Elimination of screen-tearing and artifacting when switching between the classic 1993 pixel art and the remastered hand-drawn high-definition visuals.
Featuring over 150 minutes of audio commentary from the original creators—including Tim Schafer, Dave Grossman, Ron Gilbert, Peter Chan, Peter McConnell, and Clint Bajakian—this mode provides deep insight into the 1990s development pipeline at LucasArts. Maniac Mansion Integration
For collectors: This version, running at 4K/60fps on a modern PC, is the definitive archival release. Combined with Maniac Mansion (playable in-game via Ed’s computer), you get two timeless classics for the price of one. Day of the Tentacle Remastered v1.3.11
lands 200 years in the past, interacting with America's Founding Fathers (George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Benjamin Franklin).
One of the most lauded features of Day of the Tentacle Remastered is the ability to switch between (320x200, 256 colors) and remastered high-definition art (1080p+ hand-drawn vectors) with the tap of a key (F1 by default). Combined with Maniac Mansion (playable in-game via Ed’s
The influence of Day of the Tentacle can be seen in many modern adventure games, from the graphical adventures of Telltale Games to the puzzle-platformers of the Steam era. The game's innovative use of the SCUMM engine and its focus on storytelling and character development have made it a touchstone for game designers.
, originally released in 2016 by Double Fine Productions, stands as a premier example of how to modernize a classic point-and-click adventure game. While the base remaster brought the beloved 1993 LucasArts masterpiece into the modern era, subsequent updates—including the robust v1.3.11 patch —refined the experience, ensuring stability and compatibility across modern systems. The influence of Day of the Tentacle can
Resolving rare issues where inventory items might not behave correctly or progression was blocked.
When Dr. Fred Edison’s mutated Purple Tentacle drinks toxic sludge, grows arms, and decides to take over the world, the trio attempts to travel back in time to stop the pollution. Naturally, Dr. Fred's time machine (built out of portable toilets called "Chron-O-Johns") malfunctions, scattering the three protagonists across three distinct eras: