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The town with no name
The town with no name








the town with no name

To trigger an alternate ending to the game, No Name can leave on the train that brought him into town. No Name spares Eb because of their misunderstanding each other, and the two become friends in the end over whiskey. Eb tells him in turn that Dodge Gulch is actually "20 miles down the line" from where they are. No Name explains that he is not Billy-Bob and came to town to meet his sister, believing he is in a town called Dodge Gulch. Eb, having dropped his gun in surprise and resigning to his defeat, asks No Name to kill him, believing him to be a man called Billy-Bob.

the town with no name

Īfter killing every outlaw except Evil Eb, No Name confronts Eb himself but only shoots off his hat. No Name then explores each of the town's buildings, either by interacting with the town's residents or by playing minigames, and duels with gang members usually after leaving the buildings. Once No Name kills the gunman, an unnamed man with a cigarette who more closely resembles Eastwood's character reveals that the gunman was the littlest brother of Evil Eb, the leader of the Hole-in-the-Head Gang, and foreshadows that Eb will send his bandits after No Name. Upon entering the town, he is quickly confronted by a gunman. The game stars "The Man with No Name" (no relation to the film character of the same name portrayed by Clint Eastwood), who gets off a train at the station in the eponymous town. A version for MS-DOS was released in 1993. The Town with No Name (sometimes published as Town with No Name) is a Western action-adventure point-and-click game released by On-Line Entertainment in 1992 for the Commodore CDTV.

  • The Town with No Name (Delta 4/On-Line, 1992)Īction-adventure, Point-and-click, Western.
  • The Big Sleaze (Piranha Software, 1987).
  • The Colour of Magic ( Piranha Software, 1986).
  • Bored of the Rings (Delta 4/ CRL Group, 1985).
  • Return of the Holy Joystick (Delta 4, 1984).
  • Quest for the Holy Joystick (Delta 4, 1984).
  • the town with no name

    (Developers Universal Non-programming Environment) and all games were panned by both critics and players. The Town with No Name, Psycho Killer and The Hound of the Baskervilles were all developed using D.U.N.E. In the early 1990s, Delta 4 developed several CD-based games. Published in 1985, it received a Sinclair User Classic award. Their first critical success was Bored of the Rings, inspired by the Harvard Lampoon novel of the same name. Gilsoft's The Quill was the design software. Their debut text adventure games were the Dragonstar trilogy (".like Classic Adventure but without the interesting bits." ) and two Holy Joystick comedy adventures, self-published in 1984. Delta 4 was formed by McNeill with a few friends whilst still at school.










    The town with no name