The Legend of Kyrandia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Legend of Kyrandia
Developer(s) Westwood Studios
Publisher(s) Westwood Studios
Release date(s) 1992, 1993, 1994
Genre(s) Adventure game
Mode(s) Single player
Platform(s) MS-DOS, Amiga, FM Towns, Apple Macintosh

The Legend of Kyrandia is a fantasy point and click adventure game trilogy with comedy elements, created by Westwood Studios, and released for DOS, Amiga, FM Towns and Apple Macintosh.

The games of the trilogy are named as follows:

  1. The Legend of Kyrandia, Book One: Fables and Fiends (released on floppy disk and CD-ROM, came on nine disks for the Amiga version)
  2. The Legend of Kyrandia, Book Two: The Hand of Fate (released on floppy disk and CD-ROM)
  3. The Legend of Kyrandia, Book 3: Malcolm's Revenge (released on CD-ROM only)

Each installment of the series uses the perspective of a different character. In the first game, the player controls a young hero named Brandon. In the second, the player controls a royal female mystic named Zanthia. In the third and final game, the player controls Malcolm, the evil court jester who was previously the main antagonist.

Contents

[edit] Gameplay

The Legend of Kyrandia became known for its extremely simple interface, a feature present in all three games in the series. Though vaguely reminiscent of Sierra's point-and-click adventure games of the period, the primary detail that distinguished Westwood's trilogy from Sierra's games was the use of a single "use" action, as opposed to Sierra's multi-action interface. Opinions vary on whether this added to the games' atmosphere or dealt them damage.

All three games are characterized by a quite innovative inventory; while most Sierra games had an icon which was used to access a separate inventory window, that in Fables and Fiends and Hand of Fate could be seen at all times at the bottom of the screen. In Malcolm's Revenge, however, the player has to move the cursor to the bottom of the screen in order to access the inventory and options menu.

The puzzles in the series are largely based on experimenting with inventory items, combining them or depositing them in the correct place. As the series progressed, however, so did its puzzles, which steadily increased in difficulty. In fact, the final part of the series was occasionally criticized for the complicated and confusing maze found at one point in the game; though a maze was indeed present already in Book One, many players agreed that the one in Malcolm's Revenge lacked logic.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] Book One: Fables and Fiends

In the fantasy kingdom of Kyrandia, King William and his wife have been murdered by the evil court jester Malcolm, a madman who possesses vast magical powers. Brandon, the prince, has been hidden in the forest by Kallak, a counselor of the King, who raises him as his grandson. Malcolm has fun destroying the forest of the country, and meets Kallak, turning him into stone. Brandon, oblivious of his past, soon discovers the truth about his origins. He finds out that Malcolm has stolen the Kyragem, a mystic stone that contains the kingdom's energy. Brandon has to recover the Kyragem and defeat Malcolm.

[edit] Book Two: The Hand of Fate

Years later, Zanthia, a young female alchemist and wizard encountered in the first game, discovers that the kingdom of Kyrandia is in great danger, disappearing piece by piece. The Mystics hold a meeting, and The Hand (a giant glove serving as Marko's assistant) formulates a plan, which requires a magic anchor stone from the center of the world. He chooses Zanthia to be the one who shall recover the stone. As it turns out, however, the quest for the anchor stone is a wild goose chase, used by The Hand to distract Zanthia and the other Mystics while it enacts its evil deeds. The Hand, supposedly a fragment of a long-deceased gigantic evil sorcerer, is the game's true villain, and Zanthia must defeat him in the end.

[edit] Book 3: Malcolm's Revenge

After Malcolm's defeat against Brandon in the first game, Malcolm had been turned into a statue, but after having been struck by lightning, he was liberated from the spell. Malcolm then decides to take his revenge upon Brandon and Kallak, helped by his evil conscience, Gunther. Even though he lost his powerful magic, Malcolm decides to use his malicious wit and cunning to go through with his revenge. He eventually proves his innocence of the murder of Brandon's parents.

[edit] Characters

  • Brandon: The protagonist of the first game in the series. A humble young woodsman in the forest of Kyrandia, Brandon is in fact the Prince of Kyrandia and heir to the throne. When he was just a baby, his parents were murdered, and soon afterward Kallak fled to the forest with him and raised him as his grandson. When Malcolm attacks Kyrandia and turns Kallak into stone, Brandon sets out to defeat the evil jester. In the tradition of adventure game heroes like Roger Wilco and Guybrush Threepwood, Brandon is depicted as well meaning, but not particularly bright. By the third game in the series, Brandon has inherited the throne and become King of Kyrandia, but his counselor Kallak holds the real power due to Brandon's somewhat dim-witted nature.
  • Zanthia: The protagonist of the second game in the series. Zanthia is a member of the Counsel of Mystics and a powerful magic-user, although she is highly dependent on the use of reagents in order to cast spells. Perhaps the sanest of Kyrandia's inhabitants, Zanthia's personality is witty, confident, and level-headed.
  • Malcolm: The main antagonist of the series, and the protagonist of the third and final game. Malcolm is a mean-spirited, sarcastic, and slightly deranged jester who commands incredibly powerful magic. He is also the brother of the late King of Kyrandia, and widely believed to be the murderer of the royal family (although this is revealed to be untrue at the very end of the last game). At the end of the first game, Malcolm is defeated by Brandon, who reflects his own magic back at him and turns him into stone. In the third game, Malcolm is freed by a bolt of lightning, but loses his magical powers, forcing him to rely on his wits to survive, get his revenge, and ultimately clear his name.
Spoilers end here.

[edit] Engine recreation

The Legend of Kyrandia 1 is fully compatible with ScummVM 0.9.0.

[edit] Trivia

  • Originally, The Legend of Kyrandia: Fables & Fiends was not released as the first book/part of a planned trilogy of games. It was only after the release of Book Two and Book Three that the subtitle Book One was added by Westwood Studios in subsequent re-releases of the first game to denote the origin of the series.[1]
  • In the original release of Book 3: Malcolm's Revenge, the numerical form of the number 3 is used in the title, whereas in the original release of Book Two: The Hand of Fate, the spelled-out form of number 2 is used in the title.
  • In The first Lands of Lore game, Zanthia makes an unspoken cameo in one of the earliest story sequences in the game. Both games are developed by Westwood Studios.
  • In the second Lands of Lore game, entitled Guardians of Destiny, a brief reference is made to the Kyragem, while Book Two has an Easter egg where letters written by Scotia (the villainess of Lands of Lore 1).
  • The appearance of the Kyragem and Zanthia in the Lands of Lore games hint at the possibility that both Westwood Studios fantasy games take place in the same world.
  • There are different versions of the original Legend of Kyrandia. One version has slightly different dialogue--in some areas, there is swearing and some light adult humour. For example, one can click on the chest of the statue of Zanthia and Brandon will go "I've always wanted to do that!"
  • The director of the FMV scenes in Legend of Kyrandia was Joseph D. Kucan, better known as Kane in another of Westwood Studios creations, the Command and Conquer series. This was his first directing role at Westwood.

[edit] References

  1.  Adventure Classic Gaming (1997). The Legend of Kyrandia, Book One: Fables & Fiends Review.

[edit] External links