VooDoo Magic (lost online game; 2004-2007)

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VooDooMagicArt.jpg

The game's cover/promotional art.

Status: Lost


VooDoo Magic was an online strategic multiplayer game pitching up to four players against each other in a battle of tactics and black magic. The game was available for play on the website WePlayHere originally owned by UK-based video games TV production company Gamer.tv Ltd. starting back in 2004.[1]

Summary

VooDoo Magic was one game among many available on the website throughout it's three-year tenure, but besides titles like Dinky Bomb and Oddballs Bowling, this game was not documented nearly as much. In early 2005, Gregg Abott ,a longtime fan & community moderator of the website GamerParty Ltd. were looking into negotiations to acquire the WePlayHere website, eventually acquiring it soon after. VooDoo Magic was one of the many games transferred to GamerParty Ltd. servers after they acquired the website.[2] Gameplay was strategic and unique to online multiplayer games at the time of it's lifespan. The gameplay through the website's archived screenshots is described as "Take it in turns to maneuver your malicious little witch doctors around a grid-based map, carrying out nefarious magical deeds as you do. Raise the undead as skeletons or summon hugely powerful demons to help send your opponents to their graves; sear their skins with fireballs, fry their bones with electrical storms and puncture their sniveling organs with your heinous Voodoo doll. It's an orgy of evil!"[3] More info on the gameplay is limited, as looking for a more detailed guide to playing Voodoo Magic, you'd need to click the Help button in the game itself for a much more detailed explanation of the game's features and functions.

Remains

The limited pieces of the game's existence include the game's cover/promotional art, some Wayback Machine archives, which include plenty of screenshots of the game's launch screen & the WePlayHere website throughout it's life (2004-2007)[4] before being purchased by Atari and ultimately shutdown altogether - this left loyal players at the time heartbroken, and individuals looking for the game now are still bothered by the Atari acquisition.[5] Besides the cover/promotional art, there are currently no known screenshots or video captures of the gameplay, unlike another popular game from the same website, Dinky Bomb that has many more gameplay videos and screenshots floating around. [6]

Gallery

Images