Easter Eggs and Cultural References



There are a number of real-life references and Easter eggs in the whole Ultima series. These are some of them.

See also Real-life equivalents of the characters.

Ultima I

 * When the Stranger uses a spaceship to become a Space Ace in Ultima I, the starfighters that have to be shot down look suspiciously much like the Tie-Fighters of the Empire in "Star Wars".
 * The Pillar of Ozymandias is a direct reference to the famous poem by Percy Shelley.&#160; The inscription on the pillar ("I&#160;am Ozymandias, King of Kings / Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!") is a direct quote from the poem, as is the "Nothing beside remains"&#160;comment.

Ultima II

 * The Stranger can steal food at the takeout window of "McDonalls" in Port Benefice in Ultima II. A clear jab at McDonalds, the biggest fastfood retailer of the world (meaning that you actually stuff yourself with fastfood in Ultima II!)


 * Owen K. Garriott (Richard's father) can be found in a town on Mars, while Richard Garriott himself can be found on Neptune in a Computer Camp.
 * The concept of the Time Doors (the precursor to the Moongates) as well as the cloth map showing how they interconnect are both ideas taken from the film Time Bandits.
 * "Planet X"&#160;might be a reference to the classic Looney Tunes short "Duck Dodgers in the 24½ Century."
 * There is an NPC&#160;named Sister Sledge, a cleric whose only response is to sing "We Are Family!"&#160; This refers to a popular disco song perhaps best known as the unofficial anthem of the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates.

Ultima V

 * In the city of Skara Brae there is a tombstone which reads 'Here Lies the Tale End of a Bard', a reference to the game The Bard's Tale.&#160; Notably, The Bard's Tale is primarily set in (and underneath) a large city that is coincidentally also named Skara Brae.


 * If you swear at any of the NPCs during conversation they will scold you. The list of accepted swear words is actually quite long and can be found by hex-editing the U5 data files. In DOS version, it's located in the file DATA.OVL. Last but apparently not least in the swearword list is "ELECTRONIC ARTS"...

Ultima V: Lazarus

 * Britain graveyard has a tombstone with text Here lies Kefka. The world hast not heard the last of me! Wha hoo hoo hoo hoo! Possibly a reference to Kefka Palazzo, the antagonist of Final Fantasy VI, also known for famous laughters.

Ultima VI

 * Hanging on the wall of the Avatar's house is a painting of the box art from Ultima V.


 * The pizza box in the Avatar's house greatly resembles the distinctive box style used by Domino's Pizza at the time this game was made.
 * Asking Lord British about books reveals that he loves to read"The Wizard of Oz". If the player should obtain that book from the Lycaeum and present it to Lord British, he will reward the player with a lot of Peer Gems.


 * The tavernkeeper Amanda at Serpent's Hold looks astoundingly much like Guinan from Star Trek TNG. This is surely no coincidence, since the programmers of the series are proven Star Trek fans (and the joke was widely expanded in Ultima VII, as seen below).

Ultima Underworld I

 * On Level 6, there is a little maze where you gather a substance simply by walking over it, it comes complete with four tough to kill ghosts and teleporters on the sides. It is suspiciously similar to a Pac-Man level.


 * The Book of Honesty by Ravenhurst of Moonglow is a reference to the "Honest Book of Truth" that (in the Principia Discordia) was given to an Omar Khayyam Ravenhurst, a pseudonym of Kerry Wendell Thornley.

Savage Empire

 * The Three Stooges appear as members of the Disquiqui tribe. Chafblum has a specific response if the player mentions the word "nyuk" to him.

Ultima VII

 * There is a dead Crocodile in Hook's hideout on Buccaneer's Den. Looking into it reveals a pocketwatch. A clear reference to "Peter Pan" (Crocodile, Clock, Pirate with a hook)


 * Northwest of Cove is a flower field. As soon as they walk over it, the Avatar and companions will fall asleep. This plays at a scene from the "Wizard of Oz".


 * East of Britain, a Kilrathi starfighter parks in the corn field of farmer Mack, Mack also tells of the cat-like being that came out of it (before he killed it and ate it). This is an actual Kilrathi starfighter from Wing Commander. Clicking on it will start the Wing Commander music.


 * The Fellowship's procedures and practices emulate many new religious movements, and most blatantly, they resemble Scientology. (Batlin also greatly resembles L. Ron Hubbard, both in appearance and in that he describes himself as a polymath.)


 * In Dungeon Covetous, the Avatar meets Malloy and Owings. Both, their looks and their behavior make it clear, these two are actually Laurel and Hardy! (And what they say it REALLY funny)


 * In Serpent's Hold, many of thee inhabitants are modeled after the crew of the Enterprise in "Star Trek: The Next Generation". The list is quite long, it includes:
 * Sir John Paul = Cap. Jean-Luc Picard (Bald, and the leader)
 * Sir Richter = Cmdr. Riker (Second in-command)
 * Sir Hoffre = Lt. Worf (Hoffre is from another race, raised by humans)
 * Denton = Lt.Cmdr. Data (Looks like the tin man and makes jokes that aren't funny)
 * Lady Leigh= Dr. Beverly Crusher (Leigh is a red-haired healer)
 * Lady Tory = Deanna Troi (Tory is an Empath, and good at giving spiritual help)
 * Jordan = Lt. LaForge (Black Skin and very blind)


 * In Skara Brae there is a homage to J.R.R. Tolkien on the cemetery: the plaque beneath the statue near the crypt reads: "JRRT - a great man - a great writer"


 * Parody references in books:
 * "Struck Commander" is a play on Origin's Strike Commander.
 * "Mandibles" is obviously a parody of the novel and film series Jaws.
 * "Magic and the Art of Horse-and-Wagon Maintenance" is the Sosarian version of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.


 * Among the books, there are references to several real-world literary works:
 * "Hubert's Hair-Raising Adventure" by Bill Peet
 * "Ringworld" by Larry Niven
 * "Stranger in a Strange Land" by Robert A. Heinlein
 * "The Wizard of Oz" by L. Frank Baum
 * "Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang" by Ian Fleming
 * "Play Directing: Analysis, Communication and Style" by Francis Hodge
 * "On Acting" by Laurence Olivier
 * "The Transitive Vampire" by Karen Elizabeth Gordon


 * There are a few book authors that are hideous puns:
 * "The Silence of Chastity" written by "I.M. Munk" (I am monk)
 * "What could be left but the ashes" written by "N. Flaims" (in flames)


 * The signpost method for killing Lord British alludes to the time a metal plate hit Richard Garriott in the head. The line 'Yancey-Hausman must pay!' refers to the company responsible for the maintenance of Origin's office building.

Ultima Underworld II

 * In Killorn Keep, the Avatar finds the Trilkhai, cat-like creatures, that think they had once a glorious past. The Wisps later will later confirm this, saying they were once space-dwelling. A clear reference to the Kilrathi of Wing Commander. 'Trilkhai' is an anagram of 'Kilrathi'.


 * Also in Killorn Keep, male Avatars can tell Mystell that their name is Abraham Lincoln.


 * In the purple zone of the void, there is a homage to the days when dungeons were made of vector lines (like Akalabeth), complete with VERY simple drawn enemies. It is quite fun to find and play through this little memory of older days.

Ultima VII/2

 * In the caves on the way to the ice plains of the Serpent Isle, the Avatar gets a key. It fits a tower in the Knight's Forest. Inside, the Avatar finds Captain Stokes, a software pirate, who is just busy with copying Ultima VIII (how is that possible?). And using the different parts of the computer also reveals some hidden advertisements for Strike Commander and Wing Commander (both Origin products).
 * The face of Jim Hammons (Umbrae Dragon) was used as the face of Ensorcio, the mage in Sleeping Bull.
 * In the town of Monitor, there is a woman named Lydia who specializes in tribal tattoos.&#160; Although not conclusive, it is possible that her name is a reference to the 1940s song "Lydia the Tattooed Lady," once popularized by Groucho Marx.

Ultima VIII

 * There's a reference to the "Doom Insanity" section of the official Doom FAQ (referring to the pre-release age, at least) in the game quotes section. One of the reasons cited for why Doom shipped late was "if Origin can do it, so can we"; conversely, Ultima VIII team said "if id can do it, so can we".
 * The "Eye of the Boulder, the Runes of the Myth Drainer" book is a jab at Eye of the Beholder III: Assault on Myth Drannor, especially considering how that game series was still technologically outdated compared to Ultima Underworld.
 * The "Ear of Arricorn" books refer to The Eye of Argon, a notoriously bad fantasy novella.
 * Jely, author of the "Cheesy Book", is none other than Jason Ely, the programmer who wrote the code for books. He wrote it to test multi-page books, and the other developers found it funny and decided to keep it in the game.
 * The morphing object (cube, sphere, tetrahedron) is a reference to Electronic Arts' old logo.

Ultima IX

 * The paintings in the Avatar's house on Earth are taken from the box art of previous Ultima games.
 * Turning on either of the TVs in the Avatar's house will reveal an EA&#160;Sports commercial, complete with announcer.
 * Turning on the Avatar's computer will reveal a "coming soon"&#160;plug for Ultima Online 2.&#160; (But sadly, UO2 was never released.)
 * The prisoner in Lord British's dungeon is clearly Richard Garriott who is of course Lord British in real life. The prisoner claims to also be Shamino, Lord British's other alterego.