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The dungeon crawler genre is not dead, but the monsters that crawl through the dungeons soon will be.

Legend of Grimrock will send you on a grand quest for fame, fortune, weapons, and experience like you haven’t seen on the PC for ages. For one week (until 18 April 2012 at 12.59 PM EDT), you can pick up this fantastic dungeon crawler for just $13.49--10% off the regular full price of $14.99!

If you remember playing titles like Dungeon Master or Eye of the Beholder, you probably own Legend of Grimrock already. Die-hard fans of classic dungeon crawlers looked at the this indie gem as a chance to revive the good old days when hacking your way through a dungeon prison really meant something. If you’ve never heard of the dreaded Grimrock mountain that never releases its prisoners alive, you have an amazing chance to scavenge, fight, level up, puzzle, and learn the classic formula for RPG-ing.

Legend of Grimrock sports tile-based movement combined with real-time combat. You control a party of four prisoners, either using the pre-made adventurers or by carefully creating your own desperate crew. You have only three classes: fighter, rogue, and mage, but the addition of minotaurs or insectoids races mixes things up a little and assures future replay value. Then the crawling and hacking begins--and that’s what’s most important about an action RPG. The fights are tough and require planning and some evasive movements, but the learning curve allows you to adjust to the grid-based waltz of step forward--attack--step backward--magic--step left--avoid in a minuet of death. The combination of atmospheric sounds (wind, whispers, and monster growls somewhere), some clever and demanding puzzles, amazing monster design (killer snails!), and impressive detail poured into Grimrock dungeons make the game one of the finest dungeon crawls ever made.

If you’re a born dungeon crawler: reawaken the feeling of excitement when you turn another corner and know not what to expect. If you’re a first-timer: be assured that the modern execution, simple UI, great graphics, and something absolutely magical will suck you in and not let you out unless you free your party from the magic-, mayhem-, and monster-filled catacombs of Legend of Grimrock.

Check out this early contender for indie game of 2012 (It’s already got a 95 from Destructoid, and a slew of other top reviews from publications all around the globe!) here on GOG.com for a limited time offer of $13.49
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Kunovski: but it might be nice if somehow reviews of people with high Rep would be always on top of the pages or their "value" was bigger or something like that...
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gameon: How about ratings can be rated like forum posts. So then if others dont agree, it moves down the order.
You can vote "is that review helpful?" under every review. They are ordered by this points. (the list is not updated in real time)

ps. I like the GOG.com review system. I just don't like the people who abuse it. There should be some moderators who delete very low rated reviews, from time to time.
Post edited April 11, 2012 by keeveek
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keeveek: I think many people, including me. People really need a guide about those games - how they work, if they are playable to the modern gamer, if it's just nostalgia, or that game is still really that good like it was before, etc etc.

When I am about to buy a GOG that I don't know really well, I really rely on reviews.

But lately, their value is decreasing rapidly. Thank God you may rate the review also, which clears things up a bit.
fair enough, but I don't think that review is the right place to tell you if the game works and such... either you look up some youtube video of gameplay (if you're in a hurry to decide) or read a full review online... or you remember the game and know if it's good or not :)
ALT+Tab
*pops up his head*

??? Why are there still some people talking about it instead of playing the game???

*Jumps back into Grimrock's pit*
And I think my PC is too old to run it ;(
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Lexor: Can someone post MD5 hash for the exe?
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fvdrhee: Now why would you need a MD5 hash?
The GOG.com downloader does several checks after downloading to make sure its been downloaded correctly.
Not everyone is using the featureless GOG-Downloader.
Yes! This is it! Beautiful game!
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keeveek: But lately, their value is decreasing rapidly. Thank God you may rate the review also, which clears things up a bit.
Oftentimes I find discussions in a game's dedicated forum much more valuable than those user reviews. User reviews hardly ever have an impact on my purchase practices.
Wow, a great feature in the combat system is that you can drag and move your characters icons in a fight, thus being able to bring to the back and out of reach a near dying front fighter, and replacing it on the front line by a fresher character from the back.

Mmmh I'm not sure this explanation was clear.
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fvdrhee: Now why would you need a MD5 hash?
The GOG.com downloader does several checks after downloading to make sure its been downloaded correctly.
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Woolytoes: Not everyone is using the featureless GOG-Downloader.
Ok. Even then the executable does a few integrity checks before it starts installing. But I can understand why you would want to test it before starting the exe if you used the browser download function (exactly why I don't use it anymore).
I stand corrected.
Post edited April 11, 2012 by fvdrhee
Lol at only being 8megs larger than Stonekeep!! Those FMV's always take up so much space!! :-p Can't wait to play this tomorrow night!!!
Post edited April 11, 2012 by drhoads
I feel guilty , I got the Steam Version :( It has Achievments and I'm a sucker for Achieves ... downloading right now..
The user reviews do seem to need some moderation from the staff. Right now, it seems to have turned into a bunch of "reviews" discussing what someone else wrote, and "balancing" the game rating by just giving 5-star ratings, even though they've barely played or haven't played at all.

I think a way to avoid this kind of stuff would be to only allow reviews a couple days after a game is released, when the dust has settled a bit. Or, for a more drastic solution, only allow reviews by people who actually own the game, but I can see why that would be problematic, especially with the old games that people already own on hard copies and whatnot.

About Grimrock, though, I've bought it from the developers and I'm currently downloading, can't wait to play it!
I just had a quick 15 minutes , and I think I'm totally hooked already ! Takes me back to when I spent hundreds of hours playing games like Eye of the Beholder , Dungeon Master , Knightmare etc .. If my first 15 mins is anything to go by I think it will turn into 15 hours pretty damn quick :)
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summitus: I just had a quick 15 minutes , and I think I'm totally hooked already ! Takes me back to when I spent hundreds of hours playing games like Eye of the Beholder , Dungeon Master , Knightmare etc .. If my first 15 mins is anything to go by I think it will turn into 15 hours pretty damn quick :)
oh man! I can't wait to get home to play it!!
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summitus: I just had a quick 15 minutes , and I think I'm totally hooked already ! Takes me back to when I spent hundreds of hours playing games like Eye of the Beholder , Dungeon Master , Knightmare etc .. If my first 15 mins is anything to go by I think it will turn into 15 hours pretty damn quick :)
+1 agreed, good fun so far.