12 when Myst came out and had it on PS1. I remember finishing it and was so proud of myself. I found it hard and intriguing with the weird mystery. A great memory.
52:27 This is true for everyone except Mizyzaki, apparently. No one does a better job of underestimating the size/length of their games than him lol
I am fine with this becoming a Myst only podcast. I'm all for you all revisiting, or playing for the first time, old seminal games and discussing their impact. Great episode.
I remember playing Lighthouse as a kid and i loved that game, still to this day decades later i randomly remember scenes from the game like when you remember movies and shows and books you watched or read. It was a Myst-like as well. Interestingly enough i didnt played Myst at that time, i played it only much much later, recently few years ago because i considered that this is gaming history i have to experience purely for culture if nothing else.
Myst sounds pretty cool, I didn't know anything about it before this episode. Also, really awesome that you managed to go to the Pop Out show, Alanah, that also was looking pretty dope. And hard agree about Alan Wake 2, it's SO FUCKING GOOD. I thought the first Alan Wake was just okay and very repetitive, but oh my god, did they step up for the sequel. So good
I think one of the things that made Myst have the impact it did was that it signalled the moment when games were able to actually show fantastic environments in good quality. At its time, Myst showed what felt like photorealistic environments. Of course, it could only do that without free movement - but at that time, no one expected graphics to get good enough to allow free movement in photrealistic spaces. Doom at that time showed the other end of the spectrum in a way: It allowed free movement through spaces but the graphics and especially the geometry still felt abstracted.
I remember that Myst attracted interest in the mainstream press, too. The articles usually stressed how the game felt "more adult" than previous games because of its subject matter but I think it actually garnered that kind of attraction because it was very accessible to non gamers. The game looked great and its setting intriguing at a glance, and the gameplay was easy to grasp for anyone who new how to use a mouse.
The original Myst was barely a game - a nice-looking slideshow with Quicktime videos that frequently made players feel stuck and confused. I remember the puzzles and paths being fairly unintuitive and guilty of "Guide Dang It" throughout. Rand and Robyn Miller had released games previously: The Manhole, Cosmic Osmo, and Spleunx (for Macintosh, I think) - to say they had no development experience at the time of Myst isn't quite genuine. Myst didn't quite sell by word of mouth alone; the recent adoption of CD-ROM drives had a substantial part in the popularity of the product - if you were in the market for a new PC around that time with a CD-ROM drive, Myst would have been mentioned or featured running on a demo PC in a shop.
I still can't forgive Myst for utterly destroying the entire genre of text adventures. Myst was so primitive and static in design compared to the worlds of many text adventures, it didn't even have NPCs you could interact with. But once people had seen those graphics, many were lost forever to purely text-based games. (Also, granted, text adventures had been a declining market ever since point-and-clicks had emerged, but it was Myst that drove the final nail into their coffin.)
I remember games like Myst way way way back in the day... they were magical during the era of DOS gaming. CD-ROM games with pre-rendered CG graphics seemed so advanced to a lot of us back then. Nostalgia for such games get me all myst-y eyed
Hearing Ahati talk in Control/AW2 is identical to listening to my Finnish aunts / uncles / grandparents talk. The "finn-glish" where they fumble back and forth and stumble on english and spout these crazy sayings that don't make sense in English is so freaking nostalgic.
I remember getting bryce off a PC format or similar disc back in the day. First time using 3d software. I used to setup a render and leave the pentium 1 running for 4-5 hours to finish a single frame. What a nostalgia trip 🤯 these days rendering in c4d using redshift and the difference is night and day. It's wild how far we've come.
I started and finished Myst this weekend for the first time and I'm so excited to start Riven next 🎉 I love these types of games and we need more like this and The Witness.
Bryce 3D! I learned that in high school. We had a guy make a Roman coliseum fly through, and it took, I think, a full week to render? Insane. I was not nearly so good at Bryce.
Myst is my absolute favorite game. Very happy to listen to this episode
Enjoy Shadow of the Erdtree, Alanah!! It’s honestly phenomenal, but the bosses are no joke (especially the final boss who I’m currently stuck on 🙈)
I remember watching my Dad play Myst on the computer and I thought it was so cool! Great games, definitely do future episodes on the sequels would love to hear what you think.
Just a few corrections for historical purposes... Myst was not their first game, they had made a few others already using Hypercard, which maybe only came out for Mac... "The Manhole (1988), Cosmic Osmo and the Worlds Beyond the Mackerel (1989) and Spelunx (1991) were whimsical fantasy adventures for a young audience."
Same sorts of game, but done with illustrations instead of 3D art.
(PS: Go Bryce3D!)
One brother was the main actor. One brother made all the amazing 3D art. One brother did the music. Amazing guys!
You should definitely have a play of the original CDROM version for a bit.
Look up their older games, and the illustrations are incredible. Very creative. :)
I think it shipped as an OEM game on lots of new computers with CD-ROMs which made it huge.
Also... I fear 7th Guest sucks. Badly. From what I remember. :) I might be wrong.
I played Myst as a kid and got stock in the Rocket with the piano. Maybe I should give it another try!
7th Guest has a VR version on the Occulus Quest. Well worth a play-through.
7th Quest, the 11th Hour, Blackstone Chronicles, the Gabriel Knight games... I used to be all over the Adventure genre back in the day.
i still have my copy of '93 Myst on CD, its buried somewhere in my closet along with my flobby disk copies of Doom '93
Awesome episode, I was wondering if it is possible to update this podcast so it shows up as a podcast on yt music. It only shows the old videos before the new channel. It would be very much appreciated.
32:00 The original graphics only feel like a downgrade from our current perspective because we can compare it with our current gen. I remember what they felt like when the game came out, and it was revolutionary. Even a person who was already into games and game design at that point and who understood the limitations of Myst's tech, it was impressive and felt like a breakthrough.
Alanah having an amazing gaming month! Riven is one of my favorites of all time
Alanah's reaction to Starship Titanic with not a whiff of recognition might be the oldest she's ever made me feel lol
I'd already seen Alanah's video on Drake, but I'm genuinely glad to know Mike was invested in the Hip-Hop Civil War
MYST and Riven were my life when I was high school!
I remember trying to get myst to work on our crapoy family comouter but it was just too beefy. I could load the first screen then it would crash as soon as i tried to move 😁
Funny when she was stuck trying to remember 7th guest. I could already hear the music in my head.
'Troy was probably in it,' had me spit take-ing.
Just want to point out that modern 3D renderers still can take hours to days to output an image. Modern processors are more powerful but they still can't output a high resolution photo realistic render at real time speeds. Game engines are getting better but they still have to take a lot of shortcuts graphically.
My wife just beat Myst recently in VR on Oculus. She was very happy as it was a game she poked at over the years.
I love Myst so this is a very good episode for me!
The 7th Guest is awesome.
You might want to check out Lighthouse: The Dark Being. It was developed as a Myst clone, is cheap, and on GOG. It has a lot of flaws, but the beginning of the game in particular has an excellent creepy/mystery atmosphere.
I'm 26. I remember trying to render an image on pirated Cinema 4D and it took hours
WHAT'S BEST IS HIDDEN, OBVIOUS, AND CORRECT.
Dude, when Myst was on game pass, I loaded it up cuz I love the witness. I walked around for like an hour just trying shit cuz I also apparently missed this fucking note. Also thought it was just hard af. Told myself I'd come back to it, forgot, and it left game pass shortly after. Been wanting to give it another crack for a while now so this is reassuring
Alanah I know you’ve read the Warhammer books. Myst has books too! After you play Riven, you should see if you’d be interested in them :D
i dont know why no one is talking on how the song at the end of every chapter in the "alan wake 2 night springs DLC slaaaaps soo hard
Im just here to join the mass of people saying Myst and 7th Guest are also out in VR!
Myst was on mac if I remember correctly, and that is the reason, I think, I've never played it (pc gamer from the start).
(I think that, and Bungie's Marathon were the two must have games you should own if you had a mac)
But after its success, there were so many Myst inspired games, like The seventh guest and The eleventh hour, that also had their charm.
And then, all the mediocre CD-ROM adventures kind of killed the classic point and click adventure game.
(Except for the Ripper, anything with Christopher Walken is godly by default) 😛
As for Deus ex machina, it's an exact translation of "Από μηχανής Θεός" (in Greek) to Latin.
If you like puzzles, have you tried chip’s challenge? another late 80s, 90s, game.
Depending on the age of your friend's son, an adventure game like Book of Unwritten Tales might be great to play D&D style as well.
Ok, before I even watch, if youre obsessed with Myst, Riven is the real MUST PLAY and they just released the remake (I still prefer the old version actually though).
Edit after having watched:
So, if you want the "slideshow" experience, you should definitely just play the original Riven. It still looks great imho (obviously with a low resolution, but still) and plays without problems. There also is a Myst documentary in the works with never before seen footage and stuff from back then.
I would totally enjoy another Myst episode, maybe after having finished Riven? I can imagine you could even get Rand Miller to join a podcast.
I will add something that people may disagree with:
I think the only game that did world building as well as Riven is Outer Wilds. If that doesnt tempt anyone to play Riven, I dont know what will.
How did it take 155 episodes before Mike dropped the lore that he was lectured at university by *THE* Douglas Adams?!!
Am I wrong or has he never mentioned this before?
They remade 7th guest in VR and the sequel was 11th hour
Great Myst talk, it's a game I've always been fascinated by but have never gotten to play. The UA-cam algorithm did the work and after I watched this video, and recommended Ars Technica's Myst War Stories episode about how the developers struggled with CD-ROM. A great follow up to Alanah and Mike's chat for anyone who's interested: ua-cam.com/video/EWX5B6cD4_4/v-deo.html
I would recommend Quern - Undying Thoughts and Obduction next.
Even if it's just Alanah and Mike it's still damn fine infotainment. You can call it Piffel with Bethel.
Okay but did you get the red or the blue pages? GET ME THE BLUE PAGES
I was 21 when it came out. I remember thinking Myst was barely a game, but all my friends were amazed by it.
i was around that age. i never understood the hype.
@@mirtos39 I was younger, the "game" looked booooring af, never bothered.
In fairness to the game it was an incredible demonstration of what was possible with HyperCard.
Yeah, same here. I think a big part of Myst's success was that it attracted a lot of non-gamers to the hobby. People around me who had never even thought about video games, were suddenly talking about Myst. But not being gamers, they also couldn't see (or didn't care) how primitive Myst was in most aspects that didn't revolve around graphics.
I loved Myst, but never finished Riven. I need to go back. Are they going to remake Exile as well?
Exile has rights issues, it wasn't made by Cyan but by Presto Studios (and Revelations, the 4th game, was by Ubisoft). Cyan only has distribution rights, so can't remake them unless those rights are sorted out.
Opportunity missed to call this episode 'Myst tracks'
That era... Yes there were these new FMV games but for me, the biggest draw was Lucasfilm games with v/o acting.
My local PC store had Day of the Tentacle on demo and I'd often play for 5 minutes just to hear the v/o.
That was the future (not this FMV bs 😂)!
Also, the first/second album conversation is exactly the reason why I suspect Silksong is taking so long 😂
Im surprised she didnt play the Myst remake instead. It was so good and beyond faithful
I think she did play that version, just got her facts a little muddled
You forgot Terragen, Mike ! :D
Instead of calling a game a Myst-like, we should say it's a bit mysty.
Tangent, does anyone else think she looks like Hayley Mills? (Original parent trap actor)
What about VISTA PRO Mike?!! :D That was another fun program, kinda like Bryce 3D. :)
Riven is also good
Someone tell mike to watch youtubers react to wah gwan Delilah 😂
Shit...everyone buy his games so he has more time to make react content
Mike: I was 13 in 1998
Me: I was 7
Random person in the comments: I wasn't even born yet
Support comment 🎉
Can vouch for the Riven remake as being true to the original... If you can resist diving in, there were a couple of novelizations that came out between Myst and Riven that flesh out the story and circumstances a bit. Written by Rand Miller and David Wingrove in the mid-90s. "Book of Atrus", at very least, explains the background for the Myst setup and some context that will pay off in Riven. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Myst_Reader