Ostriig on 30/3/2017 at 09:04
I really kinda wanna see this come out... I've no interest in playing it, but come on, '95? I think that's before I got my first 486, it has to see the light.
Plus, it might serve as a good model for what Star Citizen fans can expect in the 2030s.
Starker on 30/3/2017 at 10:18
Quote Posted by Renzatic
Kinda, yeah. But even moreso.
Grimrock 2. Man, if you're a fan of that style of gameplay, it really had everything going for it. Massive open maps. Tough fights. Clever puzzles. Secrets galore. Hell, I might go so far as to say that it did such a good job representing the genre, it may not ever be topped.
...not to overhype it too much, of course.
Grimrock 2 was fine, but the pinnacle of the Dungeon Master clone genre is still Lands of Lore for me. Although, arguably, the original Dungeon Master games themselves remain unsurpassed.
Renzatic on 17/4/2017 at 21:02
Quote Posted by Starker
Grimrock 2 was fine, but the pinnacle of the Dungeon Master clone genre is still Lands of Lore for me. Although, arguably, the original Dungeon Master games themselves remain unsurpassed.
I only played a bit of Lands of Lore. I have to admit, it did seem pretty interesting.
That's something I should try and fire up on my tablet one of these days.
Stingm on 20/6/2017 at 17:15
Just thought I would post that its on steam now with a release date of July 7th.
Renault on 20/6/2017 at 19:07
Whatever happened with Cleve's legal fight with the developers who put out that other Grimoire game?
Sulphur on 4/8/2017 at 15:04
I agree, it should have at least been in keeping with the game fiction.
[CENTER]'Rogue Array has been intercepted by an Ambulatory Sphincter! Sphincter squelches gastric juice at it for 5 damage!
Rogue Array is incensed! Rogue Array divides by zero!'
YOUR PARTY HAS BEEN WIPED OUT. RESTART (Y/N)[/CENTER]
Sulphur on 4/8/2017 at 15:14
Yeah, makes sense with a team and also if you want to unravel your own spaghetti-code. I suspect ol' Cleve doesn't mind taking all the time in the world to do a step-trace through every single line of code, though. Matter of fact, that'd explain quite a bit.