Everything else is periphery, and rarely is there any value in exploring every last tile. Hidden in the deepest, darkest bowels of these monster-filled lairs is some artefact of great importance. The Bard's Tale is very traditional when it comes to dungeons. However, becoming strong enough to topple the Gods themselves doesn't mean much, if you can't find your way out of a maze. Then there's the high-level Monk, who can slay a dragon with one punch. An entire legion of berserkers can't even lay a scratch on her. Picture a Paladin decked out in the mightiest armour. Of course, meek spell-casters need big strong warriors to protect them. Given enough time, he'll become a powerful Wizard, able to summon demons from another dimension. At first, this poor sod's fireball couldn't singe an orc's nose hairs. Would you believe that in less than 15 hours, these nobodies would go on to conquer the depths of the city, climb Mangar's dread tower, and then smash his evil schemes like a ripe tomato? It's hard to imagine, but definitely not impossible.įor this critic, the appeal of the genre has always been building people up from nothing. Sure enough, they're still flat broke and feeling not the least bit stronger. After dragging their fallen friends to the temple to be revived, they divvy up their earnings from the ordeal. Within seconds, a single encounter with a few lowly fiends has almost completely broken them. Upon hitting the streets of Skara Brae, they quickly discover that they should've never left the tavern. Dressed in rags and reeking of cheap ale, they pool their life savings just to buy a few swords. Much like any other dungeon-crawler, the heroes start off as pitiful losers.
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