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First-Person 3D Adventure Games
In the early 1990s, some independent adventure-game makers began taking advantage of the greater storage capacities of CD-ROMs to create games with pre-rendered three-dimensional graphics. These were usually first-person, unlike the third-person games created by Sierra and LucasArts, and more photorealistic than games with two-dimensional graphics. This gave them a greater emphasis on immersing the player in the virtual environment. The earliest examples of this type of adventure game include The Journeyman Project and Myst, both released in 1993. As computer hardware became more powerful, later adventure games containing real-time rendered three-dimensional graphics were possible, giving the player more freedom of movement.