![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Also strange about the licensing agreement for The Theater is that whenever the development studio is supposed to be named, the text is simply a blank line. The installation process immediately locks up the computer when the user reaches the licensing agreement. The game was initially known for its inability to install correctly. It is simply the Ticket-Taker on a white background on both sides. ![]() What is peculiar about The Theater, though, is that there is no developer named on the jewel case, nor a game description on the back. He is completely expressionless, though some say that if you smash the disc his face is shown as angry the next time you look at the cover, though this is just dismissed as an urban legend. He is simply a poorly drawn, pixelated, bald, Caucasian man with large red lips wearing a red vest over a white shirt and black pants. The actual legitimate copies that they say were released back in the day feature a blank cover with nothing but the sprite of what has since been named 'the Ticket-Taker’. Today, if you ever find it, it’s only available on crappy bootleg CD-ROMs, which, more often than not, don’t even actually contain the game. You see, The Theater was an old game released around the same time as Doom. Probably because many say it doesn’t even exist. Have you ever heard of an old game called “The Theater”? Yeah, didn’t think so. ![]()
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