Dragon Crystal

Dragon Crystal
Dragon Crystal
Dragon Crystal Coverart.png
Developer(s) Sega
Publisher(s) Sega
Platform(s) Sega Game Gear, Sega Master System
Release date(s) Sega Master System
Sega Game Gear
  • NA December 22, 1992
Genre(s) Roguelike
Mode(s) Single player
Media/distribution Cartridge

Dragon Crystal (Japanese: ドラゴンクリスタル ツラニの迷宮, Dragon Crystal Shirani's Maze) is a video game released for the Sega Master System and Sega Game Gear. Its gameplay derives from roguelikes, with a more intuitive graphical interface and is an 'unofficial' sequel to Fatal Labyrinth.

Contents

Story

As the player rides a bicycle one late afternoon, he turns down an alley never before noticed and enters an antique shop. There a mysterious glowing crystal lies on a shelf. Upon approaching the crystal and gazing into it, a powerful force pulls the player in, causing a blackout.

The player awakens in a forest with a large egg following behind. This forest is a huge maze, crawling with dangerous creatures. The player finds weapons and other items scattered around with which to fight the monsters. The only way out is to continue forward, defeating monsters and growing in power along the way.

Gameplay

The player starts off in the middle of a maze level covered by the fog of war. The first ten levels are a random mixture of trees and cacti, the next 10 are brick walls and the final ten are metal. (In the Game Gear version, the levels are a mix of trees, cacti, sunflowers, and Easter Island style statues.) Progress is achieved by completing each floor then "warping[disambiguation needed ]" to the next by walking the character to a differently coloured square, found by clearing the level.

Weapons, armour, potions, rings, food, money and enemies are randomly placed on the ground. If a player walks around for too long without picking up food, he will die of starvation. Cake objects give 11 to 27 and meat objects 42 to 46 food points and each food point allows the character to move six spaces on the screen and the maximum number of food points is 100.

The player has a number of Hit Points dependent on the level achieved, these increase by killing monsters and advancing to the next Character level. Hit Points are traded in battle with the enemy and recovered by moving around. Money is used to revive from death, increasing in cost with the number and severity of previous deaths.

The game is essentially turn-based, with each movement or action the equivalent to one turn and both monsters and the player will take it in turn to make an attack. This means getting surrounded can be particularly dangerous as every enemy would get one attack for every one attack the player makes. Likewise, a player who wanted to take their time in thinking about what to do next in a battle could do so without being attacked by just standing still.

Items picked up in the game, with the exception of armour and weapons, are coloured coded, with colours representing an effect that cannot be discovered until the player uses an item of that colour. Once, say, a Bronze Book has been used, all future Bronze Books will be renamed to reflect its powers. Generally speaking, Pots are potions that can heal or poison the player, Books provide either maps or spells that may strengthen the player in some way or negate a harmful effect (such as removing cursed items), Rods cast spells that affect enemies and Rings provide bonuses to stats (or sometimes are cursed, such as the Hunger Ring, which makes the player consume food much more quickly and requires a Bless Book to remove). Unwanted items, such as armour or weapons weaker than the ones already worn by the player or cursed or poisonous items, can either be dropped or thrown at enemies for minor damage. The player may only carry a limited number of items

As the player equips with better items, their in-game appearance changes to reflect the new gear, if it's sufficiently different. Robe, Cuirass and Leathers all have the same basic appearance, while Chain mail gives the player a new look.

As the player gains levels, the egg accompanying the player hatches into a dragon that grows with the player as he moves through the levels.

Each enemy has a unique attack. Toads can poison the player, Fire Diamonds cause dizziness (which had the effect of randomizing the direction the player moves), Ninjas teleport around the map, some Slime Blobs create copies of themselves and so on. The game ends when the player finds and picks up the holy goblet hidden in level 30.

Sequels & Ports

Dragon Crystal is the "unofficial" sequel to Fatal Labyrinth (1991). A sequel to Dragon Crystal, entitled Dragon Crystal II, was planned for mobile phones, but was never released.

It has been confirmed that the Game Gear version will be heading to the 3DS as part of its Virtual Console lineup. So far this has only been confirmed for the Japanese service.[1]

Reception

The game was reviewed in 1991 in Dragon #175 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 5 out of 5 stars.[2]

References

  1. ^ http://www.segabits.com/?p=8598
  2. ^ Lesser, Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk (November 1991). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (175): 57–66. 

Sources

External links


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