

As of 2000, the comic book can be read online at Revolution's website. ComicĪ comic book drawn by Dave Gibbons was included in the box in the original release version of the game and served as an introduction to the game. CD-ROM releaseīeneath a Steel Sky was also released on CDROM featuring full speech. But they were not joyous and instead did weep for nobody knew just what had been done. And the programmers looked and saw that it was indeed a miracle. But, eventually, it did come to pass that Steel Sky was implemented on a 1meg os-legal CBM Amiga. All different, but not really better, for all were pseudo backward compatible. Then a third, and this was different again. Then they did findeth another Amiga, and this was slightly different from the first. And so small was it's memory that did at first appear large queereth also was its configuration(s). But then they did look closer and did see'th the awful truth it's floppies were tiny and sloweth (rareth was its hard drive). The information describes big problems the programmers had with deficient Amiga hardware when developing the game:Īt the beginning the programmers were happy and did rejoice at their task, for the Amiga before them did shineth and was full of promise. Programmers of the Amiga version left the following information in the main "exe" file. Groups +īeneath a Steel Sky appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott. The iPhone version introduces a touch-based interface, new animated movies by Dave Gibbons, a context-sensitive hint system and a remastered audio track. Otherwise, the engine provides traditional point-and-click adventure gameplay. The game uses the Virtual Theatre engine from Lure of the Temptress, which allows its characters to move freely independent of the player's input, making the game world more dynamic than it is usually the case in comparable games. After a narrow escape from the helicopter bringing him there as it inexplicably crashes, Robert and his droid Joey must search the decaying city, attempting to befriend both the snobby rich and the frustrated poor as the two attempt to get out of the city, but in the middle of everything they uncover the dark truth about LINC, the bizarre computer which makes the city tick. When Robert Foster's Gap-dwelling tribe is killed by soldiers from Union City who capture him, everything changes for him. In futuristic Australia, there are giant cities owned solely by corporations, separated by a giant wasteland known as The Gap.
