Chronicles of the Sword

This article is about an adventure game. For the unrelated minigame, see Soulcalibur III.
Chronicles of the Sword

North American cover of the PC version
Developer(s) Synthetic Dimensions
Publisher(s) Psygnosis
Producer(s) Craig Foster
Bill Allen (Psygnosis)
Designer(s) Kevin Bulmer
Programmer(s) John Wildsmith
Artist(s) Nigel Bunegar
Matthew Stott
Ben Clark
Writer(s) Kate Copestake
Dave Minto
Composer(s) Ben Daglish
Platform(s) DOS, PlayStation
Release date(s)

Windows

PlayStation

Genre(s) Adventure game
Mode(s) Single-player

Chronicles of the Sword is an adventure game developed by Synthetic Dimensions and released by Psygnosis in 1996 for the PC DOS and Sony PlayStation platforms. The game, originally titled as King Arthur: The Quest of The Fair Unknown, is based on Arthurian legends and uses a point-and-click interface. Chronicles of the Sword tells the story of the young knight Gawain on a quest to save Camelot from the scheming witch queen Morgana. It has received largely negative reviews.

Gameplay

Chronicles of the Sword is a third-person, mouse-based point-and-click graphic adventure game, featuring sprite based characters in 3D pre-rendered environments with switching viewpoints (described as similar to Alone in the Dark[4]). The game's user interface uses a context-sensitive cursor for movement and actions, and a classic adventure conversation system based on choosing dialogue options. It also includes a few action game elements in the form of simple combat sequences that are interactive only on the Regular difficulty level and are automated (shown as cutscenes) on the Easy setting.[5]

Plot

Setting

The game's sword and sorcery type story is set in Albion, Sub-Roman Britain, circa 420 A.D. The player assumes the role of Gawain, a young apprentice knight about to be ordained by King Arthur who is struggling to uphold virtues of his peaceful and prosperous kingdom. Gawain's is ordered by Merlin to seek out and vanquish Queen Morgana, Arthur's half-sister and evil sorceress, before she can destroy Arthur and seize the throne of Albion.

Story

The game begins with Morgana cruelly murdering the court priest of King Arthur's castle of Camelot, located just as Gawain was about to be given his knighthood. She plots to reveal Sir Lancelot Du Lac and Lady Guinevere's affair to the world, which would help her overthrow Arthur and take over. The court wizard Merlin has discovered her neferious plans, and the unknowing Gawain is used by Merlin to force Morgana into appearing before the king. Morgana is tried for treason and sentenced to be banished from the kingdom, but she then openly declares war on him and uses her supernatural powers to kill the guards and vanish. After Morgana's later attempts to assassinate Arthur is thwarted by Merlin, the king finally decides she needs to be stopped once and for all, and orders her to be found and put to death. Merlin then handpicks Gawain to be instrument of Morgana's destruction.

The young knight ventures to ferret out various objects for the creation of a special ring that would grant him an immunity from Morgana's black magic, who knows of his mission and will try to eliminate him. With the ring on, Gawain finally goes off on the journey to rid the world of Morgana, who has hidden in a forbidding fortress on the island of Lyonesse. On the way there, Morgana shows up to kill Gawain's companion, her former servant named Helie. Once in Morgana's castle, Gawain gets captured and is sentenced to death, but manages to escape after defeating a giant snake. He then works to overcome Morgana and slay her vampire bodyguard Ragnar. Ultimately, Gawain is unable to end Morgana's life, but the witch's own Faerie minions help him imprison her inside Lyonesse. She swears vengeance while he returns to Camelot as a hero to join the Order of the Round Table.[6]

Characters

Development

The game has been originally being developed by Synthetic Dimensions (then functioning under the name of DCD, or Dimension Creative Design) as King Arthur: The Quest of The Fair Unknown.[4] The development team boasted of having spent a full year researching for a preparatory work into the production. According to Synthetic Dimensions, they have discovered "that there are few known facts, but plenty of mismatched half-truths, so the game sets out to detail a hitherto unheard part of the story."[7] In a mid-1994 version of the game, as shown to the Edge magazine, the player character was the titular Fair Unknown (Gingalain), sent to a Welsh castle to rescue a queen. Upon reaching the castle, the player had to battle various enemies, including a giant serpent, a pair of mages, and a few undead skeletons (sword fights against an enormous snake and the skeletons are actually featured in the final version, towards the end of the game in Morgana's castle). This initial mission completed, the player would then return to Camelot, "where the real meat of the game begins" (Chronicles of the Sword begins already in Camelot), and the game would also feature Merlin and Morgana.[4]

The version publicly shown at the ECTS '95 was titled Chronicles of the Sword.[8] The game supposedly uses professional actors for voice acting,[9] but their names were not publicly disclosed. It was created using PCs and Amiga computers and Imagine and 3D Studio Max rendering programs (the graphics were first created using the palette of 16.7 million colors, before being downscaled down to only 256 colors[10]), as well as "lots" of other techniques, "including full-motion video, stop-motion animation, model making, make-up, rendering, pain, and hand animating."[4]

Release

Chronicles of the Sword was supposed to be released already in November or December 1994, only for the PC Windows platform and on just one CD-ROM.[4] The final game is contained on two discs and was released on February 23, 1996 in North America and on May 31, 1996 in Europe. It was also the second Psygnosis-published game that was based on Arthurian themes, the first being Leander (The Legend of Galahad). It was also re-released in 1998.[11]

Chronicles of the Sword was ported for the PlayStation because of the ownership of Psygnosis by Sony, and released in June 1996 in Europe and in November 1996 in North America. To promote the game, Sony run win-a-PlayStation contests in some magazines including Hobby Consolas.[12]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings41% (PC)[13]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[14]
Game Informer2/10[15]
GameSpot4.2/10[1]
PC Gamer (UK)65%[16]
PC Zone68% (1996)[11]
56% (1998)[17]
Computer Games Magazine1/5[18]
Computer Player6/10[19]
Entertainment WeeklyD[20]
Just AdventureC[21]
NowGamer4.3/10[22]
PC GamesC+[23]

Chronicles of the Sword was met with generally poor critical reception. As of 2014, the PC version holds the averaged GameRankings score of only 41%, based on five reviews.[13] Game Informer, whose review stated that "point and click adventures don't get much worse than this [...] two disc menace,"[15] even gave the PlayStation version an award for the worst video game of 1997.[24] According to Michael L. House of allgame, Chronicles of the Sword is so "frustrating, boring, sloppy and horrible" it "deserves an award for the 'Worst Adventure Game' in the genre to date."[14]

Ron Dulin of GameSpot opined "Chronicles of the Sword does have some nice elements, most notably the richly detailed background art and the excellent musical score. But the positive features only manage to distract you from the fact that the game is confusing, frustrating and—worst of all—excruciatingly dull."[1] Similarly, GamePro praised the PlayStation version's "stunning"[9] graphics and especially its audio, as featuring "great vocal talents", but concluded: "This sword is dull."[25] PC Zone called it a game of "a couple of nice puzzles and some lovely graphics - but little else," as the story "is dull, consisting of some medieval stereotypes presented in a fancily-rendered environment."[11] T. Liam McDonald of PC Gamer wrote: "Synthetic Dimensions has created some of the best-looking visuals yet seen in a traditional adventure game, but they forget to put a meaningful story and game into them. Visually and aurally, it’s top-notch, but it doesn’t measure up where it counts: content."[16]

Some reviews lambasted even the game's visuals. Bob Strauss wrote in a 1996 review in Entertainment Weekly that Gawain "moves with all the speed and vitality of a knight in a 500-pound suit of armor" and the "jerky computer-animated characters might have looked impressive a decade ago."[20] According to Game Informer, "not only are the graphics completely lame, but the character interface is slow and boring."[15]

Several reviews especially criticised the "pixel hunting" aspect of the gameplay (forcing the player to examine all of the screen while looking for something to interact with).[1][15][16][21] In Computer Gaming World, Scorpia called it "a mediocre product at best" and added that "anyone waning a taste of the real thing is better off reading Le Mort d'Arthur.[26] NowGamer gave the PlayStation version the final verdict of "dull and painfully S-L-O-W."[22]

Internationally, the game's reception was less negative, but its review scores were still mostly average, including 3/5 in Génération4 in France,[27] 50% from Gambler, 60% from Secret Service and 65% from Świat Gier Komputerowych in Poland,[28][29][30] and three out of five stars in PC Player and 61% from Videogames in Germany.[31][32] Some international reviews were more positive, like in the cases of Germany's PC Games, Spain's PCmania, and Serbia's Svet Kompjutera, who gave it unusually good ratings of 74%, 88%, and 79%, respectively.[33][34][35]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Ron Dulin, Chronicles of the Sword for PC. GameSpot, June 13, 1996.
  2. Chronicles of the Sword for PlayStation, GameRankings.
  3. Chronicles of the Sword - PlayStation, IGN UK.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Prescreen: Dimension Creative Design". Edge UK Edition 11 (August 1994), pages 30-31.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Chronicles of the Sword PC game manual.
  6. Bamse, Chronicles of the Sword, część 2. Secret Service issue 38 (September 1996), pages 48-49.
  7. Chronicles of the Sword. Computer & Video Games 172 (March 1996), pages 90-91.
  8. Messe. PowerPlay (December 1995).
  9. 1 2 Chronicles of the Sword: Psygnosis, Swords, and Sorcery. GamePro issue 99 (December 1996).
  10. Petra Maueroder, Ritterschlag. PC Games (April 1996), pages 36-37.
  11. 1 2 3 PC Review: Chronicles Of The Sword. ComputerAndVideoGames.com, 13 August 2001.
  12. Concurso. Hobby Consolas issue 58.
  13. 1 2 Chronicles of the Sword for PC, GameRankings.
  14. 1 2 Michael L. House, Chronicles of the Sword - Review. Allgame.
  15. 1 2 3 4 March 1997 Issue, www.GameInformer.com.
  16. 1 2 3 T. Liam McDonald, Chronicles of the Sword. PC Gamer UK, September 1996.
  17. Richie Shoemaker, "Budget Zone". PC Zone 62 (April 1998), page 109.
  18. Cindy Yans, Computer Games Strategy Plus, issue 70 (September 1996), page 102.
  19. Bernard Dy, Computer Player, volume 3 issue 4 (September 1996), page 66.
  20. 1 2 Bob Strauss, Chronicles of the Sword, EW.com June 21, 1996.
  21. 1 2 Scorpia, Chronicles of the Sword Review. Just Adventure +.
  22. 1 2 Chronicles of the Sword, NowGamer.
  23. Peter Olafson, PC Games, volume 3 issue 8 (August 1996), page 70.
  24. Game Informer 58 (February 1998).
  25. Art Angel, Chronicles of the Sword. GamePro issue 102 (March 1997), page 97.
  26. Scorpia, "Oil Those Weapons". Computer Gaming World issue 145, pages 111-112.
  27. Génération4 issue 88 (May 1995), pages 96-99.
  28. Frogger, Chronicles of the Sword. Gambler (December 1996), pages 94-95.
  29. Świat Gier Komputerowych (October 1996).
  30. Bamse, Chronicles of the Sword. Secret Service issue 37 (July–August 1996), page 37.
  31. Monika Stoschek, Chronicles of the Sword. PC Player (June 1996).
  32. Videogames (January 1997).
  33. Petra Maueroder, Knight-Club. PC Games (May 1996), pages 136-137.
  34. Oscar Santos, Chronicles of the Sword: Lejenda Arturica. PCmania issue 43, pages 134-135.
  35. Slobodan Macedonić, Chronicles of the Sword. Svet Kompjutera issue 90 (December 1996).

External links

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