The Humans (video game)

The Humans
Developer(s)Imagitec Design
Publisher(s)Mirage Technologies
Producer(s)Martin Hooley
Simon Golding (uncredited)
Designer(s)Rodney Humble
Programmer(s)David Lincoln
Artist(s)Andrew Gilmour
Michael Hanrahan (uncredited)
Composer(s)Barry Leitch
Ian Howe
SeriesThe Humans
Platform(s)Amiga, Amiga CD32, Atari Falcon, Atari Jaguar, Atari Lynx, Game Boy, DOS, Sega Genesis, Super NES
Release
Genre(s)Platform, puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player

The Humans[a] is a puzzle-platform video game developed by Imagitec Design in Dewsbury, England and originally published by Mirage Technologies for the Amiga in May 1992.[1] It was later ported to other home computers and consoles. The goal of the game varies per level but usually revolves around bringing at least one of the player-controlled humans to the designated end area marked by a colored tile. Doing this requires players taking advantage of the tribe's ability to build a human ladder and use tools such as spears, torches, wheels, ropes and a witch doctor in later levels.

The Humans was conceived by Rodney Humble during his time working with Imagitec Design as a project for the Atari Lynx spawning a trilogy based upon the human evolution inspired by Psygnosis' Lemmings, creating and drawing his ideas before transferring the design work to Imagitec programmers in developing them further, serving as the first game to be published by MicroProse offshoot Mirage, while Atari Corporation liked the title and commissioned two additional conversions for their platforms.

The Humans was very well received by video game magazines and garnered praise for the originality, presentation and audio upon its initial Amiga launch. Other versions of the game have been met with a more mixed reception from critics and reviewers alike. It was followed by three sequels: The Humans: Insult to Injury in 1992, Humans 3: Evolution - Lost in Time in 1995, and The Humans: Meet the Ancestors! in 2009.

  1. ^ a b "Under Wraps: Mirage - It's Just An Illusion* -- Humans". Zero. No. 32. Dennis Publishing. June 1992. p. 42.


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