Lester the Unlikely

Lester the Unlikely

North American cover art
Developer(s) Visual Concepts
Publisher(s)
Designer(s) Jeffrey J. Thomas
Composer(s) Byte-Size Sound:
Matt Scott
Mike Cihak
Platform(s) Super NES
Release date(s)
  • NA: January 1994
  • JP: September 16, 1994
Genre(s) Platform action game
Mode(s) Single-player

Lester the Unlikely, known in Japan as Odekake Lester: Lelele no Le (おでかけレスター れれれのれ Odekake Resutā: Rerere no Re), is a platform video game developed by Visual Concepts for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). It was published in North America by DTMC and in Japan by Asmik Ace Entertainment in 1994.

Plot

In the beginning, a typical teenage boy named Lester, who is "kind of geeky" and "kind of sleepy" recently got a new issue of the Super Duper Hero Squad comic book. He was reading it while walking on a dock, until he fell asleep next to a cargo crate lying beside a cargo ship. After he and the cargo were loaded onto the ship by a crane and cruised off, the ship got hijacked by pirates who scuttled it. Lester luckily found a life jacket and swam toward the most adjacent island while the cargo ship sank. Lester must find his way home by exploring the island for someone or something that can help him survive.

Gameplay

The game has a unique engine in which the protagonist, Lester, is easily frightened early in the game and will act reluctantly when faced with animals, heights, etc. For instance, when the player guides Lester towards a turtle in the first stage, he will at first scream and run in the opposite direction; when the player makes him walk towards it a second time he will slowly creep towards it. This coincides with one of the major themes of the game being Lester facing his fears, and these instances happen less and less as the game goes on. The game also has an item and weapon box, allowing Lester to hold both of these things.

Also notable are the game's rotoscoped graphics, referred to in the game's manual as "Filmed in Geek-O-Vision." The manual boasts that Lester has more than 250 frames of animation, "about twice the number of an average game."

Character evolution

The first part of the game depicts Lester as a very cowardly character. Every time he encounters a new creature, he runs away in the opposite direction with a scream (temporarily removing the controls from the player's hand). Upon approaching the creature a second time, Lester walks slowly, protecting himself with his arms. Once a certain type of creature has been defeated, the player will be able to walk to this type of creature without any further sign of fear. At the beginning of the game, Lester walks in a very lazy, laid-back stance, suggesting weakness and lack of courage. However, after saving an indigenous girl from a huge gorilla, the girl gives a kiss to the hero and he is suddenly changed. In the following levels, Lester has a very upright and courageous stance.

Development

Eric Browning, the lead artist for Visual Concepts (as well as the voice of Lester), acted as the rotoscope model for the lead character. Browning described it as "one of those games that starts out way too ambitious, and ends up merely adequate."[1] Lester the Unlikely was one of six SNES games programmed by Brian Greenstone of Pangea Software.[2] On the Pangea website, Greenstone wrote "Lester was a game I never liked. Don't wanna talk about it."[3]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame
Nintendo Power3.7/5[4]

A review from Nintendo Power scored it a 3.7 out of five, praising the animation which they noted similar to Prince of Persia and the difficulty. They did, however, dislike the limited amount of continues for a game that would require the player to experiment a lot in order to beat the game.[4]

References

  1. "Snes Central: Eric Browning Interview". www.snescentral.com. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  2. "The Covert Gaming Corner - Interview: Brian Greenstone". legacy.macnn.com. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  3. "Pangea Software: Other Games". www.pangeasoft.net. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  4. 1 2 Nintendo Power. February 1994. Volume 57. pp. 104, 107.
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