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Leisure Suit Larry's Ultimate Pleasure Pack

Leisure Suit Larry's Ultimate Pleasure Pack

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Entertaining
Review: I recommend this collection of Larry games. They are very addicting and really fun to play. I only wish that they continued making these games. Anyways, this is a sure hit.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This is for all of you who bought this Game!
Review: If you have bought this game and are trying to install it on your windows system. The LSL 1-5 were DOS/Windows 95 games, and for you to install them on your windows 98/98se/ME/2000 system. You have to do the following:

1. When you run the installer, it will ask you if you want to do a system test on Larry 1 VGA-Larry 7. Say no to the system test, the system test only works for Windows 3.1 to Windows 95, it does not work for Windows 98/98SE/ME/2000.

2. Once you say no to the system test, the program will show you what the system test skipped. When it asks you if you want to install Larry 1 VGA-Larry 7, individually of course, say yes. Then after the install, you should be able to run these old DOS (Larry 1 VGA to Larry 5) on your Windows machine.

I found this out the hard way, by calling a Sierra tech support person. If this has helped you in any way, please let Amazon know, this is a great game series once you can getting it working on your Windows pc.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This is for all of you who bought this Game!
Review: If you have bought this game and are trying to install it on your windows system. The LSL 1-5 were DOS/Windows 95 games, and for you to install them on your windows 98/98se/ME/2000 system. You have to do the following:

1. When you run the installer, it will ask you if you want to do a system test on Larry 1 VGA-Larry 7. Say no to the system test, the system test only works for Windows 3.1 to Windows 95, it does not work for Windows 98/98SE/ME/2000.

2. Once you say no to the system test, the program will show you what the system test skipped. When it asks you if you want to install Larry 1 VGA-Larry 7, individually of course, say yes. Then after the install, you should be able to run these old DOS (Larry 1 VGA to Larry 5) on your Windows machine.

I found this out the hard way, by calling a Sierra tech support person. If this has helped you in any way, please let Amazon know, this is a great game series once you can getting it working on your Windows pc.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Last Larry Title?
Review: It's sad to say but, this may be the final title released in the epic Leisure Suit Larry saga. Any hardcore LSL fans know what I'm talking about. Leisure Suit Larry 8 has been canceled. Sierra is not interested in making another LSL "at this time". This collection is the Ultimate Pack to have. It has every single game made of LSL. As Al Lowe said, you get ten years worth of work for $35 dollars! This great collection won't come around again. And for those people that want more LSL, buying this is the last ditch effort to push for a new LSL. Please purchase a copy and save LSL.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: larry laffer the swinger of all swingers
Review: ok if you liked the first leisure suit larry in the land of the lounge lizards then youll love this i meen its all of them xcept #4 since al lowe couldnt come up with an idea for the game after #3 cuz he pretty much tied a bow around it after larry and patti live happily ever after and what not but anywayz now that i bought this i have doubles of a couple of them but thats ok cuz leisure suit larry was the first game and best game i ever played on a pc and for only 39.99 come on now you cant beat it its a great deal for really good games.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I Wish My Life Were This Fun
Review: Poor Larry. With his mind stuck in the 1970s, he has a lot of trouble with women. But, man, he has an interesting life.

This package collects all 6 games (there was no #4 for some mysterious reason). In the first game, Larry's primary goal is to get laid. Filled with ribald humour, this game was revolutionary for its time. Instead of an adventure game comprised of just text or perhaps a few static illustrations, you actually got to see everything happening to your "3D" character (now very 2D by today's standards). The parser driven gameplay could be frustrating when you didn't know how to type a command so the computer would understand it, but it also added more humour since you could type ANYTHING (and the game usually had good responses), and you couldn't guess by just clicking different inventory items on hot spots. (Also included is the remake of #1 with a point-and-click interface and better graphics). At this point Larry was just a pathetic loser who was fun to laugh at, but elicited little sympathy.

With #2, the designer, Al Lowe, decided that people played the game in order to watch an interactive movie. As a result, the game is WAY too linear, and there is no flexibility on how to get through. But now Larry was on a quest for true love, vs. just cheap thrills, and started to become more sympathetic. We also meet Passionate Patti, a recurring love interest.

As a result of negative reactions to #2's linear gameplay, #3 is more non-linear (although divided into chapters). Since Larry now has a girlfriend, the goal with #3 is changed. In this one, playing as both Patti and Larry, the player has to try to reunite the two and defeat a mad scientist. Getting laid is no longer the main goal, and except for the ribald humour, this is more like a typical adventure game. This was also the last of the parser driven games.

With #5, the series began using a point and click interface. Like most such early games, this makes it TOO easy. And, for some dumb reason, the game is again totally linear (although the order in which the chapters can be played is more flexible). Now the player just needs to randomly click items on hot spots. Suffering from partial amnesia (due to the missing #4), Patti and Larry have mysteriously become parted. Once again, playing as both characters, Larry reverts to trying to get laid while Patti tries to bring down the mob in her role as an undercover agent, and at the end the two are reunited as their paths cross.

With #6, the series returns to basics. For some unexplained reason, Patti is no longer around. Larry wins a stay at a Hellish health spa he cannot leave and tries to get laid. With this game, the puzzles are slightly more challenging, but still not very. But the humour is now back on course, making it a fun game once again.

#7 is the best in the series, having some of the most complex puzzles of the series. It is like a dirty version of Monkey Island with Larry trying to get laid on a cruise ship after finding a lost passenger ticket. The interface is also really cool. The game can be completed using point-and-click, but you also have the option of using a parser interface to uncover hidden jokes. It is also the funniest of the bunch, and the most risque. #7 left me anxiously waiting to see what they would do with #8 (one of the rumours was that they would use photographic images of real women for the female characters), but, alas, Sierra decided to do away with all its adventure game titles except Gabriel Knight for some ridiculous reason.

#7 is worth the price of this collection alone. #6 and #1 are also very good. #3 is decent, and #2 and 5 are not the best. The graphics on the earlier games are primitive, but are still charming, and to me, the gameplay is more important. Even though some of the less-well designed games can be completed quite quickly, with all 6 games, you get many hours of gameplay, and you will likely find yourself playing all (but #2) over and over to get at all the hidden jokes. It is even worthwhile playing both versions of #1 since there isn't 100% correspondence in the jokes, and both are unique experiences.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I Wish My Life Were This Fun
Review: Poor Larry. With his mind stuck in the 1970s, he has a lot of trouble with women. But, man, he has an interesting life.

This package collects all 6 games (there was no #4 for some mysterious reason). In the first game, Larry's primary goal is to get laid. Filled with ribald humour, this game was revolutionary for its time. Instead of an adventure game comprised of just text or perhaps a few static illustrations, you actually got to see everything happening to your "3D" character (now very 2D by today's standards). The parser driven gameplay could be frustrating when you didn't know how to type a command so the computer would understand it, but it also added more humour since you could type ANYTHING (and the game usually had good responses), and you couldn't guess by just clicking different inventory items on hot spots. (Also included is the remake of #1 with a point-and-click interface and better graphics). At this point Larry was just a pathetic loser who was fun to laugh at, but elicited little sympathy.

With #2, the designer, Al Lowe, decided that people played the game in order to watch an interactive movie. As a result, the game is WAY too linear, and there is no flexibility on how to get through. But now Larry was on a quest for true love, vs. just cheap thrills, and started to become more sympathetic. We also meet Passionate Patti, a recurring love interest.

As a result of negative reactions to #2's linear gameplay, #3 is more non-linear (although divided into chapters). Since Larry now has a girlfriend, the goal with #3 is changed. In this one, playing as both Patti and Larry, the player has to try to reunite the two and defeat a mad scientist. Getting laid is no longer the main goal, and except for the ribald humour, this is more like a typical adventure game. This was also the last of the parser driven games.

With #5, the series began using a point and click interface. Like most such early games, this makes it TOO easy. And, for some dumb reason, the game is again totally linear (although the order in which the chapters can be played is more flexible). Now the player just needs to randomly click items on hot spots. Suffering from partial amnesia (due to the missing #4), Patti and Larry have mysteriously become parted. Once again, playing as both characters, Larry reverts to trying to get laid while Patti tries to bring down the mob in her role as an undercover agent, and at the end the two are reunited as their paths cross.

With #6, the series returns to basics. For some unexplained reason, Patti is no longer around. Larry wins a stay at a Hellish health spa he cannot leave and tries to get laid. With this game, the puzzles are slightly more challenging, but still not very. But the humour is now back on course, making it a fun game once again.

#7 is the best in the series, having some of the most complex puzzles of the series. It is like a dirty version of Monkey Island with Larry trying to get laid on a cruise ship after finding a lost passenger ticket. The interface is also really cool. The game can be completed using point-and-click, but you also have the option of using a parser interface to uncover hidden jokes. It is also the funniest of the bunch, and the most risque. #7 left me anxiously waiting to see what they would do with #8 (one of the rumours was that they would use photographic images of real women for the female characters), but, alas, Sierra decided to do away with all its adventure game titles except Gabriel Knight for some ridiculous reason.

#7 is worth the price of this collection alone. #6 and #1 are also very good. #3 is decent, and #2 and 5 are not the best. The graphics on the earlier games are primitive, but are still charming, and to me, the gameplay is more important. Even though some of the less-well designed games can be completed quite quickly, with all 6 games, you get many hours of gameplay, and you will likely find yourself playing all (but #2) over and over to get at all the hidden jokes. It is even worthwhile playing both versions of #1 since there isn't 100% correspondence in the jokes, and both are unique experiences.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: LEISURE SUIT LARRY - A COMPLETE SUCCESS
Review: this game is like nothing anyone else could think up...

from the depths of the papers, computer hardware, and ideas that pile up around the computer nerds who create all kinds of serious, space-age/secret agent/combat fighter games, emerged leisure suit larry, a sleazy guy in a white suit made of 100% highly-flamable sinthetic materials. this interesting, though exceedingly pointless character has changed the gaming life of me, and i hope you too.

leisure suit larry games are like none i've ever played. no one could have possibly thought of something like this besides al lowe, and i'm surprised anyone thought of it. i computer game about some guy who goes around to different tropical resorts and bars trying to pick up chicks would have been thought of as ridiculous - and maybe it is - but that's all the fun of it. think of it as austin powers and play it, dammit.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Girl who loves game!
Review: This is a great game. I've played LL3 for years and have never quite beat it. I've been close, but I've just never gotten there. I totally recomend the game for ANYONE....my 13 year old brother even loves it....the only problem is, lack of hint guides. I play to win, but I find the hint guide that came with LL3 helpful, I'm having trouble locating them for the older games...so if you don't mind figuring things out as you go, this is the game for you! Highly recomended

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funniest Adventure Series in History
Review: This is absolutely a MUST-BUY! I cut my teeth on the Larry games over 10 years ago, and I still laugh out loud when I play them today. Al Lowe is a comedic genius, and Larry Laffer is the perfect victim for his hilarious plot gags. The only weak point in the series is the repetitive LSL5, but LSL1, LSL2, LSL3, and LSL6 are absolute classics.


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