★ AMSTRAD CPC ★ GAMESLIST ★ HEROES OF THE LANCE (c) USGOLD/STRATEGIC SIMULATIONS INC ★ |
AMSTAR&CPC | Amstrad Action |
The long awaited Advanced Dungeons and Dragons (AD&D) has finally arrived on the CPC. Unfortunately it's not a role playing game, but you can't have everything. Heroes is set in the fantasy world of Krynn, a world in which the Dragon Highlords and their Draconian minions seek to dominate. It's based on the AD&D role playing supplement Dragons of Despair, set in the ruins of the temple of Xak Tsaroth. A party of adventures undertake a quest to recover the Disks of Mishakal from the depths of the temple. The Disks are guarded by Khisanth, an huge and ancient black dragon. Many dangers await before you finally confront Khisanth.
There are two areas to the screen: the action window and the character window. In the character window are pic tures of the eight heroes: Tanis, Goldmoon, Caramon, Raistlin. Sturm, Riverwind, Tasslehoff and Flint. Next to each picture is a bar indicating the char-actor's health (hit points). The rest of the screen shows your surroundings and a picture of the currently selected character (top left, in the character window). Control of the characters is all done via the joystick. You can make them run, jump or duck to the left and right. When there's a suitable exit you can move into or out of the screen loo. If a monster is also on screen then you can either use ranged combat or charge in and hack at them in melee. Ranged combat includes spell casting, bows, spears and other throwable objects. A press of the space bar opens up a large menu window with the following options: character select, magic spells, clerical spells, use, take, give, drop , save and restore. The latter two options are essential in a game of this size. Character select allows you to switch the character that appears on screen, which is useful if one is getting badly injured or you want Goldmoon to resurrect someone. Take lets you pick things up and drop does the reverse. With give you can move objects from one character to another and use allows you to drink potions, read scrolls, wear rings etc. Raistlin can cast the following spells from his Staff of the Magius: burning hands, charm, sleep, magic missile, detect magic, detect invisible and final strike. Goldmoon can similarly cast clerical spells from her Blue Crystal Staff. They are: cure light, wounds, protection from evil, find traps, hold person, spiritual hammer, prayer, cure critical wounds, raise dead, restoration, deflect dragon breath. If Goldmoon dies then Riverwind. Caramon or Sturm can use the Staff, but only cure light wounds, find traps, cure critical wounds and deflect dragon breath can be used. But that's not all: if she does die things begin to go badly wrong for the party, because you have no way of getting dead characters back. The commonest cause of demise in the early stages of the game is falling down pits and consequently losing the body and all its possessions. Without a body it's tough, you can't resurrect a character. Characters can also die when then take damage from spell and melee combat. The wounds can be healed by use of the cure spells unless the character dies, in which case it's raise dead time again. Sound - merely a matter of combat and spell casting effects - is limited, and graphics distinctly lacking in colour, though they make up for it a little in detail. Characters run and jump around very well and the ones in cloaks look very dynamic as they leap over pits. Both monsters and heroes are well animated and easily identifiable. Background graphics are also detailed and objects lying around the temple can be identified with no problems.
First impressions of Heroes are that you've got a game with average graphics und simple sound effects. It takes a few plays before you realise just how much game you've got for your money. A lot of it does look similar, but as you explore the temple you discover more foes and hazards. AD&D artwork has always been of a very high standard and it's good to see that the computer games are getting the same sort of quality artwork on the packaging. Definitely the best game from US Gold this year. Let's hope they do even better with future AD&D projects, and that this sells enough to persuade them to convert them for the CPC. GBH, AA |
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Page créée en 322 millisecondes et consultée 7575 fois L'Amstrad CPC est une machine 8 bits à base d'un Z80 à 4MHz. Le premier de la gamme fut le CPC 464 en 1984, équipé d'un lecteur de cassettes intégré il se plaçait en concurrent du Commodore C64 beaucoup plus compliqué à utiliser et plus cher. Ce fut un réel succès et sorti cette même années le CPC 664 équipé d'un lecteur de disquettes trois pouces intégré. Sa vie fut de courte durée puisqu'en 1985 il fut remplacé par le CPC 6128 qui était plus compact, plus soigné et surtout qui avait 128Ko de RAM au lieu de 64Ko. |