Archive for the 'Role Playing' Category

King’s Quest 7: “the Princeless Bride”

The newest instalment in the long-running saga of the Kingdom of Daventry, King’s Quest 7 tells the story of Princess Rosella (last seen in King’s Quest 4 – “The Perils of Rosella”), who is lured into a magical pool and transported into a magical realm. Rosella’s mother, Queen Valanice (introduced in King’s Quest 1 – “Quest for the Crown”), leaps after her, and they find themselves lost in the enchanted land of Eldritch.

However, they are split up, and have to search for each other as well as try to find a way back to Daventry. Also in Eldritch, an evil enchantress plots to destroy all the goodness of the land. Can Rosella and Valanice thwart her pernicious plan, and restore order to the Realm of Eldritch?

Well, judging from previous King’s Quest games, we can be pretty sure they will, but its up to you to make sure. In King’s Quest 7 you will control the actions of Rosella and Valanice in alternating chapters. This is a new style for King’s Quest, and it isn’t the only change to show up.

The graphics, whilst always having been bright and cheerful, are now of cartoon quality, and look great. The action bits are interspersed with animations to keep the story going, and this works well. The characters look like they’ve just escaped from a Disney movie, full of life, movement and personality (not always nice personality!). The background scenery is lush, and thankfully it is very easy to see what everything is meant to be – no need to click everything just in case that round blob is a bowl (or a rock, or a helmet etc).
Continue reading King’s Quest 7:

Planescape: Torment

PLANESCAPE: TORMENT is a role-playing game, built using the same game engine as the excellent Baldur’s Gate. Instead of adventuring around the usual fantasy world, filled with elves, dwarves, and so on, in Torment you play a scarred immortal, who has awoken in a mortuary, in the centre of Sigil, the city at the centre of the Planes.

Sigil is the “City of Doors”. From here you can travel the Planes, which are like alternate dimensions. In these planes, things are often back-to-front from what you might expect: Dying can be good for you, talking with the living dead can be most enlightening, your best friend turns out to be a floating skull (with a penchant for female corpses), and getting stitched up by a fiendish mortuary attendant can actually make you stronger.

You have no memory of how you came to be in the Mortuary, and only a few clues as to who and what you are.

Torment is more of a story-driven game than Baldur’s Gate was. There is still lots of combat, complete with all sorts of weapons, spells, and a veritable horde of monsters, but your main quest is to find out just who you are, and what is going on. As the story progresses, you start to get the distinct feeling that things aren’t going to end well . . .

There are loads of mini-quests within the story. You may be asked to revenge a murder, talk someone out of dying, find a magic item and so on.

The quests differ depending on your alignment. If you are evil expect more hack-and-slay type quests. One of the unusual aspects of Torment is that you don’t decide your alignment: it is determined by your gameplay within the game. Slaughter a few innocents, steal items, and you’ll certainly be thought of as an evil guy. This means that you can play through Torment in different ways.

You design your character; The Nameless One, at the beginning of the game. You assign statistics to strength, wisdom, intelligence, dexterity, constitution, and charisma, which all give different abilities.

If you are an intelligent character you will have more dialogue options with game characters, as well as recovering memories faster, being better at spells, and so on. As a strong but thick type you’ll excel at bashing people over the head, and won’t bother too much with the thinking side of things.

As you progress through the game you’ll come across trainers, who can increase your proficiency with certain weapons or skills. There are hundreds of items to use, sell, or steal. You can change character class too, depending on who you talk to, going from Fighter to Wizard, Thief, or Cleric.

You’ll find characters willing to join your party, and each has their own agenda, as well as skills and items. Just don’t turn your back on anyone!

The graphics in Torment are similar to those in Baldur’s Gate. Each area is hand-drawn, in amazing detail. The characters and monsters have excellent animation, and the spell and other special effects are superb. There is a lot of speech in the game, and the music is quite compelling.

The humour in Torment is very dark, with lots of references to death, torture, murder, and more. Torment wouldn’t be a great game for the kids, but if you can cope with the occasional necrophilic joke you’ll find the story in Torment really grabs your attention.

Torment is Black Isle. It requires a Pentium 200MMX processor, eight-speed CD-Rom drive, four-megabyte graphics card, and recommends a Pentium 266MMX processor, 64Mb of Ram, and 12-speed CD-Rom drive.
Torment is easily the best role-playing game around at the moment. With Baldur’s Gate 2 and Icewind Dale still a long way off, I’ll be making do with Torment quite happily.

X-files

THE popular television programme X Files is set to be a big screen movie soon, and in the meantime all you X-philes can enjoy this game.

You play the part of FBI agent Craig Willmore, a field agent in Washington State. It seems that FBI agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully have disappeared in this area, and your first task is to find them.

Large Size: 250 x 355, 24200 bytes.

X-Files Returns to the Big Screen If you watched television at all during the 90s, Im assuming that you tuned in to one of the greatest sci-fi series evar , The X-Files . This week, David Duchovny confirmed that there

You have all the resources of the FBI behind you, including their crime labs, digital photo viewer, Intelligence Network Gateway, Media Index Search, and more.
Continue reading X-files’s review.

Anastasia

ANASTASIA, based on the cartoon movie by Fox, is about an orphaned girl’s quest to find her true identity.

All attitude and determination, Anastasia is an engaging and fiery 18-year-old orphan. Torn from the royal Romanov family during the Russian Revolution, young “Anya” is left with no memory of her past. She has grown up in an orphanage in St Petersburg, and now that she is old enough to leave, she can set out to discover if she has any true family in the world.

Large Size: 633 x 550, 72800 bytes.

Evening Game- Anastasia HOHRIAKOVA- 2001

She meets up with Pooka, a little puppy, who will help her in her search. You play the part of Pooka in this game. Your task is to help Anastasia, mainly by finding items that she needs on her adventures.
Continue reading Anastasia’s review.

Diablo

THE land of Khandaras has fallen into chaos. Evil has swept across the kingdom, plunging it into civil war and terrorising the people. You have journeyed to the source of the evil, the town of Tristram, now inhabited by only a handful of survivors. The cathedral there is built over the ruins of an ancient monastery, and now eerie lights and sounds are heard echoing through its abandoned halls. Perhaps the answer lies within the remains of a forgotten past.

Large Size: 210 x 301, 40600 bytes.

Blizzard recently released a trading card game which is set in the World of Warcraft . One of the best parts of the

As a valiant Warrior, nimble Rogue or powerful Sorcerer, you must descend into the depths of the dungeons beneath the cathedral. Fight your way down through 16 levels, till you come face to face with your mightiest foe – Diablo, an ancient Demon released from his captivity.
Continue reading Diablo’s review.