![]() This can be good or bad for a lot of people. It’s ambient and action sounds and that’s about it. There’s no real music to speak of in-game. If you’re an audiophile this game is half for you. The three-quarter isometric view is in full force and they do use something like the fog of war for enemies and your map you haven’t visited yet.Īt first there’s a nice rousing title theme to get you all interested, but after you get into the game, that’s when the music dies and the ambient and fighting sounds come in. ![]() This doesn’t detract from the game, as much as it sucks you in, giving it this nice fantastic appeal that you can miss out on in the newer RPGs that go so far over the top you’re left wondering what you just saw or killed. ![]() While not as flashy as Baldur’s Gate as I’d mentioned earlier, it is maybe a step back. While visually it’s not a powerhouse, the game is fairly pleasant to look at. While not the most original or most standout RPG story I’ve played, the world and characters are very intriguing and seeing the subtle changes your actions make in the world come across as you play is always welcome. There are lots of little hidden characters throughout the game with some great stories and it seems nearly everyone you interact with has some kind of backstory and really fleshes out the world. The story-telling here is done pretty well, showing the player the strength of Avadon and then showing you people going against it and even where the Pact is at its weakest. After quelling the outbreak you’re put about to making sure that the pact between the five nations is upkept. Your character has been brought in to be one of Redbeard’s Hands, which are basically the peacekepers but with pretty broad abilities to uphold the pact as they see fit. As a player you find out that Avadon is responsible for upholding a pact between rival nations and have pretty sweeping powers as far as keeping the peace goes. ![]() You talk to a few people and are slowly introduced into the world. The game starts you off as a newcomer to Avadon, but something has gone wrong and the prison is run amok and many prisoners that were never supposed to leave have been set loose in the bowels of the Fortress. Not that I’m knocking the newer RPGs, but a bit of nostalgia is good for the soul, and it’s even better when that nostalgia machine feels like something a bit older but plays like something new and fresh and isn’t something you’ve beaten a hundred times before. It has that classic 2D RPG feel to it, like the old floppy disc RPGs like Curse of the Azure Bonds got together with Baldur’s Gate to make something that looks and plays like a throwback to the good ole days of PC RPGs, before the Japanese RPG invaded and everyone had a new console to play them on. So when I’m given an old-school style RPG, or one with a retro feel, I’m very much enjoying remembering back to the “Ëœold’ days. I’d kept up with a few computer based RPGs up until that point and some of them still hold my attention even today. I’d ended up taking a short break from them, dabbling a bit again in high school with some friends and then jumping in feet first in college with a variety of play settings. I’ve actually played them as far back as when I was 9 and my cousin had table-top miniatures in a dungeon escape scenario, but also had them on his computer that loaded from a floppy, yes the big thin ones, not the hard smaller ones that vanished a number of years back. For more info, check out Touch, Tap, Play’s August preview of the game and be sure to give the below trailer a watch.RPGs and I have a rather long and interesting history. While this may come as disappointing news for fans who were hoping to take their Avadon 2 adventures with them on the go, it is still comforting to know that Spiderweb Software is on the home stretch of development.Īvadon 2: The Corruption, the sequel to the hit 2011 RPG Avadon: The Black Fortress, was first unveiled back in February and comes with a host of new features including an entirely new playable character class (the Tinkermage). Spiderweb Software has officially announced that the Windows PC and Mac version of Avadon 2 will be available through both Steam and its own website on October 30 while the iOS version still needs a bit more work and should be available sometime in early 2014 (though no specific date could be confirmed). While PC and Mac players will be enjoying the game as early as later this month, sadly it seems iOS players still have a bit of a wait on their hands. Indie developer Spiderweb Software has finally confirmed some dates for the release of their upcoming isometric RPG Avadon 2: The Corruption.
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