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top 20: #16: Quest for Glory I: So You Want to Be a Hero? (EGA version)
"Between the monsters and the brigands, we could certainly use a Hero around here." The plot involves your aspiring Hero, recently graduated from the Famous Adventurers' Correspondence School, answering an ad for a Hero needed in the land of Spielburg. Eventually you will confront a kobold, an ogre, and the evil ogress Baba Yaga. But the adventure does not end when you finish restoring order in Spielburg; instead you are wisked off to another land in preparation for the next adventure—and you get to take your character with you. That's one of the major elements that made this series so much fun: the personal connection to the Hero that you had spent time creating. If you had spent time in QFG2 developing your Throwing skill, it would pay off in QFG3, and vice versa if you had ignored it. And of course, the QFG humor is legendary. You'd never know it on the surface, but there are almost as many jokes in this game as in a typical SQ or LSL game; the difference is that Al Lowe and the Two Guys preferred a beat-you-over-the-head style of humor (which, don't get me wrong, I'm not criticizing), whereas the brilliant Corey Cole preferred a darker, more deviously subtle method of making you laugh. The result was a distinct dark comedy style that has never been duplicated in an adventure franchise. It's hard to rank the Quest for Glory games. I love all five of them, with QFG3 maybe being a notch below the rest in my book. There was no question the series deserved to be represented on the countdown; the only issue was which one to choose. Since this was really the bold experiment, the one that gave birth to the adventure-RPG blend that no other designer was ever able to perfect like this, Quest for Glory I represents its series proudly as the #16 adventure game of all-time. It's worth noting that the game was redone in VGA in 1992 with gorgeous claymation graphics, but the substance of the game was 100% the same. Last time: I chose QFG4 instead to represent the series last time, also at #16. After receiving a lot of input from a couple close friends who are QFG fans, playing both games, and realizing how close they really are, I gave the nod to the one with more historical importance. Click here for the complete top 20 of best adventure games of all time!
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