The Making of Dragons Lair
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The Making of Dragon's Lair.
Dragon's Lair was the first video disc arcade machine to be developed. This documentary covers interviews with the development team and how the animations for the arcade game were developed onto huge video discs. The artwork and animation was put together by ex Disney film animator Don Bluth.
Пікірлер: 73
Saying this game was ahead of its time is not just lip-service, it was truly decades ahead of everything else on the market at the time...
This man is an animation god
I was the first to slay the dragon in my local arcade.. Everyone was watching.. I felt powerful haha
Love Don bluth's work. I'm almost 21 and none of my friends have heard of him. Except for a few
Little did the artists know that those drawings would be worth a fortune today
Good memories with this. I would play this while my mom was elsewhere in the mall shopping. I would beat the game with a crowd around and just walk away after beating it like a 12 yo boss LOL.
@patsfan4life
6 жыл бұрын
DJ IQS that was probably bad-ass
@patientmental875
4 жыл бұрын
I dont think you came close to beating it, no one really did back then
@GrahamTruman
3 жыл бұрын
@@patientmental875 Yep full of sh!t
@lilnoggin7601
Жыл бұрын
@@patientmental875 Well how do you know they didn't beat the game???
Great visuals, never get tired of watching Dragons Lair
Story-wise, I feel Disney has always pwned Bluth, but animation-wise, Don Bluth's animations have always felt more realistic and fluid.
This was quicktime action before Heavy Rain was a thing
@PhyreI3ird
5 жыл бұрын
Yet somehow, nowhere near as comedic, despite intentionally being a comedy.
Who would have thought 30 years later you would be able to play it on your cell phone?
@robertjenkins6132
8 жыл бұрын
+JackBauer270 Who would have thought 30 years later "cell phones" would exist? "What? You mean you can take the phone with you in your car? Where is the cord?"
@Twobarpsi
3 жыл бұрын
Not the same at all.
Some of the best scenes ever animated!
it's pretty impressive they could laod the video clips that fast and in sync...edit: apperently the laser disc player they used supported dumping the data on the disc. it also moved the disk instead of moving the laser..." the ability to jump up to 99 tracks during vertical blanking, giving essentially "instant" searches"
I have one sitting right next to me, fully restored, as I watch this. How cool is THAT?
Thanks for the memories 👍
Dragons lair, mortal kombat, and street fighter were the greatest in history.
@fredericktate7989
3 жыл бұрын
You're a list is correct for the exception of a couple more
@tenthirty82
2 жыл бұрын
TMNT and Final fight
@grizzlywhisker
Жыл бұрын
I personally love Konami's Simpsons arcade game, that was always my all time favorite.
i was a baby when this game 1st came out.....
@Twobarpsi
3 жыл бұрын
Wah
Thanks for this video.
Legend.
Damn the good 'ol days of arcades when games were 25cents.
@galni
3 жыл бұрын
this particular one was the first to cost 50c
@fredericktate7989
3 жыл бұрын
This game was 50 cent or a dollar..
Wow amazing
Nice!
Currently building my own cabinet.
Daphne was hot.
@EnchantedSmellyWolf
9 жыл бұрын
JustSoLeopard I'm sure Don Bluth felt the same way.
@jacefiore6203
8 жыл бұрын
He,Bluth should have ignored while tobe hooper should've ask to Bluth to do an animated version of the 1974 cult classic low-budget b-movie horror Film,the Texas chainsaw massacre,you know because Jerry Goldsmith composed the secret of Nihm and also poltergeist because both films released the same year but poltergeist was produced by FUCKEN Steven Spielberg and Bluth & Spielberg collaborated to make FUCKEN an American tail,BOOM That's it but Bluth & Spielberg should've collaborated to do a full feature length film version of woody woodpecker.
@xxaltered7xx
7 жыл бұрын
the emulator,too
@patsfan4life
6 жыл бұрын
Fun fact, her voice was done by a female employee who was on the animation team for Dragon's Lair, to save money
@joeyabuki5807
6 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂
Ahh the 80/90s...
"$40 spent before I killed the dragon." So, adjusted for inflation, same cost as a AAA game today.
This game was difficult i could never get the hang of it, i must admit i did nt try very hard, but i would waste a fair bit trying to play it.
The birth of the QTE
If a modern game took that many art assets, or that level of ingenuity, we wouldn't see many...
@tickledropstop
6 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile, games now take 100x more art assets and take 5 years on average to be released using a budget of $100m.
I hope we see a new cartoon laser disc game
I don't know... Seeing how it was made kind of feels like the magic was somehow removed from the game. I still remember the first time I laid eyes on the game, it was like this is a whole new world of video games where do they go from here? It was so life like and was so far advanced graphically from the regular games it was impossible not to be impressed. I only every tried to play it at the arcade maybe once or twice, but could never make it past the first draw bridge and I think because it was too hard for the double priced games no one in my area ever mastered it. I bought it a few years later for PC (3.5" floppy I think) but despite having endless credits never really got much further.
@patsfan4life
6 жыл бұрын
Dodgy Brothers you gave up too easily LOL
@dojomojomofo
5 жыл бұрын
Exactly. That part about needing to make the illusion of control rang true to me. Press left, get your head bashed. Right? Same. Up? Same. Down? Same. Action? Same. Ok... that's $2, 8 whole plays on anything else wasted to show that no matter what you do, you lose in a few seconds. There needed to be an indicator when you could make an input and when it received one, like Braindead 13 later did. It seemed the window to react was both invisible and an impossibly small fraction of a second. That, and the way these games were known to destroy the laserdisc player mechanism, I guess were why I only ever saw 4 games like it. (Dragon's Lair, Space Ace, Braindead 13, Sega's Time Traveller.)
Been playing this game so many times on my PS3. And I play it on the hard difficulty with the arcade vision to make it feel like I'm playing the arcade game. I wonder how different the experience would be if I play it on the actual arcade cabinet?
@bubbythebear6891
4 ай бұрын
The arcade version that I played was VERY particular with the timing. Move one frame early and you die. I first played it via the Wii, and the original makes that version seem like a cakewalk because it doesn't kill you for moving early.
17:20 A Lupin's Castle of Cagliostro videogame?
@acholl980
8 жыл бұрын
+Sancho Retáblez yep. (it was called Cliff Hanger)
Lauren: (screamed when I saw Singe, the evil dragon) Off with his head! Off with his head!
Rick Dyer.. not talked about enough!
Don Bluth should have stayed in the games ever since, instead of repeating Disney's fairytale formula. The end of the story we all know how it ended.
@yunghoonjo1
3 жыл бұрын
Cinematronics, the publisher, who does not work at all treated the don blueth animation team who did all the work unfairly. (I think) he didn't have any intectual property right. So creating his own game business was hard. So he left the game business, and made his own company.
All that nick
14:46. -Too HARD. And not only that, confusing. Because in the game, you see more movie, then play. Creators could put some pictures in the center (arrows and sword), so the player could understand, what to do.
Cliff Hanger Lupin 3 is the best
Where’s clash of clans?!?!?! Or SuperCell?!??!
Play Station sucks.
@lilnoggin7601
Жыл бұрын
What does this have to do with the video? Dragon's Lair Trilogy?
@Twobarpsi
Жыл бұрын
@@lilnoggin7601 Dragon's Lair is better than any PS game.
@lilnoggin7601
Жыл бұрын
@@Twobarpsi Oh, I get what you mean. Dragon's Lair looks better than a PlayStation game. But the controls weren't that responsive.
@Twobarpsi
Жыл бұрын
@@lilnoggin7601 yes
@lilnoggin7601
Жыл бұрын
@@Twobarpsi The only problem with those controls is that if you accidentally put the wrong input in the game, and then you quickly put in the right input, it sometimes still reads it as the wrong input. But hey, it was a Laserdisc game of course!