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- Dragonsphere - MicroProse RRP £39.99/£35.99
- (Graphic adventure for CD-ROM and PC floppy)
-
- Reviewed by The Grue!
-
- At first Dragonsphere seems normal fair for a graphic adventure,
- with a seemingly standard plot. I was to be pleasantly surprised,
- as Dragonsphere is a cut above most graphic adventures.
-
- The plot is basically this ... the evil sorcerer Sanwe came to
- your world over a hundred years ago, transporting himself from
- another dimension of strange magic and strange machinery. His
- pattern is to stay for one year, burning lands and slaying
- inhabitants, and then to demand a tribute from the ruling clan.
- After he receives his tribute, he leaves and does not return for
- twenty years.
-
- Luckily the last time he came he was imprisoned by the spells of
- the court wizard, Ner-Tom. Sanwe was trapped but vowed he would
- break free in twenty years and take his revenge. Now twenty years
- later, your father has died, leaving you in command. Sanwe is
- beginning to break free, you know this because the spell that
- Ner-Tom created was called the Dragonsphere. This is basically a
- small crystal sphere with a dragon inside, the dragon represents
- Sanwe and the crystal around it represents the spell that keeps
- Sanwe trapped. As long as the sphere remains complete all are safe
- from the evil of Sanwe, but now the Dragonsphere is starting to
- crack and it is up to you to defeat him.
-
- As I said, this all seems pretty standard fair but you will find
- that once you have managed to defeat Sanwe, certain things will be
- revealed about you and your quest, and the game takes a quite
- unexpected twist. I wouldn't like to spoil the game for anyone so
- I won't say any more. What we have almost is two parts cleverly
- linked to provide an excellent story.
-
- To succeed in your quest you will have to talk to everyone you
- meet and listen to them very carefully as there is an immense
- amount of text/speech to the game. Oddly for a CD-ROM game you
- have the option of only listening to the speech or you can read it
- on-screen at the same time. I found I could pick up the clues
- better when the text was on screen, although I found myself
- reading the text before the speech had finished and clicking the
- mouse button to cut the speech short. You also have the option to
- control the speed at which certain locations scroll across the
- screen and the room fade effect as you move from one location to
- another, depending on the speed and power of your machine.
-
- The manual is well written and the technical/troubleshooting
- aspect of it is clear and concise. It even offers you various
- config.sys files that you could use as templates if you so wish.
- One thing I did particularly like was the thought given to the
- game packaging. Dragonsphere comes in what looks like any normal
- hardbacked book, and if you saw it on the shelf in your local
- computer store you could well mistake it for just that.
-
- The puzzles are all logical and vary in difficulty and the game
- often has you teetering on the brink of frustration but if you
- read/listen to everything all the answers are there, and you
- always manage to progress. There are a couple of items that are a
- bit easy to miss but at least you will not have to find the pixel.
- You will even have to learn and understand a new language if you
- wish to be successful.
-
- The graphics are very good, the animation is excellent, especially
- when your character has to scale up to Sanwe's tower for the first
- time. MicroProse have really paid attention to detail, for
- instance, you have at one point to jump across the top of a series
- of stone tree trunks. You will see that if you do it quickly your
- character will sway and teeter on the edge as he tries to regain
- his balance, in a way it reminded me of Prince of Persia. The
- speech adds nicely to the realism and only a couple of the voices
- are a little iffy.
-
- I also found that in some locations the music became a bit
- annoying but you can easily turn it off and just leave the speech
- on. If I had to criticise Dragonsphere in anyway I would suggest
- that they could have used some sound effects for certain things
- and cut back on the music a little. This would have added to the
- already nice atmosphere the game conveys.
-
- Dragonsphere is a wonderful game and a lesson to other software
- houses in the art of story telling, even within the framework of a
- graphic game. If you have a CD-ROM drive don't hesitate in trying
- this, you won't be disappointed. This is a totally absorbing
- adventure, nice graphics, great puzzles and a superb story, and
- one hopes to see a lot more of this from MicroProse.
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