I’ve listened to Myst creator Rand Miller inform the story of how he and his brother Robyn squeezed their 3D puzzling masterpiece onto a tiny CD-Rom again in 1993 many, many occasions and it at all times leaves my jaw on the ground. In the event you’ve skilled the joys of venturing to the Mechanical Age and retrieving a couple of pages for Achenar, Miller’s anecdotes of growing the sport on Mac’s rudimentary HyperCard utility are equally as mind-boggling.
In the event you additionally take into account your self a Mysthead, the Video Recreation Historical past Basis has arrived with the final word present: hours and hours of unfiltered behind-the-scenes interviews, B-roll, and different videotaped ephemera from Miller’s vault at Cyan Worlds.
The VGHF, a non-profit devoted to preserving video video games and the media made about them, launched into a quest to digitize Cyan Worlds’ archives after noticing within the trailer for an upcoming Myst documentary that Miller had metric tons of Beta and VHS tapes chronicling the historical past of the corporate’s video games saved away in an workplace closet. So VGHF library director Phil Salvador got down to protect them — and the outcomes span all the historical past of the Myst sequence, with a great deal of tape from Riven, Uru, and the next sequels and remakes.
Cyan even logged each media look and point out within the firm’s historical past; come for each blue-screened take of Atrus (performed by Rand Miller) yelling at you about pages, however keep for a Spokane sizzle reel highlighting the significance of Cyan Worlds to the Washington financial system. The Cyan assortment is a strong addition to the VGHF database, which incorporates all the things from outdated gaming mags to game-development manufacturing paperwork, and it’s all free to take a look at. And like all non-profits, you will get in on the motion with a donation.