TIME AND MAGIK
==============
Interactive Fiction from Level 9 and Mandarin Software

CREDITS
-------
Game designs:		Sue Gazzard, David Williamson, Pete Austin
Game program:		Pete Austin, Mike Austin, Simon Aspinall
Adventure System:	Mike Austin
Transport to your micro:Nick Austin, Mike Bryant
Pictures:		Godfrey Dowson, Neil Strudwick

GETTING STARTED
---------------

If you have not played a Level 9 adventure before, please read
all these instructions. If you are an experienced Level 9 adven-
turer, skip to the preface and just read that.

Boot the disc or load the cassette to start the game. If you
don't know how to do this, see the loading instructions on Page ix.

When the game prints "What now?" or ">", it is waiting for
you to type a command. (The game also waits when it has more
text to print than will fit on the screen at one time; read what's
displayed and press the Spacebar to continue.)

Time and Magik knows four types of commands:
*  Movement. Just type the direction you want to go: NORTH,
   NORTHEAST, EAST (and the other compass directions), IN,
   OUT, UP, DOWN or ACROSS.
*  Actions. For example, LOOK, TAKE THE HOURGLASS,
   DROP IT, LOOK AT THE PICTURE, WIND THE CLOCK,
   WEAR THE RUCKSACK, or GIVE COIN TO THE INNKEEPER.
*  System commands. EXITS, INVENTORY and SCORE give
   information; WORDS, PICTURES, BRIEF, VERBOSE, EXITS
   ON and EXITS OFF control what is output. UNDO takes you
   back a move. SAVE, RESTORE, RAM SAVE and RAM RES-
   TORE save your position or return to an earlier position. QUIT
   stops the game. See the example game on Page |i for details of
   these commands.
*  Commands to others. A spell in The Price of Magic lets you
   control creatures. Type their name, followed by a command
   such as BAT, GO NORTH.

You can abbreviate commands, such as SOUTH to S and
SOUTHEAST to SE, and even type several commands on one
line, like EAST, TAKE ALL, WEST. After typing a command
(or commands), press the ENTER or RETURN key.


PREFACE
-------

This adventure is a trilogy of key episodes from the struggles of
the Guardians to protect Time and Magik. The three parts are
played as separate games.

In Lords of Time the evil Timelords are fighting to change
world history, with the aim of gaining permanent control over
Time and warp eternity according to their wishes. You must
bring together nine crucial objects from different times to
defeat them.

Red Moon, tells how the Red Moon Crystal, only remaining
source of magik power, was lost. And how the Guardians
selected a lone adventurer to recover it.

And finally The Price of Magik recounts the sad tale of
Myglar who, driven mad by the intensity of magikal radiance
from the Moon Crystal that he had protected for so long, stole
it. His aim was a vain attempt to squander its power and live
forever. But a magician of great skill (who eventually rose to
lead the Guardians) avoided Myglar's traps, recovered the
crystal and ensured that magik survived as long as there was
need for it.


Hints for Time and Magik
------------------------
*  You need to enter the clock; nine time zones can be reached
   from here.
*  Tackle the time zones in numeric order most of the time.
*  After each of the first eight zones, you can always get back to
   the clock.
*  You score points for each of the nine ingredients and for
   each of the 18 treasures collected. There are a few bonuses.
   
Hints for Red Moon
------------------
*  To cast a spell, enter CAST [spell-name] [optional-target],
   such as CAST ESCAPE or CAST SNOOP NORTH.
*  If you must attack something, wear armour and carry a
   weapon.
*  You score points for making progress towards regaining the
   Red Moon Crystal, and 50 bonus points for each of nine treas-
   ures collected.
   
Hints for Price of Magik
------------------------
*  Tackle the outdoor locations before entering the house.
*  The HYP (hypnosis) spell lets you command one creature at
   a time. To give an order, key in instructions such as BAT,
   TAKE THE FELDSPAR.
*  You score points for learning and using spells, and for
   reaching a few inaccessible places.


TALKING TO TIME AND MAGIK
-------------------------

As you have seen, Time and Magik understands a lot of com-
mands. The following list is only part of its vocabulary, but it
gives an idea of what to try:

North, northeast, east (and other compass directions), up,
down, in, out, across, climb, again, attack, inventory, quit,
restore, save, RAM save, undo, score, wait, shout, search,
examine, blink, look, kneel, take, drop, wear, throw, give, fill,
empty, open, unlock, close, eat, drink, light, press, wave, blow,
rub, dig, insert, turn, pull, wind, kiss, exits, words, pictures,
brief, verbose.

Many words can be abbreviated, e.g. "INVENTORY" to "INV".

The following game example is not Time and Magik, but it
shows how to play. The player's commands are in capitals,
after each > prompt, and any of the text in square brackets is a
comment.

> LOOK
You're standing on the north shore of a marshy island, lost in
the mists and reed-beds of a great swamp. Frogs croak incess-
antly.
> GO NORTH
You bravely wade into the cool water, sink up to your neck in a
tangle of weeds and barely manage to struggle back to the
island.
> NORTH
Some people never learn! You wade into the marsh again, get
hopelessly tangled in the weeds and sink beneath the waters.
The game is over. You scored 0 out of 1000. Enter UNDO,
RESTART, RESTORE or RAM RESTORE.
> UNDO ["Take back move" - available on most micros. ]
You're standing on the north shore of a marshy island, lost in
the mists and reed-beds of a great swamp. Frogs croak incess-
antly.
> S [SOUTH]
You're on the south shore of the marshy island, which looks
exactly like the north shore. You can see a little rowing boat.
> EXITS
Exits lead north and south.
> LOOK AT THE BOAT
Fragile is too good a description for this craft! The only reason
for it remaining in one piece must be because the woodworm,
deep in its crumbling timbers, are all holding hands.
> GET IN BOAT
OK.
> BRIEF, WORDS, EXITS ON
OK. OK. OK. [Locations will be described briefly, pictures
turned off and exits reported automatically in future.  To
reverse these choices, you could use VERBOSE, PICTURES
and EXITS OFF respectively.]
> S [SOUTH]
You're in a little rowing boat in the middle of the swamp. By
paddling very carefully, you are able to make slow but steady
progress. Exits lead north and south.
> A [AGAIN. Repeat previous command]
You're in a little rowing boat at a jetty. Exits lead north, west
and south. You can see a signpost.
> OUT. EXAMINE SIGNPOST
The boat rocks as you get to your feet, then breaks apart and
sinks into the depths.
The letters on the sign are too tarnished to see properly.
> RUB SIGNPOST AND READ IT
You clean the signpost and it is readable now.
Apparently the west road leads along a causeway to the City of
the Moon.
> SCORE
You score 10 out of 1,000.
> RAM SAVE
OK. [Having escaped from the swamp, save your position in
RAM - i.e in the computer's memory - in case you encounter
difficulties and want to return to this point, using RAM RES-
TORE.  To save to disc or tape,  use SAVE and RESTORE
respectively. ]
> WEST
You are on the east end of a long causeway. Exits lead east and
west. You can see a wallet.
> TAKE WALLET AND EXAMINE EVERYTHING
The wallet is a tanned fishskin bag. In the wallet are a coin and
a card.
The coin is a golden sovereign.
The card is printed with,  "J. Fisher Esq, The Burrow,
Pondside".
>EXITS OFF [stop reporting exits]
OK.
You can hear a faint buzzing noise!
> WEST
You are in the middle of the causeway. A swarm of insects
appears and starts circling around you!
> EXAMINE THE INSECTS AND HIT THEM
The insects are a kind of virulent mosquito.
Something bites your neck!
You flail wildly at the air, but miss everything.
More insects bite you, then they all fly happily away.
> WEST
You are at the west end of the causeway. You can see a pebble.
The air seems to be getting colder!
> GET PEBBLE
OK. You seem to have a fever.
> INVENTORY
You own a pebble and a wallet. You shiver uncontrollably.
> WEST
You are on the outskirts of the City of the Moon. Unfortunately,
the fever develops apace and you can barely stay on your feet.
> RAM RESTORE [return to the position you saved earlier]
You're at a jetty. Exits lead north, west and south. You can see a
signpost.
> SOUTH
You are outside a drug store. Exits lead north and in.
> IN
You are in the drug store. You can see a shopkeeper and a
bottle of plague antidote pills. "Good morning", says the
shopkeeper, "Can I help you?"
> TAKE PILLS
The shopkeeper slaps your hand away. "Naughty!", she
scolds, "Antidote pills are extremely valuable - one gold
sovereign each!"
> OUT. N. W. GET WALLET. E. S. IN. GIVE SOVEREIGN TO
SHOPKEEPER
[then, armed with the antidote pills, try to pass the insects
again... ]


HINTS
-----

1. Draw a map (or a series of maps). Remember that the EXITS
   command lists the possible paths from each location.
2. To make life easy for you, the objects that matter in a
   location are normally listed in a sentence like, "You can see
   a shopkeeper and a bottle of plague antidote pills". (Some
   other authors mix in useful objects amid the background
   scenery, but Time and Magik avoids this time-wasting
   trick.) The rest of your surroundings are probably scenery,
   but by all means do things to them if you like.
3. Examine all the objects that you see, and take everything
   that you can. Most objects are useful - either as treasure, or
   in solving later puzzles.
4. Remember "UNDO". If you make a mistake and get "killed"
   or lose a vital object, the UNDO command is available on
   most versions and takes you back in time - hopefully to
   before the mistake. On larger micros you can use UNDO
   many times in succession to step backwards a long way '
   through the game.
5. SAVE your place occasionally, so that if you notice a mis-
   take too late to be able to UNDO it, or if the electricity
   flickers and your computer crashes, you can RESTORE the
   saved position and continue from there. SAVE puts your
   position on tape or disc and RESTORE can retrieve it later.
   RAM SAVE is quicker but less secure, as it just saves the
   position in memory.
6. Try everything you can think of - even weird or dangerous
   actions sometimes provide clues, and might be fun. You can
   always use UNDO (or SAVE followed by RESTORE) to
   recover if the results are "fatal".
7. You can word a command in many different ways. For
   example, if there were an axe and a ball on the ground, you
   could take the axe by typing any of the following:
   > GET THE AXE
   > TAKE AXE
   > GET ALL BUT THE BALL
   > LOOK AT THE AXE AND TAKE IT
   
If Time and Magik doesn't understand your command, try
rephrasing it and using synonyms. If Time and Magik still
doesn't understand, you are probably trying something that is
not important in the game.

-- End of File
Transcribed by:
Jim Grimwood, Dead Dog Farm, Hatfield, England
--
