Kingdom Decay: Invasion Of The Rythmic Army Mac OS

Microsoft Windows, Mac OS Epic Mega Games: GT Interactive 1999 Unreal Tournament: First-person shooter Microsoft Windows, Mac OS, macOS, Linux, PlayStation 2, Dreamcast: Epic Games GT Interactive Cancelled X-COM: Alliance: Tactical shooter: Microsoft Windows MicroProse 2001 X-COM: Enforcer: Third-person shooter Microsoft Windows MicroProse. Standalone, AU, VST Feb 4, 2020 1,8GB An excellent collection of tools for any music production task. The widest possible range of ultra-modern means covering the whole cycle of creating and producing music – from sound design, sound and production to information, mastering and live performance.

(Redirected from Dark Ages (1991 computer game))
Dark Ages
Developer(s)Scenario Software
Publisher(s)Apogee Software
Designer(s)Todd Replogle
Artist(s)Allen H. Blum III
Composer(s)Keith Schuler
Platform(s)DOS, Windows, Mac OS
Release
Genre(s)Platform
Mode(s)Single player
Kingdom decay: invasion of the rhythmic army mac os update

Dark Ages is a platform game written for DOS, published by Apogee Software. It was the first shareware game to feature music for the AdLib sound card.[1]

Dark Ages was distributed as shareware. It consists of three episodes, with only the first episode playable in the shareware version. The episodes are:

Kingdom Decay: Invasion Of The Rhythmic Army Mac Os 10

  1. Prince of Destiny
  2. The Undead Kingdom
  3. Dungeons of Doom

The game was released as freeware on March 20, 2009,[2] and for Steam with Windows and Mac OS support in 2015.

Plot[edit]

As a child, the Prince of the Great Kingdom was sent away by the power-hungry wizard Garth, to be raised by peasants. This turns out to be Garth's greatest mistake as one of the peasants is a retired hero who trains the Prince to be a master fighter using magic as a weapon. In the years after Garth's conquest, the kingdom had fallen into ruin and despair, with no hope of returning to the times of happiness and prosperity. Garth ruled with an iron fist and terrorized the population with undead creatures. The prince battles through badlands, castles, dungeons, caves, forests and finally to the Great Kingdom itself, with Garth's army of undead creatures attacking at every turn. After a confrontation between the Prince and Garth and after killing the evil wizard, the prince's destiny is fulfilled, having freed the kingdom from the Dark Ages of fear and tyranny. The prince assumes his rightful place as the peaceful King and Leader of the Kingdom. The Great Kingdom is once again free to prosper and grow without fear.

Gameplay[edit]

Kingdom Decay: Invasion Of The Rythmic Army Mac OS

Dark Ages is a side-scrolling game where the playable character, the prince, can move sideways, jump and shoot. Gameplay involves killing and avoiding enemies and jumping over obstacles. Progression to the next level often involves a hidden door, revealed by one of several Wise Men-type characters after retrieving an item for them. The items include a key, a shield, and an apple.

The player can use magic to fight the prince's enemies, starting out with a simple energy bolt and slowly gaining access to more destructive spells as the game progresses. There are three spells in the game: a blue bolt that flies straight forward, a boomerang that flies forward then returns allowing enemies to be hit twice, and a magic beam with a shorter range but can kill most enemies in one hit and can be fired in rapid succession.

Development[edit]

When Todd Replogle first designed the game, the graphics were drawing slowly. With some aid from the Apogee members (who were still working for Softdisk at the time), the game was improved to run at a faster and smoother pace.[3][4]

Reception[edit]

Kingdom Decay: Invasion Of The Rhythmic Army Mac Os Catalina

References[edit]

  1. ^Todd Replogle & Allen Blum (1991). 'Dark Ages Manual'(PDF). Apogee Software. Retrieved December 5, 2017.Cite journal requires journal= (help)CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  2. ^'Several old games released as Freeware'. 3DRealms. Retrieved 26 March 2009.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  3. ^Romero, John (May 1997). 'Audience - John Romero'. Edge. No. 45. Future plc. p. 20.
  4. ^Romero, John (June 1997). 'Talking - John Romero'. Next Generation. No. 30. Imagine Media. p. 10.

Kingdom Decay: Invasion Of The Rhythmic Army Mac Os Download

External links[edit]

  • Dark Ages at the Internet Archive
  • Dark Ages at MobyGames

Kingdom Decay: Invasion Of The Rhythmic Army Mac Os X

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dark_Ages_(1991_video_game)&oldid=999735981'