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To experience great adventures, you’ll have to take a step back in time.Might and Magic VII - For Blood and Honor brings back the fantasy role-playing genre with an enhanced game engine and thrilling gameplay. It brings to life a fantasy world replete w...
To experience great adventures, you’ll have to take a step back in time.Might and Magic VII - For Blood and Honor brings back the fantasy role-playing genre with an enhanced game engine and thrilling gameplay. It brings to life a fantasy world replete with fearsome dragons, horrifying monsters and exotic races. This game has everything the experienced role-player desires, including new character classes, skills, spells, magic items and a compelling story that will keep you absorbed for hours on end. Might and Magic VII - For Blood and Honor brings to life the most fantastic, engrossing and intense role-playing experience ever created.
You own a castle, can play Arcomage, fly, cheese the mountains with the invisibility spell to access the experience fountain way sooner than you should and still have plenty of time to duel the arena, kill more rats and steal shit from the snotty Evles.
Although this game is, admittedly, very good, I am giving it a lower rating purely because of its high difficulty. Perhaps I had been pampered by the likes of Lands of Lore, where you rarely have to fight more than three enemies at the same time, so I was unpleasantly surprised when I first started exploring Emerald Isle – I was beset by dozens of dragonflies, who killed me almost instantly. When a similar thing happened with bats in the Temple, and the scores of orcs outside Harmondale, I finally realised this game can only be won using clever strategies which border on exploiting game tactics, like kiting enemies and endless reloads. Don't be surprised when one of the routine advancement quests pits you against two dozen some of the game's most powerful assorted monsters, five times. The game itself is a bit of a grind, but finds its devoted audience as such. The game world is large and varied enough, although you'll spend most of the time traveling from town to town looking for skill trainers.
Definitely recommended if you liked the previous installments, but skip it if you like a more cleverly written story and a subtler gameplay mechanic.