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The Memory Card .59: With knowledge comes nudity photo

For concerned parents, the formation of the ESRB (Entertainment Software Rating Board) and its decision to display ratings on videogame boxes must have been a huge relief. But, honestly, how much does it really work? For every videogame store employee I see turn away a young kid for trying to buy a “Mature” rated game, I see five not even thinking twice while they ring up a thirteen-year-old’s Grand Theft Auto IV purchase. But who can blame them? It’s a tough thing to monitor.

In a parent’s perfect world, there would be some kind of age verification included as part of the game. This way, no mother would have to worry about her precious little Timmy seeing something that maybe he shouldn’t see. (For the record: I would much rather let my kid play Resident Evil 5 with me than listen to anything by the Jonas Brothers -- but, again, that’s just me.)

Funny enough, one game actually attempted this in-game age verification more than twenty years ago (!). The game was Leisure Suit Larry III: Passionate Patti in the Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals for the PC.

Hit the jump for, hands-down, the best attempt at keeping minors out of a very adult videogame ever.

The Set-Up

In the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, publisher Sierra released a string of highly successfully and truly classic adventure games for the PC. While most of these games were aimed at family audiences -- most notably the King’s Quest series -- designer Al Lowe decided to take things in a decidedly more “adult” direction and introduce the world to Leisure Suit Larry.

The Leisure Suit Larry series -- while strong adventure games at their core -- are known for their sexual-based humor and awkwardly hilarious situations. Out of the seven adventure games released between 1987 and 1996 (and, no, I am not counting the subpar collection of mini-games that is Magna Cum Laude), arguably the best game in the bunch is Leisure Suit Larry III: Passionate Patti in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals.

Like all the incredible Sierra games of the time, Leisure Suit Larry III is a graphical adventure game. While controlling the main character as he moves from screen to screen, players are required to type in commands on the keyboard that usually contain a verb and a noun. For example, if you want your character to open a drawer you would walk said character next to a desk and type in “open drawer.” Simple as that!

Leisure Suit Larry III: Passionate Patti in the Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals takes place a few years after the previous game in the series. In the game, you play as white leisure suit clad hero Larry Laffer.

At the end of LLLII, Larry met and married a beautiful woman named Kalalua on the tropical island of Nontoonyt. As Leisure Suit Larry III begins, Larry’s seemingly wonderful marriage comes to an abrupt end when Kalalua kicks him out of the house and leaves him for another woman.

Saddened by the news, Larry decides to once again set off on a quest to find true love.

This adventure eventually leads Larry into the life of Passionate Patti, a jazz pianist in a local hotel. Once meeting her, Larry instantly falls in love.

At this point in the game -- after Larry accidentally becomes lost in a maze-like forest of bamboo shoots -- the player takes control of Passionate Patti as she heads out on a search to rescue the unlikely man of her dreams.

But this is the entire plot in a nutshell. This week’s moment actually occurs before any actual gameplay begins: right after the title screen.

The Moment

Once booting up Leisure Larry III from the DOS menu (ah, the memories), the title screen appears accompanied by one of the catchiest theme songs in videogame history. After hitting “Enter” (again ... the memories), an on-screen prompt displays a warning for the player:

Wanting to obviously try out the game even more after reading this, you, the player, click on the next screen.

After confirming you want to play one last time, a new window pops up:

The choices are “Under 12”, “13 to 17”, “18 to 25”, and “Over 25.”

One cool thing this game does: If you are not old enough to play, it doesn’t lock you out completely. Instead, all of the nudity in the game is completely censored. Take the below (scandalous) image, for instance:

If you are younger than 18, the female character that Larry is spying on through the binoculars pulls the shades down all the way to the bottom before getting completely naked. If you are not old enough, you don’t get to see the naughty bits the game has to offer.

But it’s easy to lie and just say you are old enough, right?

This is where the game tries something brilliant that had never been done before in any other videogame.

Once you select an age range, the game takes you to a new screen: one showing an image of a Nontoonyt postcard displaying a woman in a bathing suit sitting on a rock.

At this point you are asked five trivia questions based on how old you said you were when asked.

If you chose “18 to 25” you are asked questions (mostly of the pop-culture variety) that someone of your age would know the answers to. The game was released in 1989, so the questions in this case would focus on things someone who was born around 1968 would know.

Here are a couple of examples:

Obviously these questions are easy, but there are many in the mix that are pretty darn difficult, especially for someone who didn’t grow up during the time.

After answering all five questions the game let’s you know how many you got correct. Answer them all and you are treated to the games “raunchiest” level -- all nudity, all the time. The more you get wrong, however, the more that is censored.

In the example I mentioned earlier, this would mean the girl in the window would pull down the shades just a little farther depending on how many questions were missed.

Once the quiz is complete and the vulgarity level has been determined, the game starts and Larry starts his quest to find the love of his life.

You can watch the opening of the game, followed by the amazing age verification questions, right here (the questions start at about 2:42):

The Impact

I know, I know: If something like this was implemented in games nowadays it could easily be beaten by using this magical thing we call the Internet -- obviously every child in our modern society knows how to use Google Search. But that doesn’t mean the sheer cleverness of it all should be ignored.

At the time, this was an ingenious technique for keeping young players away from the very adult antics of Leisure Suit Larry.

And I am the perfect example of this!

While I won’t tell you exactly how old I was, let’s just say I was between 13 and 15 when Leisure Suit Larry III: Passionate Patti in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals came out (yes, I know: I am old). Being a fan of the previous games in the series (the ones sans age verification), I couldn’t wait to get my perverted little hands on LLLIII.

Needless to say, I was surprised to see that not only would I have to tackle a series of questions to play the game with all the nudity, but I would have to answer all five correct. Argh!

To make a long story short, I had a lot of trouble with at least one or two questions even when I would restart (the questions are different every time) and never got to experience the game the way it was meant to be played until I was a little older. So, there you go: I was proof positive that the feature worked!

Regardless of the frustration I felt at the time, looking back, this is a pretty amazing idea. The concept of working age verification into the actual game is completely unique! Years ago, a lot of PC games would include some kind of copyright test in the form of a password you had to enter at some point in the game by using the manual that came in the box, but this was different. Regardless of whether you bought the game and owned the manual or not, if you weren’t old enough to answer the questions you didn’t get to play the adult version of the game. Simple as that!

Even more, the fact that the game can be played on five different levels of “raunchiness” is surprisingly deep and something I would love to see carried over in some of today’s games. Can you imagine playing a highly censored version of Grand Theft Auto IV? It would be a hoot to experience and would be welcomed with open arms by some of those overly paranoid parents out there.

As I mentioned earlier, this specific feature obviously would not work in the Google world we live in today, but I would love to see videogame designers try something similar to this. It’s not that I am for heavy censorship by any means; I just love to see smart videogame ideas implemented in creative, fun, original ways.

Instead of slapping a useless “M” on the front of the next God of War, how about asking the player “Who won an Oscar for portraying Roman general Maximus Meridius in the 2000 film Gladiator?” I doubt a 12-year-old would know the answer to that.

And if he does, hey, good for him! Your prize for being awesome is a threesome mini-game and a gratuitous amount of violence! Congrats!

With rewards like that, learning will always be fun!

The Memory Card Save Files

.01 - .20 (Season 1)
.21 - .40 (Season 2)
.41: The tadpole prince (Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars)
.42: Pyramid Head! (Silent Hill 2)
.43: Waiting for Shadow (Final Fantasy VI)
.44: Solid vs. Liquid (Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots)
.45: The birth of the cutscene (Ninja Gaiden)
.46: Insult swordfighting (The Secret of Monkey Island)
.47: A castle stuck in time (The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker)
.48: 'That's the magic flute!' (The Wizard)
.49: Saving Santa (Secret of Mana)
.50: A shocking loss (Half-Life 2: Episode Two)
.51: The flying cow (Earthworm Jim)
.52: Blind the Thief (The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past)
.53: The nuclear blast (Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare)
.54: Microwaving the hamster (Maniac Mansion)
.55: The fate of Lucca's mother (Chrono Trigger)
.56: A fiery demise? (Portal)
.57: Jade's moment of silence (Beyond Good & Evil)
.58: The Great Mighty Poo (Conker's Bad Fur Day)








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Chad Concelmo is Destructoid's features editor. He loves hanging out with awesome people. That's why Destructoid makes him so happy, since it is full of THE MOST AWESOME PEOPLE OF ALL TIME! Also, dolphins. Likes Chad enjoys punching old ladies in the face, Super Metroid, Zelda: A Link to the Past on the SNES (best system ever!), Final Fantasy VI, Day of the Tentacle, Shadow of the Colossus, Mother 3, Beyond Good & Evil, Contra III, Valkyria Chronicles, Punch-Out!!, Half-Life 2, and Super Mario Galaxy 2. Meet the rest of the team



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27 comments | showing # 1 to 27
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iconsam's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:08
iconsam
This is so great! I had to sleep over at my friend's house to play this game! Mostly because I didn't have a PC at the time to play it. Staying up all night, getting excited over pixelated "vulgarity".
eternalplayer2345's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:10
eternalplayer2345
(For the record: I would much rather let my kid play Resident Evil 5 with me than listen to anything by the Jonas Brothers -- but, again, that’s just me.)

Agreed to the millionth power chad.
fetusmilk's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:15
fetusmilk
ha as you answer questions right the girl on the left looses clothes.
Technophile's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:15
Technophile
Ah, but Larry wasn't the first time Sierra had ventured into adult territory

http://www.allowe.com/images/SoftpornCover.jpg

:D
Demtor's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:20
Demtor
Haha, I totally forgot about the adult check questions. I remember failing them when I was young but writing down the answers that were incorrect so that I would eventually get them right the more I tried. Yes... pixelated boobies when you are 7 years old will make you do amazing things.
Castro's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:21
Castro
This was my favorite of the series. I especially liked the constant use of the phrase "an experience not wholly unfamiliar to you." Freddy Pharkas is still Al Lowe's best game though.
bluexy's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:22
bluexy
Leisure Suit Larry and it's sequels are classics! I tried playing them again recently, and let's just say they haven't aged very well.
KyleGamgee's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:27
KyleGamgee
Apparently you can use computers to experience pornography.

What a fascinating world we live in[i]![/i}
Darren Nakamura's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:34
Darren Nakamura
I remember going over to my friend Josh's house when I was a kid, like, ten years old or something, and trying to get all of the questions right in a Leisure Suit Larry game. I don't think we ever did it. And to be honest, I think we spent more time trying to get the trivia right than we did actually playing the game.
Chronic Logic's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:34
Chronic Logic
Good times. Where has all the humor went?
elysse's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 16:56
elysse
Great writeup!

the first LSL had the quiz system as well, and my dad thought I would flunk it so he let me try it out on our top-of-the-line 386. Given that I had a insatiable appetite for historical/military books at the time, and had friends whose parents loved to tell stories.. well... I sure showed him.

Oh jesus christ, I'm old.
Castro's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 17:13
Castro
@ I'm OK

Freddy Pharkas was the first game that I ever played where I would be, literally, bawling from laughing so hard. And the ending went on for about 10 minutes or so. That was epic.

Never played Torin's Passage. Always wanted to though. I remember how horribly King's Quest 7 ran and feared that Torin's Passage would be more of the same so I never tried it out. I should do that soon.
Joanna Mueller's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 17:27
Joanna Mueller
It's a shame it wouldn't work anymore, for its time this was a truly brilliant idea.
Jonathan Holmes's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 18:41
Jonathan Holmes
I'd love to play a version of GTA IV, HotD:Overkill, or MadWorld with all the swears replaced with nonsensical word combinations.

Mother Fuckers < Melon Farmers
Castro's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 18:56
Castro
@Im OK

Yes, the theme song was pretty spectacular. I was a fan of "The Ballad of the Demo of Freddy Pharkas" and "The Ballad of the End of the Game of Freddy Pharkas" as well. As for Torin's Passage, I'm not sure where I could possibly find it. This is a majorly sticky wicket. Hmm...

Also, speaking of Al Lowe, I recall reading an article in their old magazine (InterAction) talking about a new game that he was working on called "Capital Punishment". Does anyone know what happened to that? It just kinda dropped off the radar at some point.
Conrad Zimmerman's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 19:43
Conrad Zimmerman
Leisure Suit Larry has a surprisingly rich history to it. Did you know that the fourth installment of the Larry series was intended to be entirely online? Sierra was attempting to create the MMO in the late eighties! They failed to do it, which is why the series jumps from Leisure Suit Larry 3: Passionate Patti in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals directly to Leisure Suit Larry 5: Passionate Patti Does a Little Undercover Work.
Castro's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 19:49
Castro
@Conrad

Hey! I remember an article where Al Lowe talked about working on the network code that eventually became The Sierra Network. It started out as a Larry game? How would they do an online Larry game? Remember when they were going to force Scott Murphy to make Space Quest 7 an "online" game? That would have been a disaster.

Also, does anyone else remember The Sierra Network? That was the golden age. I was too young to get into LarryLand, unfortunately.
Brian Szabelski's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 20:43
Brian Szabelski
Very interesting idea I hadn't even heard about until now. Great write-up, Chad!
etirflita's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 21:09
etirflita
My Grandfather had this game on his computer and helped me and my brothers with the trivia answers. We beat the hell out of this game- I only wish the newer LSL games had half the quality this title did.
Paul Soth's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/26/2009 22:00
Paul Soth
You can get the classic Larry collection for around $5.00 at closeout retailers. Mind you that all the instructions and other "feelies" are in PDF format, which can be a pain since older games did rely on them for copy protection.
Amayirot Akago's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 00:10
Amayirot Akago
Three words: Ctrl-Alt-X.
ygro wok's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 01:16
ygro wok
I used to love the Leisure Suit Larry games. I remember when I was a wee lad and my baby sitter had the game on her computer. I'd try over and over again to answer the questions and one out of every hundred or so times I'd actually get in. One of the funniest parts in the first game was when you received a call on a pay phone and depending on how you answered you'd get a call later in the game that used the answers you gave earlier. Very clever! I never could beat any of them without a walkthrough though, thank god for the internet. Also, thank god for ice cream sandwiches. They tasty!
Jaffacakelover's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 06:05
Jaffacakelover
Ha, I completely forgot about this! Me and my friend played the original game before we hit puberty, and yes we had to note down the answers to get them right next time!
Quick Fact: If you press the minus key in Carmageddon, it toggles the peds and blood on/off!
AgentMOO's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 06:43
AgentMOO
LSL was such a hilarious series...
BoBoTheChimp757's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/27/2009 07:36
BoBoTheChimp757
Such a mechanic wouldn't work these days thanks to Google ;)
Purringturtle's Avatar - Comment posted on 03/29/2009 16:11
Purringturtle
My dad had the original LSL, and my brothers and I would just brute force the thing until we were allowed in. I was the oldest, at like 10, so all we ever actually did was play the casino games. We had no idea why our mom was so upset when she caught us with it... It was disappointing that later that night the game seemed to disappear as well. *sigh* memories.
TheGameFreak's Avatar - Comment posted on 04/08/2011 01:02
TheGameFreak
While I would have to say "Love for Sail" was the best, this feature is a hilarious one, indeed.
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