Hubbry Logo
search button
Sign in
Circuit's Edge
Circuit's Edge
Comunity Hub
History
arrow-down
starMore
arrow-down
bob

Bob

Have a question related to this hub?

bob

Alice

Got something to say related to this hub?
Share it here.

#general is a chat channel to discuss anything related to the hub.
Hubbry Logo
search button
Sign in
Circuit's Edge
Community hub for the Wikipedia article
logoWikipedian hub
Welcome to the community hub built on top of the Circuit's Edge Wikipedia article. Here, you can discuss, collect, and organize anything related to Circuit's Edge. The purpose of the hub is to connect peo...
Add your contribution
Circuit's Edge
Circuit's Edge
Cover art
Developer(s)Westwood Associates
Publisher(s)Infocom
Platform(s)MS-DOS
Release1990
Genre(s)Interactive fiction, role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

Circuit's Edge is a video game developed by Westwood Associates and released by Infocom in 1990. It is based on George Alec Effinger's 1987 novel When Gravity Fails. The game is a hybrid interactive fiction/role-playing video game; it contains a window of text, a graphic window for depiction of the player's current location, and various menus and mini-windows for character statistics and other game functions.

Plot

[edit]

The player assumes the role of Marîd Audran, a private detective. The game is set in "The Budayeen", an entertainment/criminal quarter in an unnamed city somewhere in the Middle East that is based on New Orleans.[1] While running a series of errands/"business deals" for "Saied the Half-Hajj", a friend of Marîd's, Marîd is framed for the murder of a man named Kenji Carter. Although Marîd's influential patron Friedlander Bey clears him with the local police, Bey asks him to look into Carter's death. Doing so leads Marîd deep into the criminal underworld of the Budayeen.

Effinger's novel When Gravity Fails was the first in a series of three "Marîd Audran" books (followed by 1989's A Fire in the Sun and 1991's The Exile Kiss); Circuit's Edge takes place between the first and second novel.[2]

Reception

[edit]

Jim Trunzo reviewed Circuit's Edge in White Wolf #22 (Aug./Sept., 1990), rating it a 4 out of 5 and stated that "One thing is certainL once you begin to play Circuit's Edge, you'll keep going back to the streets of Budayeen, where life is never boring and death never far away."[3]

The editors of Game Player's PC Strategy Guide presented the game with their 1990 "Best PC Graphic Adventure Game" award. They wrote, "An intelligent, literate, and thoroughly compelling sci-fi role-playing game, Circuit's Edge is the best cyberpunk game yet released."[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Behind The Budayeen/An Interview with George Alec Effinger". Computer Gaming World. July–August 1990. p. 46. Retrieved 16 November 2013.
  2. ^ Scorpia (July–August 1990). "Circuit's Edge". Computer Gaming World. p. 10. Retrieved 16 November 2013.
  3. ^ Trunzo, Jim (August–September 1990). "The Silicon Dungeon". White Wolf Magazine. No. 22. pp. 58–59.
  4. ^ "Game Player's Annual PC Game Awards 1990". Game Player's PC Strategy Guide. 4 (1): 10, 12, 14. January–February 1991.
[edit]