Adventure Gamers - Forums
You are here: Home → Forum Home → Gaming → Adventure → Thread
Post Marker Legend:
- New posts
- No new posts
Currently online
Adventure Game Scene of the Day — Wednesday 22 October 2014
—
Galador : Der Fluch des Prinzen (1999) is a fun but difficult game which was unfortunately never localised for non-German markets. A 3rd-person humorous adventure with dialogues and the traditional inventory-based puzzles. It has everything we expect from a classic fantasy adventure: castles, dragons, wizards, and of course a princess.
In the prologue we learn that a lad called Galador has somehow sold his soul to the devil and is now a prince. But he regrets it and wants his soul back. In the screenshot we see Galador (the guy in purple and blue with the lovely hairdo) listening to the town crier: The king has denounced the prince!
See you around, wolf. Nerissa
Admit it!! You chose that screen because it reminded you the Town Square from Disc!!
wow , very cheerful colors
Admit it!! You chose that screen because it reminded you the Town Square from Disc!!
Hehehe… you’re on to me. It’s that thingie, don’t remember what it’s called in English. With the holes for hands and head. Used for tax inspectors.
wow , very cheerful colors
Yep. And glad you’re here.
See you around, wolf. Nerissa
Hehehe… you’re on to me. It’s that thingie, don’t remember what it’s called in English. With the holes for hands and head. Used for tax inspectors.
It’s nice to see you taking stock of the situation.
Carpe chocolate.
It’s nice to see you taking stock of the situation.
Is this where the pun groan starts? Grrrrooooaaaaannnn!
For whom the games toll,
they toll for thee.
Damn! Another one of those un-translated German games that looks like the thing I would’ve loved Indeed the similarities with the street from Discworld 1 is striking. Karlok, the wood-lock-thingies are called Stocks
“Stocks are devices used internationally, in medieval, Renaissance and colonial American times as a form of physical punishment involving public humiliation. The stocks partially immobilized its tax collectors and they were often exposed in a public place such as the site of a market to the scorn of those who passed by.”
Duckman: Can you believe it? Five hundred bucks for a parking ticket?
Cornfed Pig: You parked in a handicapped zone.
Duckman: Who cares? Nobody parks there anyway, except for the people who are supposed to park there and, hell, I can outrun them anytime.
“Stocks are devices used internationally, in medieval, Renaissance and colonial American times as a form of physical punishment involving public humiliation. The stocks partially immobilized its tax collectors and they were often exposed in a public place such as the site of a market to the scorn of those who passed by.”
LOL! How very nice of Wikipedia to mention tax collectors.
See you around, wolf. Nerissa
You are here: Home → Forum Home → Gaming → Adventure → Thread