The Residents: Freak Show

The Residents: Freak Show is a CD-ROM by The Voyager Company. A few years earlier they had released a similar work based on The Residents entitled Twenty Twisted Questions.[1] The project was spearheaded by James Ludtke.[2] 0

Critical reception

The Atlantic deemed it one of the most influential early CD-Roms.[3] Wired noted it was "widely hailed as the best CD-ROM ever".[4] PC Mag listed it as one of the top 100 CD-ROM titles.[5] The book Resolution felt the title opened up the "poetic possibilities" of the interactive medium.[6] The Book is Dead deemed it "obscure".[7] The Voyager Company themselves noted the limitations of sound in the meidium which had the potential of alienating players.[8] The New York Times felt the game offered the player a chance to view the characters' "sad yet oddly exhilarating lives".[9]

References

  1. "Twenty Twisted Questions - Historical - The Residents". www.residents.com.
  2. https://binart.eu/freak-show/freak_show_booklet.pdf
  3. "Digital Culture - What Happened to Multimedia?". www.theatlantic.com.
  4. Ginsburg, Lynn (September 1, 1995). "Twin Peaks Meets SimCity" via www.wired.com.
  5. Inc, Ziff Davis (June 27, 1995). "PC Mag". Ziff Davis, Inc. via Google Books.
  6. Renov, Michael; Suderburg, Erika (September 2, 1996). Resolutions: Contemporary Video Practices. U of Minnesota Press. ISBN 9780816623303 via Google Books.
  7. Young, Sherman (September 2, 2007). The Book is Dead: Long Live the Book. UNSW Press. ISBN 9780868408040 via Google Books.
  8. Inc, Nielsen Business Media (January 29, 1994). "Billboard". Nielsen Business Media, Inc. via Google Books.
  9. Redburn, Tom (July 17, 1994). "Profile; He's Finding the Fire, This Time, in Interactive Media" via NYTimes.com.
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