lunes, 25 de julio de 2011

Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale

Nota Frikis Olvidados:

Desde Frikis Olvidados me siento en la necesidad total y absoluta de alertar de lo siguiente: este juego solo tiene cabida aquí porque a) pertenece a la saga D&D y como tal no hay modo de evitar mencionarlo en estos lares y b) PARA PREVENIR A CUALQUIERA QUE CAIGA EN LA TENTACIÓN DE COMPRARLO SIN MÁS.

El juego es de una calidad pésima. No se me ocurre nada por lo que merezca la pena pagar el coste completo del mismo (800 puntos) a menos que se trate de una oferta (de 400 puntos o menos y, aún así, la decepción puede ser monumental).

Los gráficos son PENOSOS. La jugabilidad, en cuanto avanzas un poquito de nada, es un churro. La apariencia que das al personaje cambiando los items, sencillamente, cutre en todos los aspectos. Las fases todas iguales. Cualquier otro juego de D&D, cualquiera, que se os pueda ocurrir es mucho mejor (desde las versiones para recreativas, como los primeros de PC o cualquiera de los aparecidos en consolas, son, con diferencia, infinitamente mejores; de verdad, bien por su sabor auténtico de clásico old school, bien por la historia o por el modo de juego).

Aparte, de verdad, ya no es que se vea fatal y que haga daño a la vista (preferiría que me pegasen los párpados a una partida de Doom durante un par de años antes que volver a tener que jugar a este desastre de videojuego) sino que es un batiburrillo de bugs uno tras otro en el que el personaje se queda bloqueado, el juego palma o la consola por completo se cuelga.

Un horror. Insisto, por curiosidad, si está por 400 MS Points o menos, puedes plantearte comprarlo (más por coleccionismo que otra cosa) pero en sí es una aventura patética, mal hecha y, sobretodo, DESCUIDADA en todos sus aspectos (de la música, si es que se puede llamar así, prefiero ya ni comentar, porque he visto BSO de juegos de móvil infinitamente más elaboradas que este pestiño que acompaña al videojuego).

Supongo que, en resumen, TODOS nos esperábamos más de la vuelta a la palestra de D&D. Bien es verdad que existe D&D online que, aunque incomparable a primos lejanos suyos como el WoW, al menos sí cumplia un mínimo que, a aquellos fans de la franquicia, satisfacía las necesidades mínimas de diversión, pero dar el salto a las consolas con esa birria, es... decepcionante.

[Fuente Wikipedia]

Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale is an action role-playing video game developed by Bedlam Games and published by Atari.[2] The game includes both single and co-operative multiplayer modes and is set in a Forgotten Realms environment.[3]

Contents

Gameplay

Bedlam stated that Daggerdale is a video game that uses real-time tactics combat, questing, character development, exploration and a pick-up-and-play feature. Two modes, campaign and freeplay, have been announced. Single and multiplayer modes also exist for the game, including split-screen multiplayer. While some gameplay elements were borrowed from Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance, developers stated that this was only the linear part of the game and that the gameplay was inspired from Dungeons & Dragons: Heroes.

The game makes use of the four main D&D character classes: clerics, rogues, wizards and fighters, as well as the four main races, dwarves, elves, halflings and humans. Some customization of the characters is provided as a player earns experience in the game, and character progression advances as per a limited set of 4th Edition Dungeons and Dragons rules for both class and race. Further customization is achieved through loot and equipment drops. Character level advancement is currently limited to level 10.[4]

Synopsis

Characters

The game makes use of the four main D&D character classes: clerics, rogues, wizards and fighters, as well as the four main races, dwarves, elves, halflings and humans.

The main antagonist of the game is a worshipper of the god Bane, this Wizard Mage is an agent of the Zhentarim and is known as Rezlus. He is extremely grotesque. He is hell-bent on taking over Daggerdale for his evil god and states it in the beginning of the game and is amassing an army to take over the Dale. Lorin-Aria is the character in the game that summons the main characters, she was a Banite Priestess loyal to Rezlus. Her sister, Nezra, is first revealed as a mystery, but at the very end is revealed to be a Zhent loyal to Cyric. Due to the game taking place in the Dwarven Mines of Tethyamar, there are many Dwarves present. The Zhentarim are also known as the Black Network, a name which they are referred to when hiding their identity.

The Black Network has been divided into two sections: the Banites and the Cyrcists (those loyal to Bane and those loyal to Cyric). The Zhentairm, however, have become extremely weak following the Spellplague and the dividing weakened them further. Rezlus hopes to take over Daggerdale to restore the Zhentarim to their former glory. If Rezlus succeeded, this would have happened because the Zhentarim's control in the Dalelands would have been firm again, their empire would be feared, they would have a strong army and Cyric's influence would be crushed, making Bane the main deity again.

Setting

The game takes place in the Forgotten Realms year of 1420 DR in the fictional Daggerdale, which rests atop the underground ruins of the Dwarven Kingdom of Tethyamar. The Zhentarim have built the Tower of Void in these ruins to take over the Dale and players will have to enter the mines and find the Tower of Void to kill Rezlus and stop the Zhentarim operations. The tower's entrance is underground, but it extends high above Daggerdale. At the end of the game, Daggerdale is destroyed by the dragon Incendius.

Plot

In the Mines of Tethyamar in Daggerdale, in the year 1420 DR, the Zhentarim have constructed the Tower of Void as an attempt to take over the Dale. Lorin-Aria, fearing the power of the Zhentarim, calls on four adventurer's from different regions in the Dalelands. She calls a human fighter, dwarven cleric, elven rogue and a halfling wizard. She informs the player that the Zhentarim are building an army to conquer Daggerdale. Aria then vanishes before the heroes, telling them that because of her ties to the Zhentarim, she will not be able to further aid them. The heroes soon run into trouble, as they find goblins imprisoning a dwarven worker. The heroes save the worker who informs them that Goblins are raiding their camps all throughout the Mines of Tethyamar.

The heroes are attacked by an earth elemental, a creature that kills all of the goblins and tries to kill the four heroes. The heroes enter a portal and arrive in a rebuilt part of the Ruins of Tethyamar called Granstone. The dwarf Garbo Silvertongue arranges for the heroes to meet with the dwarves Master Paxton, Union Leader Esar and Ayer. Eventually they manage to gain Master Paxton's favor through helping the dwarves fight the goblins. While looking for oxenmoor for the dwarves, the heroes find Master Paxton's satchel, containing Dryad Dust, in a goblin camp. The heroes find that the goblins have poisoned the dwarven water supplies with dryad dust. When the heroes return to Granstone, a whole goblin army attacks the Ruins of Tethyamar, however the heroes defeat the goblins. Ayer then gets Master Paxton arrested and opens up the Grand Gates for the heroes which they enter.

Through Ayer's advice, they enter the Tower of Void through its storage area. There they find Garbo Silvertongue talking to Master Paxton. The heroes overhear Garbo state that he and the Goblins are loyal to Bane and the Zhentarim and that they plan to poison the rest of the water supplies of Granstone. Garbo states that the Zhentarim will grant him the rule of the Mines of Tethyamar. When Garbo leaves, the heroes free Master Paxton who runs to Ayer to warn him about Garbo. The heroes attack the Goblin Chieftan to make sure the Goblins do not attack Tethyamar again, killing him and scattering the Goblins of Tethyamar. The heroes then encounter Garbo who they also kill.

The heroes try to enter the Tower of Void but are swiftly defeated by Zhent Black Hands who lock them in prison. The Zhentarim tieflings play gladiator games with the players. They are encountered by Rezlus who believes them to be Cyrcists. Long after Rezlus leaves, the heroes escape. They kill their tiefling guards and venture upwards into the Tower of Void. The heroes then once again fight Zhent Black Hands who nearly kill them. The heroes, however, meet up with many dwarves, prisoners and a mysterious cleric woman named Nezra. These allies help them beat the Zhent Black Hands.

The heroes then make it to the top of the Tower of Void. Rezlus kills the heroes' allies and nearly kills them too. The four heroes then get the upper hand for a short time but are once again defeated when Rezlus calls on his red dragon, Incendius. As the remaining goblins chain the heroes, they manage to escape and kill Rezlus. The dying mage orders Incendius to raze Daggerdale, an order that the dragon complies to. The human fighter, however, jumps on the dragons back as it destroys the dale and stabs it in the head, killing it. They both then plummet to the destroyed dale.

When the dragon crashes to the ground, the fighter is quickly teleported to the Tower of Void, they are not in the mines of Tethyamar, but rather the ruins that surround the part of the tower where it reaches the surface. The teleporter is revealed to be Lorin-Aria, who has also teleported the other three heroes.. Lorin-Aria congratulates the heroes but her back is shanked with a sword and she is killed by Nezra. Nezra reveals herself to have survived Rezlus and to be Lorin-Aria's sister. Nezra tells the heroes that Lorin-Aria was once a Banite Priestess loyal to Rezlus, she tells the four heroes that rule of Daggerdale will go to Cyric's Zhentarim, revealing herself to be a Cyrcist Zhentarim Priestess. She tells the heroes that she has no desire to kill them, but they persist and the Zhent Black Hand army marches into Tethyamar to the Tower of Void and kills them.

Development

Bedlam Games began development of Daggerdale in March 2010 and 60 developers were reportedly working on the game as of January 2011.[5] On January 19th, 2011, Bedlam began operating as a subsidiary of bitHeads, Inc. and continues to operate as a brand-dependent division. bitHeads co-founder, Scott Simpson, has alluded that the company plans to pursue a game model that will allow a gamer to play the same game on both an Xbox 360 and a portable device, such as an iPhone, in order to provide 24-hour access to the game.[6] It is unclear if such a strategy will be implemented for Daggerdale.

Release

Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale was the second Dungeons & Dragons video game to be announced in 2010 and was released in May 2011 on Xbox Live Arcade and Microsoft Windows.[7] Due to the PlayStation Network outage, Atari has stated that Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale might miss its original Playstation Network release date of May 31, 2011.[8] It is the first D&D video game to be released on a console since 2004.

Reception

Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale received generally negative reception, with a 47 score on Metacritic. Joystiq rated the game a 1.5 out of a 5 scale. They stated that "It's not just a bad game, it's a terrible use of Wizards of the Coast's timeless license".[15] GameSpy's Andrew Hayward also gave it a 1.5 "poor" rating out of 5, criticizing its lack of innovativeness, as well its voice-acting, character models and "dialogue-heavy" story.[16] Gametrailers gave it a 4.8 out of 10 saying that Daggerdale is cheapened by dull quests, bland combat, dreary environments, and an overall unpolished feel.[17] GameSpot gave it a 4.5/10 criticizing the distracting screen tearing, pop-in and bugs but enjoyed the core combat.[18] Eurogamer gave it 7/10, calling it solid but also noting its lack of innovation.[19] GameZone gave the game a 4.5 out of 10, stating "The fact that Daggerdale relies heavily on its D&D roots is perhaps its biggest downfall. From the cliché storyline to the uninspired side quests, muddled graphics, and most of all the bland and repetitive combat, Daggerdale is one place that you’ll be reluctant to save, let alone care about."[20]

Add-on content

An Atari Developer posted a statement on the Atari Forums asking the fans as to what they would like to see in additional content that will be released for Dungeons & Dragons Daggerdale. He put up two voting polls, one for additional player characters and one for an increased level cap. The most highly asked for class was the Monk Class and people asked for a level cap up to 20. More monsters, locations and story areas were also asked for the first DLC.[citation needed]

Sequels

The game is the first in a planned trilogy of video games. With each game being released, the player will be able to go up 10 levels higher. [21] At the very end of Daggerdale in the post-credits scene, a picture of a robot holding a sign saying Gamma-Terra was shown. At E3 2011, Atari unveiled Gamma World: Alpha Mutation, set to be in development by Bedlam Games and use the Daggerdale Engine. Alpha Mutation is set to be the spiritual successor to Daggerdale and will likely be released before the sequel to Daggerdale. [22]

References

  1. ^ a b McCroskey, Matthew (2011-05-23). "Atari on Facebook". Atari.
  2. ^ McElroy, Griffin (2010-12-22). "Dungeons and Dragons Daggerdale coming to XBLA, PSN and PC next year". Joystiq. Retrieved 2010-12-22.
  3. ^ Yin-Poole, Wesley (2010-12-22). "Dungeons & Dragons Daggerdale revealed". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2010-12-22.
  4. ^ "GameZome Preview for Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale Hands-On - PC". GameZone.
  5. ^ "Daggerdale: The Future of D&D Games?". EuroGamer.
  6. ^ Vito, Pilieci. "Bitheads, Bedlam Join Forces". Ottawa Citizen.
  7. ^ Bailey, Kat (2010-12-22). "Atari Announces Dungeons & Dragons Daggerdale". 1UP.com. Retrieved 2010-12-22.
  8. ^ http://www.joystiq.com/2011/05/27/atari-daggerdale-to-miss-may-31-psn-launch-network-not-gonna/
  9. ^ "Dagger Dale (PC) reviews at". Metacritic.
  10. ^ "Daggerdale (Xbox 360) reviews at". Metacritic.
  11. ^ http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2011-05-27-download-games-roundup-review?page=2
  12. ^ http://www.gamespot.com/xbox360/rpg/dungeonsdragonsdaggerdale/review.html
  13. ^ http://www.gametrailers.com/gamereview.php?id=14291
  14. ^ McElroy, Griffon (2011-05-25). "Dungeons and Dragons: Daggerdale review: Critical miss". Joystiq. Retrieved 2011-06-17.
  15. ^ Griffin McElroy (2011-05-25). "Dungeons and Dragons: Daggerdale review: Critical miss". Joystiq. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  16. ^ Andrew Hayward (2011-05-25). "Dungeons & Dragons: Daggerdale Review". GameSpy. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  17. ^ "Dungeons and Dragons: Daggerdale review". gametrailers. 2011-05-25. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  18. ^ Carolyn Petit (2011-05-28). "Dungeons and Dragons: Daggerdale review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  19. ^ Kristen Reed (2011-05-27). "Download Games Roundup - Review". Eurogamer. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  20. ^ http://xbox.gamezone.com/reviews/item/dungeons_dragons_daggerdale_review/
  21. ^ Tan, Maurice (january 31, 2011). "D&D: Daggerdale story will span three games". Destructoid. Retrieved 2011-05-16.
  22. ^ "Gamma World Unveiled". Retrieved 28 June 2011.

External links