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SWATJester_os
October 15th, 2008, 06:32 PM
From http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2008/10/02/kings-bounty-my-zombie-wife-the-belt-odoom/ (PS this game is fucking awesome. It's a remake of the original, which was the predecessor to the entire Heroes of Might and Magic series. Average reviews are in the 8/10 range.)

Awesome parts bolded for emphasis.

So I gazed up at the mountain of games about guns due this Autumn, and I sighed a little. Did I burn myself out on all those FPSes last year? Are, heaven forfend, my baser instincts now somehow in check? I will play Far Cry 2 and Dead Space and Fallout 3, but right now they’re not what appeal. I made it about 15 minutes into Crysis Warhead before the oh-this-again tedium hit, and I blame myself more than I do the game for that. I wanted something a little different, something I could sink into on more than a purely visceral level, but I didn’t know what.

Turns out it was King’s Bounty: The Legend, the RPG-strategy remake/sequel from some of the good (mad) folks behind Space Rangers 2. I’m not going to review it or even describe it here. Instead, I’m going to tell two stories that aptly demonstrate the insanity-ingenuity of the thing.

Briefly though, it’s basically Heroes of Might & Magic (the original King’s Bounty having been the source of those games), but, well, better: faster and sillier and bigger. It’s mad and weird and unfair and the Russian-English translation is a disaster. It’s also gloriously ridiculous and constantly inventive. It’s exactly what I wanted to play right now, and I’m quietly confident it’s going to be one of the games I most enjoy this year.

First, the belt story. I found a belt! This was excellent news, as armour for my main character is rare and expensive. Better yet, the belt, apparently, could be upgraded. Right-click to upgrade, it said. So I did. I expected the game to tell me I was lacking Rare Crystal X or something, but I was surprised. “Are you sure you want to fight the keepers?”, it asked. “Er,” I said. “Yes? But I thought I was upgrading my be…”

Suddenly, I find myself here:

I’m fighting inside my belt, at war with mystic guardians for the right to build a better belt. Unfortunately, it turned out said mystic guardians outnumbered my own meagre, low-level army by 10 to 1, so I was roundly thrashed within seconds. Now, in any other fight in the game, if all your troops get knobbled, you continue - respawning at the main town and receiving some sympathy cash to go hire some new guys with. This time, I got a game over screen. I was perma-killed by my own belt. Man! That’s never happened to me before. The lesson here: never upgrade your belt.

(Inevitably, I tried again later, when I was several levels higher. And I won! Hundreds of my troops were killed, but my belt is now 1 better at defence. And really, that’s all that matters.)

Then there’s my wife. Various characters in the game kept recommending I get married, but beyond the king’s child daughter rather unnervingly flirting with me and some polite chit-chat with an old lady who sold plant-beasts, I couldn’t find any women in the game, let alone one to make my bride. Then I met Hake, the robber-baron. He was in a bit of bind because his wife had turned into a zombie. As is so often the way in anything RPGy, he tasked me with solving his problem. So I duly did some trekking about for him, and eventually discovered the magic phrase that would de-zombify the poor lass. A hero is me.

At which point he revealed that, actually, having an undead wife was quite handy - she could test his food for poisons and… well, his reasons weren’t entirely convincing, if I’m honest. And that’s when a surprising dialogue option appeared. There was always at least one vaguely psychotic response I could choose in any given conversation, but requesting if I could buy a man’s wife off him was a whole new layer of madness. I couldn’t not go for it, but fully expected violent reprisal for my cheek.

Except he agreed. For just 5000g (not a lot in KB’s money-rich landscape), I had myself a wife. Not just any old wife - a zombie wife. I was married to a zombie. Ew. A zombie who I could talk to about having kids. Ewww.

I didn’t really want to go there, but fortunately it turned out I could use that magic de-zombie phrase whenever I wanted, so I did the gentlemanly thing: restored her humanity, pledged undying love, and fathered a child. Then, with my heir sorted, I turned her back into a zombie again. Then I divorced her for someone else. The combat bonuses were better, you understand.

Later, I performed amateur dentistry on a dragon, fought a turtle as big as a castle and fed 89 giant snakes to a fish-god. I love King’s Bounty.

If you’re looking to buy King’s Bounty - and you should - your best bet is probably a download through Gamersgate.

SWATJester_os
October 15th, 2008, 06:33 PM
System reqs: # OS: MS Windows 2000/XP
# DirectX 9.0c
# CPU: 2,6 GHz
# RAM 1 GB
# Graphics: nVidia GeForce 6800 with 128 MB RAM
# Sound: DirectX-compatible sound card

It's a 2.1 gb download from gamersgate.

SWATJester_os
October 15th, 2008, 06:40 PM
Update on things you can do:

Become a pirate
Killed a Kraken
Met a man who puts make-up on frogs
Gained the ability to summon a giant robot sphere made by an AI construct from the future
Resolved a miner’s strike
Had rides in a submarine and a zeppelin
Resurrected a dead dragon as a skeleton dragon
Been defeated by an army of 3000 fairies
Fathered eight children
Ended a dwarf-human war
Had a conversation with a waterfall
Purchased a tiny castle that I carry around in my pocket. On demand, I can shrink to doll-size and wander around it.

Splitlip
October 15th, 2008, 07:08 PM
yeah, its next on my list after fallout 3.

pro kossu
October 15th, 2008, 07:12 PM
I wasted a good chunk of time with this game. It was good fun until I got bored with constantly having to run back and forth looking for troops.

Makai Goblin
October 17th, 2008, 10:26 PM
I remember playing KB on my sega genesis. (EA put it on the Gen... back when EA had not turned to the dark side) and loving it. It was one of those games that I called a "time waster" because I could pop it in, play 15 minutes until that TV show came on, or dinner was done, or whatever.

So, the other day I got the remake. It's great. It's a bit of a hassle to get more troops, but still fun.

I have questions for you who have played it more than I have so far:
Do troops restock? I recall them doing so in the original, albeit randomly...
Do the "wandering monsters" out on the field respawn? I could use a easier fight or two to get a level up.

HodgeMASHEEN MkIII
October 18th, 2008, 02:22 AM
I really tried to like Heroes of Might and Magic 5, but the simple battles and pointless city building left me bored. I never finished the human campaign.

PopeDragunov
October 18th, 2008, 08:19 AM
I kinda liked Heroes V as it was the first heroes I played.

After buying 3 I was disappointed in it. And Disciples which is kinda the same thing.

Splitlip
October 18th, 2008, 09:27 AM
HOMM 3 and 4 are the shizz.
the Dwarf expansion for HOMM 5 is good, but the orc one is just too easy.

MeanPatrick
December 30th, 2008, 06:27 AM
Sandro uses Raise Undead to raise 1 Dead Thread to join his horde.

So I just got ahold of King's Bounty and I've played about 7 hours into it and all I can say is this feels more like a Heroes of Might and Magic game than Heroes V did. Which is pretty funny, since King's Bounty was what started Heroes and its rebirth is ultimately more fulfilling than its spawn's reincarnation.

Splitlip
December 30th, 2008, 06:47 AM
Is it bad that not only did i immediately know who Sandro was, but could see his portrait in my head?

NO IT ISNT.

MeanPatrick
December 30th, 2008, 06:49 AM
Sandro is awesome and always worth a thought, no matter what the context.

SWATJester_os
December 30th, 2008, 05:54 PM
Sandro uses Raise Undead to raise 1 Dead Thread to join his horde.

So I just got ahold of King's Bounty and I've played about 7 hours into it and all I can say is this feels more like a Heroes of Might and Magic game than Heroes V did. Which is pretty funny, since King's Bounty was what started Heroes and its rebirth is ultimately more fulfilling than its spawn's reincarnation.

Heroes 5 is fun, but heroes 3 was the best. Heroes 4 is not even worthy of the title.

MeanPatrick
December 31st, 2008, 01:05 AM
Heroes V was fun, for the first five minutes. Then I felt like I was playing a lukewarm Heroes III mixed with Warhammer. After an hour I uninstalled it and reinstalled Heroes II and III and played both for about 4 hours each. My attempts to replay Heroes V always end like that.

Heroes VI, I think, gets a bum rap. It had some radioactive flaws that made some great design choices fall short. For example, I thought making the Hero part of the battle was a brilliant move, it made combat more interesting. But being able to lead an army without a Hero seemed too much of a stretch.

Loké
December 31st, 2008, 11:19 AM
Downloading it. When I get around to playing it, anyone want me to look out for anything specific?

SWATJester_os
December 31st, 2008, 07:00 PM
Do multiple playthroughs, and make sure you explore all the options for the zombie wife.

Loké
January 1st, 2009, 01:10 AM
Found her. She's a bandit king's girlfriend, and it's funny because you get to change her back and forth from zombie to human. As a zombie she gives bonuses to undead troops and as a human bonuses to bandits and pirates. Which honestly kinda sucks because I don't field either. Then again, the idea of having a wife you can turn into a zombie willy-nilly and back and forth kinda makes up for it.

Loké
January 1st, 2009, 11:47 AM
Not sure if I should restart on easy. The combat right now seems to be fairly simple for me-Either I win comfortable on normal, or I get hammered brutally and end up scuttling away with my tail between my legs. I did a bit of an easy game to see what happened, and interestingly, some of the random crap in the teasure chests is different, as well as potential recruits-in an animal menagerie for example, I can recruit giant poisinous spiders and MUTHERFUCKING BEARS. That's right, my army's heavy hitters are FUCKING BEARS. That get pissed off and twat things for like double damage, when they get attacked, and they roar when they kill things.

In contrast, on easy mode I'm getting faerie dragons and hiyenas. they few shops I have seen sell different crap too.

Problem is with easy is it's... well. Easy. I'm happily sloshing around with look in the first area, and I've barely even started clearing it. Plus the combat is so facile you can do the autopilot (moar leik autofight am i rite?) and go have a cup of tea or something while it sorts them out.

Compare to normal mode, where as I mentioned, I either steamroll or get steamrolled; for the moment.

So suggestions? Do I play through on easy or normal?

SWATJester_os
January 2nd, 2009, 04:30 AM
It gets harder as you go along. Plus your quests will take you to other territories, which will be much harder than what you handle at that level. Bears FTW also.

Loké
January 2nd, 2009, 10:33 PM
meh, so I'll just restart on easy then.

SWATJester_os
January 2nd, 2009, 11:22 PM
Put it this way: I completely cleared out the starting zone, before I headed into swamps. My army there was good enough to handle most of what was immediately there in front of me, but far from sufficient to handle everything in that zone.

Loké
January 2nd, 2009, 11:25 PM
Definately restarting on easy then. It's alot of work clearing out the first zone on normal and I've killed off everything except 3 groups on normal who wtfbbqpwn me, hard. (Compared to battles I just blithered through)

Factor in I can't get a bigger army and meeeeeh.