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Unleash your imagination into a vast, savage world, sun-scorched and wind-scraped.
This series contains the radiant classics, Dark Sun: Shattered Lands, and Dark Sun: Wake of the Ravager.
Dark Sun: Shattered Lands
The Dark Sun world of Athas is arid a...
Windows XP / Vista / 7 / 8 / 10, 1.8 GHz, 512 MB RAM, 3D graphics card compatible with DirectX 7 (co...
介绍
不支持简体中文
本产品尚未对您目前所在的地区语言提供支持。在购买请先行确认目前所支持的语言。
Unleash your imagination into a vast, savage world, sun-scorched and wind-scraped.
This series contains the radiant classics, Dark Sun: Shattered Lands, and Dark Sun: Wake of the Ravager.
Dark Sun: Shattered Lands
The Dark Sun world of Athas is arid and bleak, a wasteland with a handful of cities ruled by thousand-year-old sorcerer-kings. Your party begins as slaves in the city of Draj, destined to die as gladiators in the Arena. You must find a way to escape into the hostile wilderness, join with other escaped slaves and create a rebel force powerful enough to destroy the evil sorcerer-king's army.
Dark Sun: Wake of the Ravager
Wake of the Ravager, sequel to the mega-hit Shattered Lands, hurls you back to the scorching AD&D Dark Sun game world of Athas. A sun-blasted, wind-scraped wasteland, Athas is home to multitudes of the most horrifically mutated creatures you'll ever encounter! No wonder then that the mighty Dragon of Ur Draxa and his powerful minion, the Lord Warrior, gaze longingly upon this savage paradise: it's the perfect setting for their vile plans! If you think things on Athas couldn't possibly get hotter, think again...
Recruit champions of Athas to your cause from various races and classes, including Gladiators, Psionicists and Rangers
Level and customise your party as you traverse the sands of Athas and engage with its denizens
Delve into ancient mysteries and engaging plots on completing your two quests
This was my favourite AD&D campaign settings. AS a lot of people already mentioned, the 2nd game came out a bit buggy, but otherwise they were probably some of the most involved storylines and had the best side quests of anything to date at the time. I would say it was the spiritual forefather of the Baldurs Gate games.
Dark sun : shattered lands and Dark sun 2 : wrath of the ravager are kind of games that I have never ever played before : a turn-based isometric rpg with beautiful pixel graphics set in a post-magical-apocalyptic world where slavery, betrayals at every corner, mystical and mysterious creatures and prophecies meet ( basically Dune but with magic).
Its gameplay is D&D at its finest, with some modification due to the different setting ( Dark Sun instead of the over-used Forgotten realms, at least in videogames).
Moreover, both games have an intricate and intriguing story (no spoilers) full of interesting sub-quests and plot twist unlike many rpg games that I have seen, that really keep you on your toes and teach you to trust on one.
Its soundtrack is decent ( some track memorable but they are played in a loop, which can be quite distressing) and and its graphics are quite enchanting , with the possible exception of the second entry, which is an actually a step down (much like Eye of the beholder 3, for example).
Aaaand its the second entry ( wrath of the ravager) is the true reason why actually I'll not give this game a 5 star : on top of the worse graphics ( and also a looot of moments where the framerate would go down without no apparent reason), the game is so filled with bugs that I wasn't able to complete it ( fact is, after a while I simply grew tire to watch solutions).
However, that does not mean you shouldn't play the game, on the contrary : plot, gameplay and those fascinating pixel used in a isometric point of view are really top-notch and the games can offer unique and memorable experience both for the average player and the veteran ( although I'll suggest to the veterans to raise the level of difficulty ).
So, create your party with care : the sand of Athas are truly an unforgiving adventure where the fools fall and heroes rises.
Played though this game at least 4 times. The first game is far better than the second, wonder why they changed a winning formula for something worse. Second game is playable but important to have backup saves, it's possible to break the game for doing something wrong. Second game has a more linear story than the first game.
The first Dark Sun was brilliant, but the second one - absolute garbage; so buggy it's not even playable and if you ignore the bugs the game itself is still garbage with a garbage storyline.