Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine:
The Search Continues
Burmese tiger traps and other devious hazards await Indy in the seemingly idyllic paradise of Palawan Lagoon.
"The Volcano can't still be active, can it?" muses Indy at the beginning of this level. Uh, guess what, big guy ....
An amazing piece of engineering, Palawan Temple was built in the midst of magma flows. Perhaps "Palawan" is an aboriginal term for "toasty."
Keeping the Jeep on narrow mountain roads is not a sport for the faint-hearted.
Indy's trusty lighter gets plenty of use in the gloomy bowels of Teotihuacan. Locals called it "Pyramid of the Sun," doubtless in hopes of luring gullible tourists.
Our hero's transglobal trot now leads him to the lost Olmec Valley.
Indy finds himself a relucant passenger on the not-so-good ship V.I. Pudovkin. The Russian crew has taken away Indy's guns and Bullwhip. How nice of them.
Wild hyenas terrify the villagers living near the Meroe Pyramids, resting grounds of the ancient Nubian kings. The hyenas aren't particular favorites of visiting Americans, either.
Indy hops out of his cart to investigate the legendary King Solomon's Mines.
Near King Solomon's Mines lie the colorful ruins of Nub's Tomb, Indy's last stopping point before reaching the Infernal Machine.