


The cool (but certainly a bit bizarre) animated intro nicely prepares for the graphical sheen this title possesses. While other 93’ release were pumping out partial screen grainy openings, Life Stage somehow managed to pull off a borderless clear intro (the look reminds me of the later Sega Saturn game, Clockwork Knight) Watching a 3DO with an exaggerated shape scuttling about like a roomba robot vac, than sprouting arms and drinking a cup of tea, how can this not bring a grin to your face?


In game ditches the cartoon look for what often approaches photo realistic. This must have been simply jaw dropping for ’93! Heck I was still surprised several times viewing this title 15+ yrs later. It reminds me, of all games, Shenmue


Life Stage is far far away from an adventure game like Shenmue though, so where does the familiar interaction come into play? My first example (which will also cover the mandatory audio discussion) is the stereo. For the longest time I thought Life Stage was essentially a silent title. It certainly doesn’t have to be though. For you aren’t limited to just walking up to and admiring the stereo, you can turn it on. Even more of a surprise is that the thing churns out some high quality professional tracks! There are no lyrics but I love a good instrumental, and these tunes definitely are good (no generic tunes, elevator music, or public domain jingles here) Several are actually polished knockoffs (I thought I heard anywhere from Kenny G all the way to movie soundtracks) There are 17 tracks in all, and all of them unique. The rich audio dwarfed the cartridge music being produced at the time. My one complaint is that you can’t move around while listening.
My second example of interaction? The television. Over a dozen clips are available for your viewing. They are short, but the fact that they are included at all speaks highly to the ambitions this title was aiming for. High production value is evident!

There are many other objects available to interact with (click on a vacuum and hear it run, touch the phone and it will ring, flush the toilet and … well, you get the idea



Want to hear my list of complaints. Sorry, you are just going to have to ….
“WAIT FOR A WHILE”
That lovely sentence appears fat too often in this title, and with the wait averaging between 30-40 seconds you’ll quickly grow to loathe the above phrase.


Unique, ambitious, stunning visuals, brilliant music … and yet I can’t recommend it. Check that, I can’t recommend it as it was intended. As a tech demo I can, but Life stage needed more time in the cooker (Would have been interesting to see how this fared if it had come out in 1996) Detail should have been sacrificed for speed.
-Trev