Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Heroes of the Lance | |
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Box art of the Nintendo Entertainment System version |
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Developer(s) | U.S. Gold |
Publisher(s) | Strategic Simulations, Inc., U.S. Gold Pony Canyon (NES/Famicom) |
Platform(s) | Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, MSX, NES, Sega Master System, ZX Spectrum |
Release date(s) | 1988 Nintendo/Famciom
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Genre(s) | Role-playing game |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Media/distribution | Cassette, Floppy disk, Cartridge |
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Heroes of the Lance is a video game released in 1988 for various home computer systems and consoles. The game is based on the first Dragonlance campaign module for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, Dragons of Despair, and the first Dragonlance novel Dragons of Autumn Twilight. It focuses on the journey of eight heroes through the ruined city of Xak Tsaroth, where they must face the ancient dragon Khisanth and retrieve the relic, Disks of Mishakal.
Contents |
The eight heroes that make up the party are:
Heroes of the Lance is a side-scrolling action game.[1] Eight heroes from the Dragonlance novels series must be assembled for the quest, and only one is visible on the screen at a time; when one on-screen hero dies, the next in line appears.[1]
While Heroes of the Lance is a faithful representation of the books it is based on, it was a departure from the usual role-playing video game style of most Dungeons & Dragons games, and many players lamented its difficult gameplay interface which consists of using one character at a time in horizontally-scrolling fighting. Each character has different types of attacks and spells making them more suited to fighting different enemies but they merely act as "lives" for the player as in more traditional fighting games, removing one of the main strategies of role-playing games from the game.
Heroes of the Lance was not part of the Gold Box series; the nickname for these other D&D titles were "Silver Box" games.[1]
Two video games continued the storyline after this game, Dragons of Flame and Shadow Sorcerer.
Reception | |
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Review scores | |
Publication | Score |
G.M. | n/a[2] |
After reviewing a pre-production copy of Heroes of the Lance, G.M. said that "it would undoubtedly go straight to the top of the computer games charts and stay there for several months. Its THAT good."[2] They specifically praised its graphics and audio, calling the latter "excellent".[2] Computer Gaming World gave the game a similarly positive review.[3]
While the DOS version was the one reviewed in the magazines mentioned above, the NES version is often cited as one of the poorer titles available for the console. Specifically, past Electronic Gaming Monthly columnist, Seanbaby, listed it as the 2nd worst NES game, and as the 11th worst video game.
Levi Buchanan, in a classic Dungeons & Dragons videogame retrospective for IGN, wrote that "If you don't plan well, you can lose a lot of heroes in a very short period of time. This offered a slight strategy angle, but D&D fans largely preferred the Pool of Radiance straight RPG approach."[1]
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