![]() The similarities aren't just skin-deep, either. The graphics, while not as good as DA, could still pass as the Baldur's Gate game half of the time. The game plays from the same overhead perspective (albeit with a zoom function), the characters lay into enemies in the same fashion, the levels are littered with chests and some of the characters' powers are even the same. Are you going to have your cleric hang back, heal and only do the odd bit of fighting? Or will you give him powers that lean more towards some of Heroes' deadly finishing moves? Will your wizard play it safe, or will she get her hands dirty in the thick of the action? Will your halfling get over her self-consciousness and realise size doesn't matter?Ī quick glance at Heroes, and you'd be forgiven for thinking it was actually Dark Alliance. As you'd expect, each of these characters plays quite differently, and most of the fun revolves around how you and up to three friends decide to handle them. These heroes are a human warrior, a dwarven cleric, an elven sorcerer and a halfling rogue. Instead, it's the 'tale' of four heroes who rise from the dead to defeat the evil they defeated 150 years previously. We wish we could say it was about diseased giraffes taking over a Japanese mining corporation or something, but it's not. So while anyone looking for a roughly enjoyable multiplayer hackandslash might find comfort in Heroes, everyone else might as well wait for DA2 and, perhaps, Norrath. The problem is that, unlike Dark Alliance, is doesn't do enough to attract the kind of gamers who otherwise might not enjoy roaming through swamps hacking up goblins. It has clearly been designed to appease fans of the Baldur's Gate game, and to this effect it might well have succeeded. It brings very little to the torture table and pulls its punches like a drunken ogre. It's a straight clone of Dark Alliance and makes no orc bones about it. However, Dungeons & Dragons Heroes ensures that while the crown remains firmly on DA's head, there is competition nonetheless. In fact, so bad has the drought been that were it not for the impending release of Champions of Norrath, Brotherhood of Steel and the subject of this very review, come February Dark Alliance 2 would have been its predecessor's only real competition. The Hunter series might be fun, but it's not to everyone's taste. Yet despite the critical and commercial success of Dark Alliance, there hasn't been a single contender for its crown since the day it was released. blimey, not since Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance!"Īnd that's a bit sad really, because co-operative hackandslash gaming is something we should never really be without. When was the last time you had a good slash with someone, eh? How long has it been since you hacked up with a friend? The answer to this is probably: "Last Saturday night actually," but it could also be "God, not since.
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