Out of Order may refer to:
Out of Order is a freeware 2D adventure video game for PC. The game was developed by Tim Furnish of Hungry Software and released in 2003. The game's comedic science fiction-adventure narrative focuses on protagonist Hurford Schlitzting, who is woken in the night by a thunderstorm. Hurford finds himself transported to a place called "The Town," set in an alternate future in which aliens have taken over. He navigates the environment in his bathrobe and teddy bear slippers in an attempt to resolve the mystery of why he has been sent to "The Town." Player controls are based on the point and click model of gaming that is commonly used in 2D adventure games.
Originally intended to be a commercially released title, the game's developer decided at the last minute to release the game for free in order to showcase his video game engine called SLUDGE.
Out of Order received favorable reviews. Adventure Gamers wrote that the game possessed "very detailed and appealing graphics, an excellent original soundtrack, consistently humorous dialogue, very substantial length, and one of the most amusingly bizarre stories we've seen in a long time."
Out of Order is a 1990 farce written by English playwright Ray Cooney. It had a long run at the Shaftesbury Theatre starring Donald Sinden and Michael Williams.
As with many other Ray Cooney plays, it features a lead actor (in this case a junior UK minister) who has to lie his way out of an embarrassing situation (in this case a planned adultery with a secretary) with the help of an innocent side-kick (in this case the minister's personal private secretary), who gets more and more embroiled in the increasingly tangled tale improvised by the lead character as events unfold. The action takes place in a suite in a posh London hotel and revolves around accidents caused by a defective sash window.
The play is also often performed under the alternative title Whose Wife is it Anyway?
In 1996, the play was adapted in France as Panique au Plazza, starring Christian Clavier and Gérard Lartigau. In 1997 the play was made into a successful Hungarian movie A Miniszter Félrelép.
Distorted minds. shut, blind
It's out of order
There's nothing but silence
Not a voice can be heard
Closed down, out of line
It's a mindstate border
There's Nothing but silence
We're all out of words
You wanna slow down and you wanna stop
Well, I know where it begun
I saw the vicious circle
Takin' em off the line
You wanna slow down and you wanna stop
Well, I know where it begun
I saw the spiderwave
Takin' em off the line
White lies, avoiding eyes
And artificial ways
Some people are like robots
They're prisoners counting their days
Heavy bounds, steady downs
I know it's quite complex
You've seen the noble winners
Now come and see the wrecks
The spiderweb reaches from top to bottom
It's out of order
Take a closer look you'll see the spiderweb got 'em