Fable (video game)

This article is about the 2004 game. For the 1996 game, see Fable (1996 video game). For the series, see Fable (video game series).
Fable

Cover art
Developer(s) Big Blue Box Studios
Lionhead Studios (Lost Chapters/Anniversary)
Robosoft Technologies (Mac OS X)
Publisher(s) Microsoft Game Studios
Feral Interactive (Mac OS X)
Designer(s) Peter Molyneux
Composer(s) Danny Elfman, Russell Shaw
Series Fable
Engine GameBryo
Unreal Engine 3 (Anniversary)
Platform(s) Xbox
Xbox 360
Microsoft Windows
Mac OS X
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Action role-playing
Mode(s) Single player

Fable is an action role-playing open world video game, the first in the Fable series. It was developed for Xbox, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows platforms, by Big Blue Box Studios, a satellite developer of Lionhead Studios, and was published by Microsoft Game Studios. The game shipped for Xbox on 14 September 2004. An extended version of the game, Fable: The Lost Chapters, was released for Xbox and Microsoft Windows in September 2005; Feral Interactive ported the game to the Mac platform on 31 March 2008 and Robosoft Technologies created the platform after a delay of more than two years due to licensing issues.

Originally developed under the name Project Ego, Fable's development involved more than 150 people. The game's music was composed by Russell Shaw, with the opening title theme written by Oscar-nominated composer Danny Elfman. The game's release was widely anticipated, due in part to Lionhead creator Peter Molyneux's enthusiastic hype of the game.

Fable was well received by critics for the quality of its gameplay and execution, though the failure to include many promised features was noted. Fable was the top-selling game of September 2004 and sold more than two million units by 2007. The game was followed by two sequels, Fable II in 2008, and Fable III in 2010. A high-definition remake of the game, entitled Fable Anniversary, which includes The Lost Chapters was released in February 2014 for the Xbox 360.[2]

Gameplay

Screenshot of Fable for the PC, showing the Hero fighting a bandit. In the top left of the screen are health and will meters, and in the top right is a map. Available spells are displayed on the bottom edge of the screen.

Fable is a role-playing video game where players control their character from a third person perspective. The main character, known as The Hero of Oakvale, can interact with people and objects as well as battle foes. The goal of Fable is to complete missions called quests that advance the game's plot, but Fable also features optional quests and allows players to pursue actions not directly tied to story completion.[3]

Most quests are acquired at a central location, known as the Heroes' Guild; required quests are marked with a gold symbol and advance the game's story, while optional quests are coloured silver and can be completed in any order. Some quests allow players to pick sides and aid either evil characters, such as bandits, or good characters, such as traders and guardsmen. Players can also boast after accepting a quest, wagering some of the quest's reward gold in exchange for a larger return if the player accomplishes their bet, such as sustaining no damage or undertaking the quest naked. Each quest's completion gives players gold, which can be used to buy weapons and items, and renown, which affects the way townspeople react to the Hero. Heroes also earn trophies of their victories, which can be displayed to large groups of townspeople to earn more renown.

In addition to fighting with melee weapons (such as swords and maces) and ranged weapons (longbows and crossbows), Heroes can learn and use spells to empower their abilities, ward off damage, or harm foes. As players complete quests or defeat enemies, they gain general experience as well as experience based on whether they used melee attacks, ranged weapons, or magic; these bestow Strength, Skill, and Will experience, respectively. Experience can be spent at a platform in the Heroes Guild to level up attributes.[4] General experience can be used to modify all groups of attributes. Strength experience can only be used to modify three attributes: Physique, Health, and Toughness. The same applies to Skill which can only modify Speed, Accuracy, and Guile. Will can be used to upgrade your total magic power or to learn and upgrade spells which are broken into three groups, Attack Spells, Surround Spells, and Physical Spells. The experience the main character gains can be multiplied during combat through the combat multiplier. As the character successfully hits an enemy, his combat multiplier increases. If the character is hit by the enemy, the combat multiplier drops down to the next multiple of five, or zero if below five.

Fable's game world is dotted with towns where recreational activities not related to combat can be undertaken. Enterprising Heroes can buy trade items such as beer kegs or grain sacks and sell them at other towns for profit. Towns are also prime locations to buy clothing, weapons, or other items. Many towns have houses for sale, which the Hero can buy, furnish, or lease to tenants for gold. Heroes may woo and marry men or women in each town.

Alignment

Positively and negatively-aligned Heroes.

In Fable, a player's Hero has a measure of good or evil alignment based on the Hero's actions. Good deeds award good points, which produce a positive alignment, while committing evil acts adds evil points, producing a negative alignment. Killing monsters or saving villagers are acts of good, whereas killing innocents, breaking laws, or abusing a spouse will accumulate evil points. Consuming certain foodstuffs can also affect the Hero's alignment; for example, eating tofu will earn the hero positive points, while eating crunchy chicks (because crunchy chicks are assumed to be still alive) will earn evil points. The player may also pray at the temples of Avo and Skorm. Donations to the Temple of Avo will result in good points, while "gifts" to the Chapel of Skorm will result in evil points. The alignment affects not only the responses of non-player characters around the Hero, but also the appearance of the Hero himself. A Hero with a strongly positive alignment will feature a halo and a shaft of sparkling light above his head, butterflies fluttering around him and lighter features. An evil Hero emits a red haze from around his legs, draws flies, has glowing red eyes and grows horns.

Other actions besides alignment affect the Hero. Eating too much causes the character to gain weight, while drinking excessive amounts of beer causes Heroes to become sick and vomit. Clothing, which provides defence in combat situations, also changes the Hero's attractiveness or scariness as well as alignment in some cases, and townspeople's reactions to the Hero accordingly. Bright clothing makes the character look more noble to the townspeople, and thus cause them to praise and respect him. Dark clothing causes the character to seem evil or threatening to townspeople and cause them to fear him. Heroes can be further customized via hairstyles, facial hair, and tattoos. The Hero's attributes also affect appearance; high levels of Strength increase brawn, high levels of skill increase height, and high level spells create glowing arcane patterns on the Hero's body.[5]

Synopsis

Setting

Fable takes place in Albion, a patchwork of city-states with lawless stretches of plains and forest between them. Once called the Old Kingdom, the entire land was once led by an ancient royal bloodline, bestowed with the title of Archon. The first Archon's rule was peaceful and prosperous, but the source of his power was an ancient and powerful sword (the Sword of Aeons) that gradually began to corrupt him and, eventually, his entire kingdom. By the time the events of the game take place, the world has slowly deteriorated from the days of the Old Kingdom. One of the most prominent institutions of Albion is the Heroes' Guild. The Guild is a centre of learning and training for Heroes, renowned mercenaries that are active in all parts of Albion. Heroes are hired as thieves, soldiers, guards, rescuers, and protectors; the Guild makes no moral judgement on the actions of its Heroes.[4]

Plot

On his sister's birthday, a young boy's village of Oakvale is raided by bandits; killing the boy's entire family. An old Hero, Maze, rescues the boy, seeing great potential in him; Maze trains the boy to become a Hero at the Heroes' Guild. Years pass; after honing his skills, Maze informs the Hero of a blind seeress living among a bandit camp near Oakvale, and advises the Hero to infiltrate the bandit camp. To the Hero's surprise, the blind seeress is actually his older sister Theresa who was taken in by Twinblade, a former Hero and the present Bandit King. After a showdown with Twinblade, the Hero is given the choice of killing or sparing the bandit.

Later on in the Hero's life, after he has gained more recognition among the people of Albion, he is invited to fight in the Arena, where he meets the legendary Hero named Jack of Blades, who runs the arena battles. As a final challenge, Jack pits the Hero against his rival, which was also once his childhood friend/room-mate back in the Guild - Whisper; when the Hero defeats her he may kill or spare her.

The Hero learns that Jack of Blades himself destroyed Oakvale during the Hero's childhood; aided by Theresa, the Hero discovers his mother alive in Bargate Prison. The Hero is captured in the rescue attempt and spends a year or more in the prison before finally escaping. Maze is revealed to be a traitor and working with Jack. Maze kidnaps Theresa. After defeating Maze, the Hero is led into a final confrontation with Jack where his mother is killed. Jack reveals that The Sword of Aeons can only be wielded if it receives the blood of Archon. The Sword of Aeons is said to be a very powerful sword of destruction. Upon the death of their mother, the Hero and Theresa are the only two remaining descendants of Archon, and if Jack destroys them both the sword will be even more powerful. After defeating Jack, the Hero must choose whether to keep the Sword of Aeons by killing his sister, or cast it away forever into a portal created by Jack of Blades' death.

Depending on the Hero's alignment and the player's choice of using or destroying the sword, there are a total of four different endings. Once the ending credits roll, players can resume their games.[6]

In The Lost Chapters special edition, the story continues. After the defeat of Jack, the Hero must find passage to the Northern Wastes to aid a legendary hero named Scythe in stopping an unknown great evil from returning. Should the hero have discarded the Sword of Aeons he will have the opportunity to gain the sword "Avo's Tear", a sword of similar design and equal power but that holds a light alignment rather than dark. Avo is said to be a god that represents the light side alignment. After a series of quests revolving around this new evil, it is learned that Jack of Blades has returned. He must then defeat Jack of Blades a second time, Jack having returned from the dead in the form of a dragon. Upon the death of Jack, the hero then uses Jack's mask to capture Jack's soul, with Scythe telling him that the battle is not over and that he must destroy the mask. The hero then has the final choice of putting on the mask - being consumed by Jack in the process - or destroying it, along with Jack, forever.

Development

Peter Molyneux enthusiastically promoted Fable.

Fable was the first game developed by Big Blue Box, a satellite studio of Peter Molyneux's Lionhead. Dene and Simon Carter, Big Blue Box's founders, stated that their first project would have to meet several criteria in order to be accepted by game publishers, but that they weren't interested in producing a generic title.[7] To offset the costs of running a fledgling studio, Molyneux proposed Lionhead 'satellites', where Big Blue Box would receive the technology and support of Lionhead so that Big Blue Box could focus on making the game.[7] After some difficulty in finding a willing publisher, Big Blue Box was offered a contract by Microsoft. According to the Carters, they wanted to create a role-playing game like no other:

The world would be a breathtakingly beautiful place filled with waterfalls, mountains, dense forests, populated with compelling and convincing characters with real personality, people who actually reacted to what you did. We wanted to give the player control of a hero who would adapt to the way they played, who would age, become scarred in battle, who could get tattoos, wear dreadlocks and a dress if the player was so inclined. We wanted each and every person who played our game to have a unique experience, to have their own stories to tell. And we called it Thingy.[7]

Early in Fable's development, the game was called Project Ego.[8]

The game took roughly four years to create, with a team of around 70 developers working on it.[9] The main ideas that constituted the entire development of Fable were that the hero visually reflects his experience and that the world reacts in a manner appropriate to the player's actions.[10]

Peter Molyneux aggressively promoted Fable, at one point stating that "It's gonna be the best game ever."[11]

Fable previews noted that the somewhat absurd humor and atmosphere of the game, which GamePro called "Terry Pratchett or Piers Anthony fantasy" was far different from what was seen on contemporary RPGs.[12]

With the exception of the title theme, Fable's music was composed by Russell Shaw, who had previously worked on Molyneux games such as Magic Carpet and Black & White. The job for composing Fable's theme music was given to Danny Elfman.[13] Elfman noted in an interview that Hollywood composers did not typically cross over to video game work, in part because many game developers wanted a synthesized score that sounds like an orchestra, instead of the real thing.[14] At Elfman's insistence, the developers used a small orchestra,[14] which Shaw noted was much more of a challenge than previous projects; "There are more people involved (even without considering the orchestra), and the complexities of any music interactivity are brought to the fore."[15]

Fable: The Lost Chapters

Fable was expanded and rereleased as Fable: The Lost Chapters for Xbox and Windows PC platforms in September 2005. The game was later ported to Mac OS X by Robosoft Technologies and published by Feral Interactive on 31 March 2008.[16][17]

The Lost Chapters features all the content found in the original Fable, as well as additional new content such as new monsters, weapons, alignment based spells, items, armour, towns, buildings, and expressions, as well as the ability to give children objects. The story receives further augmentation in the form of nine new areas and sixteen additional quests. Characters such as Briar Rose and Scythe, who played only minor roles in the original game, are now given more importance and are included in certain main and side quests. Other character-based augmentations include the voice of the antagonist, Jack of Blades, sounding deeper, harsher and more demonic, and the ability to uncover (and resolve) the murder mystery of Lady Grey's sister. The updated edition of the game also applied fixes for certain glitches, such as the "dig glitch," in which the protagonist would move backward each time he used the shovel, pushing him through solid objects and sometimes trapping him.

Fable Anniversary

Lionhead Studios announced Fable Anniversary, a re-mastered version of Fable: The Lost Chapters, for release on the Xbox 360 later in 2013.[18] It features overhauled graphics, a new save system and incorporates Achievements.[19]

On 13 September, Ted Timmins, lead designer of the game, announced that the game's release date will be pushed back to February 2014.[20][21]

Later that year on 12 December 2013 the release date was announced as 4 February 2014 in North America, 6 February 2014 in Asia and 7 February 2014 in Europe.[1]

On 2 June 2014 the game was also confirmed to be coming to PC.[22] It was released on Steam on 12 September 2014[23] and includes mod support.[24]

Fable Anniversary was in full development for 15 months.[25]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankingsFable:
85.28% (Xbox)[26]
The Lost Chapters:
84% (Xbox)[27]
83% (PC)[27]
MetacriticFable:
85/100 (Xbox)[28]
The Lost Chapters:
83/100 (Xbox)[29]
83/100 (PC)[29]
Review scores
PublicationScore
1UP.comA (Xbox 360)[30]
GamePro4.5/5.0 (Xbox)[31]
GameSpot8.6/10 (Xbox)[32]
GameSpy4.0/5.0 (Xbox)[33]
IGN9.3/10 (Xbox)[34]

Fable received positive reviews from both audiences and critics. The original Xbox version of the game has an aggregate critic score of 85% at both Metacritic and Game Rankings.[28][26] The game won more than fifty awards,[35] and became the Xbox's fastest-selling game up to that time.[36]

Fable's combat was praised. Staff from 1UP.com complimented the multiple approaches to combat which the publication stated made the game more a mini-game of its own. "Combat becomes its own minigame, with the goal not solely to beat a foe, but to beat it with skill and get the most from every fight. Slaughter becomes irrelevant, and the fights never become tedious."[30]

Though pointing out several flaws in the game such as bland character designs, Marc Saltzman of USAToday.com stated that the game "should satisfy you with its incredible depth, open-ended game play, and a solid story that gets even better about half-way through the adventure." Fable has been praised for its concept of free will and having consequences for the Hero's actions.[37] Other aspects of the game positively received included the game's tongue-in-cheek characters and what The Observer called a "very British sense of humour, in the style of Monty Python or Douglas Adams".[38]

The short length of the main plot was criticised by reviewers, but many overlooked this due to the much larger array of side quests available to the player. One of the complaints that arose upon the release of Fable was the fact that it failed to include features that Peter Molyneux had mentioned while the game was still in development.[39]

One of the features that were not included in the game's release was the Hero's ability to have children[40] despite the fact that Molyneux had previously mentioned that the Hero's own children would be significant in the game.[41] Molyneux reacted to these complaints by means of a public apology posted on the official Lionhead forums, on which he said, "If I have mentioned any feature in the past [that], for whatever reason, didn't make it as I described into Fable, I apologise."[39][42]

The PC and Xbox versions of Fable: The Lost Chapters were also well-received, with slightly lower Metacritic and Game Rankings averages than the original title.[29][27] Reviewers such as Greg Kasavin of GameSpot noted that the addition of new content helped prevent the game from becoming stale.[43] 1UP.com previewed the game and found that the additive content didn't redefine Fable, but helped bulk up the available quests, addressing the complaint of how short the original Fable was.[44] GamePro and IGN judged The Lost Chapters on PC as surpassing its console predecessor.[45][46]

Fable was a commercial success upon release, selling 375,000 copies in North America during its first week,[47] and 600,000 copies in the first month.[48] The game has sold around three million copies worldwide.[49] In 2005, a Microsoft Game Studios representative stated that Fable would be among the franchises that would appear on the next-generation Xbox 360.[50] Sequels Fable II and Fable III were released in 2008 and 2010, respectively.

References

  1. 1 2 "Fable Anniversary Release Date and Bonus Content Announce!". Lionhead Studios. Microsoft. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  2. Staff (4 June 2013). "Relive the Magic with Fable Anniversary for Xbox 360". Xbox Wire. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  3. Loe, Casey (2004). Fable: PRIMA Official Guide. "Fundamentals – Training: Quests". United States of America: Random House. pp. 4–6. ISBN 0-7615-4179-9.
  4. 1 2 Fable (Xbox) manual. "The Way of a Hero". Microsoft Game Studios. 2004. pp. 18–19.
  5. Cohen, Peter (13 June 2008). "Mac Software: Fable: The Lost Chapters". Macworld. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  6. Loe, Casey (2004). Fable: PRIMA Official Guide. "Chapter 4 – Stop Jack of Blades". United States of America: Random House. p. 97. ISBN 0-7615-4179-9.
  7. 1 2 3 Carter, Dene; Simon Carter (14 June 2002). "Developer Diary #1: Out of the Blue". Lionhead Studios. Archived from the original on 26 February 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  8. Carter, Dene; Simon Carter (22 September 2002). "Developer Diary #5: Demo Days". Lionhead Studios. Archived from the original on 2 January 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  9. Saltzman, Marc (29 September 2004). "Fable weaves fun fantasy adventure". USA Today. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  10. Carter, Dene; Simon Carter (6 December 2002). "Developer Diary #8: A Living World". Lionhead Studios. Archived from the original on 20 April 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  11. Staff (18 April 2003). "Xbox Previews: Fable". Computer and Video Games. Archived from the original on 17 April 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2008.
  12. Dingo, Star (7 July 2003). "Fable". GamePro. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011.
  13. Adams, David (18 March 2004). "Danny Elfman does Fable". IGN. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  14. 1 2 Leone, Matt (28 July 2004). "Previews: Fable – Hollywood legend Danny Elfman dishes the inside dirt on his music". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 31 March 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2008.
  15. Staff (1 November 2004). "Interview with Fable audio director and composer Russell Shaw". Music4Games. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  16. "Portfolio: Macintosh". Robosoft Technologies. Retrieved December 9, 2014.
  17. Staff (13 March 2008). "Fable: The Lost Chapters – Release Date". Feral Interactive. Retrieved 29 July 2008.
  18. http://lionhead.com/fable-anniversary-coming-soon/
  19. Iuglio, Anthony (2 February 2014). "Don’t Overlook Fable Anniversary". Pixelvol. Pixelvolt. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  20. http://www.lionhead.com/blog/2013/september/13/a-letter-to-all-of-our-fable-fans/
  21. Luke Karmali (13 September 2013). "Fable Anniversary delayed". IGN. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  22. http://www.computerandvideogames.com/465684/fable-anniversary-headed-to-pc/
  23. http://store.steampowered.com/app/288470/
  24. Chalk, Andy (11 September 2014). "Fable Anniversary will support modding with included Unreal Engine 3 editor". PC Gamer. Future plc. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  25. Yin-Poole, Wesley (21 January 2014). "Definitely not on rails". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  26. 1 2 "Fable Reviews". Game Rankings. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  27. 1 2 3 Fable: The Lost Chapters Scores (Xbox and PC). Game Rankings. Retrieved on 10 August 2008.
  28. 1 2 "Fable (xbx: 2004)". Metacritic. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  29. 1 2 3 Fable: The Lost Chapters Scores (Xbox and PC). Metacritic. Retrieved on 11 August 2008.
  30. 1 2 Staff (16 September 2004). "Reviews: Fable – The Legend of You". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 31 March 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2008.
  31. Staff (17 September 2004). "Review: Fable". GamePro. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 4 August 2008.
  32. Kasavin, Greg (4 September 2004). "Fable for Xbox Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
  33. Lopez, Miguel (10 September 2004). "Fable (Xbox): Review". GameSpy. Archived from the original on 31 March 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  34. Goldstein, Hilary (27 August 2004). "IGN: Fable Review (p. 1)". IGN. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
  35. "Fable: Awards". Lionhead Studios. Archived from the original on 12 July 2008. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  36. Tilley, Steve (10 October 2004). "Fable Guru: It's All My Fault". Toronto Star. p. S27.
  37. Buchanan, Levi (23 September 2004). "Moral choices have (limited) consequences in Microsoft's Fable". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  38. Yusuf, Bulent (24 October 2004). "Digital Culture; Making the Myth". The Observer. p. 76.
  39. 1 2 Molyneux, Peter (1 October 2004). "A message from Peter Molyneux". Lionhead Forums. Archived from the original on 4 April 2007. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  40. "World Exclusive: Peter Molyneux talks Fable – Part Two". spong.com. 2 October 2003. Retrieved 16 November 2007.
  41. "World Exclusive: Peter Molyneux talks Fable—Part Three". spong.com. 1 October 2003. Retrieved 16 November 2007.
  42. Bishop, Stuart (4 October 2004). "Molyneux apologetic over missing Fable features". Computer and Video Games. Retrieved 24 August 2008.
  43. Kasavin, Greg (6 September 2005). "Fable: The Lost Chapters (PC) Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 23 August 2008.
  44. Lee, Garnett (28 April 2005). "Preview: Fable: The Lost Chapters (PC)". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 31 March 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2008.
  45. Staff (21 September 2005). "Review: Fable: The Lost Chapters". GamePro. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
  46. Adams, Dan (17 May 2005). "E3 2005: Fable: The Lost Chapters". IGN. Retrieved 13 August 2008.
  47. Adams, David (23 September 2004). "Fable Sells Big". IGN. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  48. "Fable Continues to Break Records as Best-Selling Game Across All Platforms". GameSpot. 21 October 2004.
  49. Parfitt, Ben (11 August 2010). "5m sales goal for Fable III". Market for Home Computing and Video Games. Intent Media. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  50. Thorsen, Thor (3 April 2005). "Next-gen Halo, Fable, and Project Gotham confirmed". Gamespot. Retrieved 13 August 2008.

External links

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