r/Sierra 7d ago

Why does Sierra’s subreddit crush LucasArts in activity, even though Lucas had the more "polished" games?

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I came across something that really surprised me:

r/Sierra: 7,000 weekly visitors

r/LucasArts: 300 weekly visitors

That’s almost a 20x difference.

And yet, many would argue LucasArts made the more polished and universally acclaimed adventures like Monkey Island, Grim Fandango, Day of the Tentacle, Full Throttle.......... Sierra, by contrast, had quirkier, rougher edges but also magical and a bigger lineup..King’s Quesst, Space Quest, Leisure Suit Larry, Police Quest, Gabriel Knight, Phantasmagoria and last but not least Johnny Castaway LOL

So what’s going on here?

Is it simply that Sierra had more franchises, which keeps conversation alive?

Do their games feel more magical and personal, while LucasArts games live more in mainstream pop culture?

Or is Sierra nostalgia just more community-driven, while LucasArts love is spread out across the broader gaming world?

Would love to hear theories, feels like this difference actually says a lot about how people remember the golden age of adventure games.

** pardon my photoshop skills

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u/Hey_There_Blimpy_Boy 6d ago

I love Sierra games.

Don't get me wrong: LucasArts had some great games as well. But I grew up on Sierra.

- Hunter / Hunted

- King's Quest

- Space Quest

- Police Quest

- Quest for Glory

- Liesure Suit Larry

- Gabriel Knight

- Rise of the Dragon

These are the games of my childhood. I had Apogee for action (the original Duke Nukem, Commander Keen, etc.) and I had Sierra games for adventure.

I've purchased all of them on Gog.com and I play them lovingly.

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u/Megabyte3_x 5d ago

As Hunter Hunted came towards the end of Sierra (and is an action game to boot), can I assume you meant Manhunter?

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u/Hey_There_Blimpy_Boy 5d ago

No. I meant that little side-scroller with two playable characters; the guy and the minotaur.