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The Curse of Monkey Island - Lucas Arts Classic (PC CD)

Platform : Windows 95
4.4 out of 5 stars 42 ratings

£9.82
Only 1 left in stock.

About this item

  • Film quality animation, voice, sound and music - the undead come to life before your very eyes!
  • A barrel of gameplay - estimated 30 plus hours!
  • Two difficulty settings: regular and Mega-Monkey (now with more puzzley goodness)
  • New and improved insults suitable for swordfights and other fun occasions!
  • More inside jokes and other wisecracks!
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Product details

  • Is discontinued by manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Rated ‏ : ‎ Ages 12 & Over
  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 18.8 x 13.6 x 1.6 cm; 117.94 g
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ 1 Dec. 2006
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00005B4P4
  • Customer reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 42 ratings

Product description

Product Description

In this highly anticipated third instalment to LucasArts popular Monkey Island series of graphic adventures, Guybrush Threepwood once again takes up dull blade and rapier wit against the nefarious demon-pirate LeChuck. In Curse, Guybrush must save his one true love, Elaine Marley, from being turned into the evil pirate's zombie bride. But, hoping to marry Elaine himself, Guybrush unknowingly slips a cursed ring onto her finger, transforming her into a gold statue. He must then find a way to change Elaine back to her beautiful self and stop LeChuck from carrying out his sinister plans. Aye, 'tis a rollicking adventure that is sure to challenge the mind and shiver a few timbers.

Amazon.co.uk Review

Thankfully, The Curse of Monkey Island's technical superiority to its two predecessors doesn't come at the expense of a delightful and hilarious story line--it's every bit as good as its prequels.

Players once again assume the role of Guybrush Threepwood, an aspiring pirate who lacks the coordination and muscle tone to succeed as a swashbuckler. After unknowingly slipping a cursed diamond ring on the finger of his long-time love, Elaine Marley, Guybrush finds himself--and the player along with him--again battling wits with the nefarious (and very dead) pirate, LeChuck.

Utilising a simple point-and-click interface, players guide Guybrush through hundreds of beautifully rendered scenes, meeting unique characters, collecting dozens of objects and solving puzzles. Interacting with the eccentric inhabitants of LucasArt's comic Caribbean is one of the adventure's highlights; the excellent writing and dialogue make each new encounter even better than the last. The Curse of Monkey Island, with excellent animated graphics, is suitable for all ages, though the tricky puzzle solutions may be a tad obscure for younger gamers. --Doug Radcliffe

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
42 global ratings

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Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 April 2020
    Arrived quickly & intact
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 July 2011
    People bemoan the ending but to be honest there is'nt one. The puzzles range from easy to hard on the normal setting. At times what stumped the player was the inability to see a minute item intentionally placed on a wall or not use a drink on yourself to make a potion.
    There are a lot of charcters in this game and a lot of dialogue once you get passed that you will quickly become stuck often for hours.
    I got stuck multiple times and would have to switch the game off to think about the options. There is a beautifull art to playing these games and they are pretty wonderfull it;s jsut sad that walkthroughs are so easy to accesss now it takes all the enjoyment out of the game. All in all though a pretty decent game.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 December 2020
    good condition well packaged, just unlucky i got a duff cd rom
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 March 2015
    One of the best adventure games on the PC. It's funny, clever and so well written and designed. If you like adventure games, this is a must!
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 April 2013
    This is probably the best in the Monkey Island series, everything from the characters, to the story, to the soundtrack are just superb. I cannot recommend this enough.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 April 2014
    i love monkey island games, ive got the whole set now and i would recommend them to anybody that likes a point click adventure game
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 January 2012
    Game designer/programmer Ron Gilbert is the equivalent of a folk hero for several thousands of old school adventure game fans. He was the brain behind 1987's Maniac Mansion, a seminal graphic adventure game with unprecedented atmosphere and storytelling; the brain behind 1990's The Secret of Monkey Island, another milestone that took absolutely everything about adventure games to the next level; and the brain behind 1991's Monkey Island 2, an epic, refined and outlandish piece of art that I seriously believe is the best adventure game ever made. He left LucasArts soon after for reasons that were discussed to death.

    Monkey Island 3 has nothing to do with Ron Gilbert. It has everything to do with LucasArts' greed to make some new bucks off the revival of their flagship adventure game series several years after Gilbert's departure, when LucasArts was very probably faced with diminishing sales and critical reception.

    This game's popularity baffles me. Then again, maybe not, as I can see where it's coming from. Monkey3 is like an Indiana Jones film NOT directed by Steven Spielberg, or like a Harry Potter novel NOT written by JK Rowling. It lacks the soul of the series, or worse yet, it is replaced with a different soul. Obviously, this is not sensed by those who dashed through the originals in a superficial way. It is only felt unanimously by fans who embraced Monkey1 and Monkey2 to their hearts, or were even obsessed about them, like I was in my late teens. See, not obsessing about a game series is no sin. (In fact, the world probably doesn't need more hardcore game geeks.) But trying to argue how a counterfeit entry to the series is on a par with the true classic entries... is plain wrong. Monkey3 has superior graphics and music compared to the originals, which seem to have dazzled several gamers, but this is the only upside I can think of.

    Monkey Island 3 was designed and led by the Ackley-Ahern duo, with only one of them present in the team of Monkey2 (as an animator). While they prove to be capable game developers by and large, in the delicate, nuanced, semi-serious, and very personal world of Ron Gilbert, they move and thrash around like a particularly clumsy elephant in a porcelain store.
    Regardless if they do or do not understand what made the original games work, they prove utterly unable to emulate their general weirdness, their general Ron Gilbertness. Now it's hard to define this Ron Gilbertness in mere words and give it a semblance of justice -- but for the purposes of this review, we can try: bittersweet, spooky, unpredictable, odd, offbeat, atmospheric, enchanting, smart, subversive, tragicomic and poignant; definitely poignant. The design in Monkey3 sometimes manages to be remotely spooky and/or atmospheric (the theater scene comes to mind), but that's where similarities end.

    Aimed squarely at prospective new fans who were probably still preteens during the run of the original Monkey Island games, Monkey Island 3 is an OK if unremarkable adventure game when taken strictly in isolation. It looks well, plays well and sounds great. But it's not a proper Monkey Island entry. What LucasArts does here is effectively betraying the old fans (and Ron Gilbert himself, I guess), and producing something lighter, less profound, less edgy and more "PG" than Monkey Island 1 and 2, all for the sake of catering to a "fresher" audience. Out of cold calculation, the Monkey Island soul is replaced by a cheaper, downsized one that proves incapable of emulating the feeling, mood and peculiar jokes of the original, despite trying hard.
    All this results in that no real fan of the series would honestly cheer this game. They just feel it's fake, like a changeling. What is there to cheer about an Indiana Jones movie deprived of Spielberg?..
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 July 2015
    How can you not love Guybush Threepwood I've followed him since Monkey Island first debuted.
    One person found this helpful
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