Avadon: The Black Fortress Review

GameSpot apparently decided to catch up with Jeff Vogel’s latest production, Avadon: The Black Fortress, and offers a review for the indie role-playing game. The score is a solid 7.0/10, and, while the writer calls the game “ugly” and laments the lack of quest tracking on the minimap among other things, he also praises the quests’ inventiveness and the writing. Here’s a sampling:

Quests mix inventive tasks like playing PR man to an irritable dragon with typical go-fetch and locate-missing-people busywork. There is a lot of combat during these assignments, although you’re never overwhelmed. Battles are not so numerous that you feel numbed by monotony. They actually fly past pretty quickly, with characters and foes moving as though they’re under the influence of a haste spell augmented with liberal shots of Red Bull. Fighting is handled from a tactical perspective, in a way that hasn’t changed much since the aforementioned Gold Box games of two decades ago. Whenever you spot a foe, the real-time exploration mode switches to a turn-based perspective, and grids pop up on the screen to show you how and where characters can move. It’s an easy-to-learn and intuitive system for anyone with a background in RPGs. The main drawback is a lack of monster variety. There are a fair number of creeps in the game, drawn from fantasy archetypes such as giant spiders, lizards, wizards, orcs, and the like, but they mainly attack in straightforward melee styles. You don’t need to get too fancy with combat strategies, save in some of the boss battles, which can be brutal on the regular difficulty and above. The visuals aren’t detailed enough to make monsters distinctive, either, so you’re often facing off against blurry groupings of pixels that need to be identified by the text blurbs beneath them.

(…)

If you crave up-to-the-minute 3D visuals and bombastic sound, Avadon: The Black Fortress is not for you. But if you want to immerse yourself in a fantasy adventure and don’t mind letting your imagination take over where the graphics end, this RPG can be involving and satisfying. You might get the feeling that you’ve played this game before, but in this case, that is sort of the point, and one of the big positives to this retro treat.

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