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If you love to explore the deepest tunnels and darkest caves in search of fame and fortune, this is your lucky day. 7 dungeon crawlers, made with passion, arrive on GOG.COM. Let’s see to what darkest corners of the underworld they’ll take us.

Mazes and Monsters
The title of one of the earliest Tom Hanks’ movies mentioned above is no coincidence. From the beginning of tabletop RPGs in the 1970s, setting the action of a story in various dungeons and underground caves was considered almost generic. Why? The claustrophobic atmosphere of dark tunnels helped players to focus on their goal and it enabled the game master to keep the action of the RPG session on a somewhat smaller scale.



Swords and Pixels
In tabletop gaming, as well as in computer RPGs, so-called dungeon crawlers became a vanguard of the whole genre. The first known title of this breed was pedit5 developed for the PLATO system by Rusty Rutherford in 1975. Early dungeon crawlers, like dnd and Moria, were turn-based and had very crude visuals, yet they managed to inspire a whole generation of RPG creators and fans.

After Dungeon Master, a classic title by FTL Games from 1988, dungeon crawlers with a first-person perspective and real-time action became more popular. The game’s spiritual successor was the Eye of the Beholder trilogy from SSI and Westwood Studios with its eye-catching visuals and the rich Forgotten Realms world setting. Westwood then went on to create its own Lands of Lore RPG series with great music from Frank Klepacki.



Other classic dungeon crawlers worth mentioning are the Ishar trilogy from the French studio Silmarils and the Might & Magic series that later gave birth to the hugely popular turn-based strategy series known as Heroes of Might and Magic. Their legacy lives on, as we now witness a new generation of dungeon crawlers arrive on our modern computers. Here are 7 of them freshly made available on GOG.COM.



Conglomerate 451
The game from RuneHeads is an interesting cyberpunk addition to the dungeon crawler genre. Conglomerate 451 is a grid-based, first-person RPG with roguelike elements set in the hostile world of the future. As the CEO of a Special Agency, you have been given the command by the Senate of Conglomerate to restore the order in sector 451. To do that, you must build your own team of enhanced agents and fight crime with every weapon at your disposal.



Dark Quest 1 & 2
Those two games from Brain Seal Ltd are a tribute to the first turn-based dungeon crawlers from the past. In Dark Quest 1, the player will take the role of a mighty barbarian on his quest to destroy the minions led by an evil sorcerer. In Dark Quest 2, the game system is now party-based and the visuals have received a significant upgrade.



Heroes of the Monkey Tavern
Here we have a first-person perspective title which bears much resemblance to the classic Stonekeep dungeon crawler. We join a team of four heroes who, after spending countless days and nights celebrating within the infamous Monkey Tavern, went completely broke. Now, their fates are about to change as one mysterious stranger shows them the location of a tower filled with a priceless bounty.



Knightin'+
A humorous isometric dungeon crawler with some arcade elements. The creators of Knightin'+ from Muzt Die Studios took much inspiration from the classic The Legend of Zelda series by Shigeru Miyamoto. In the game, you join brave Sir Lootalot on his epic quest for fortune and glory. Explore and fight your way through the dungeons filled with traps, puzzles, magical artifacts, and of course – dangerous bosses.



Legends of Amberland: The Forgotten Crown
A real treat for pixel art and heroic fantasy fans. Legends of Amberland: The Forgotten Crown is a tribute to the 1990s dungeon crawlers like the already mentioned Ishar and Eye of the Beholder series. The turn-based system makes the game really easy to play and the story is the quintessential hero’s quest, with magical, picturesque land and good triumphing over evil in the end.



The Quest and Islands of Ice and Fire DLC
This game closely resembles the Might & Magic games, especially the last ones with their first-person perspective and 3D environment. The Quest from Redshift has a neat hand-drawn world, a grid-based movement system, and turn-based combat. A huge kingdom of Monares presented in the game allows us to spend many hours just exploring without touching the main story at all. In the game’s DLC, titled Islands of Ice and Fire, the player can explore even the most remote parts of Monares.

Every dungeon crawler fan will find something for themselves amongst the six titles presented above. They are also a great choice for anyone who would like to start their adventure with this genre with a long history and many classic titles in the past. So, let’s brace ourselves and venture into the dark and dangerous dungeons!
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Xabyer_B: I miss The Fall of the Dungeon Guardian Enhanced Edition, why not it's here?
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karnak1: Put your vote on the Wishlist (if you haven't already). At least we have bigger chances now of getting it here:

https://www.gog.com/wishlist/games/the_fall_of_the_dungeon_guardians
It's been a long time since I voted, so all we can do now is wait.
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GOG.com: [...] The first known title of this breed was pedit5 developed for the PLATO system by Rusty Rutherford in 1975. [...]
This sounds like the name of a made-up porn actor. The "in 1975" part sounds about right, though. =P
This is an interesting batch of releases. And, as always, nice to see a bigger article, even if in this case there's less about each game.

Now, Conglomerate 451 says roguelike and also has a setting I don't care for and saw that Dark Quest games restrict saving, so those are out, what about the others? Any others with save restrictions, procedurally generated worlds or any other such roguelike elements, to know what to weed out right away before looking further into what's left?
I own The Quest on Steam and I like it a lot.
I got word from Redshift that the GoG version will accept the DLC from a couple sources. This is great news, better than no way to get the DLC at least.

"The GOG version of the game can accept any PC expansion. The game will look for the following folder: "Documents/The Quest/expansions" (on both Windows and Mac). Any expansion paks put there will be picked up and will be playable.

You can buy the Steam versions and put them there (Steam Workshop expansions are called "world.pak" but can be renamed to whatever is convenient).

You can also try and buy the expansions directly from Zarista. (The how of that is theirs to decide.)"
This is the worst-written announcement ever.

I can't tell what are games, what aren't, what's available, what isn't... what the hell is wrong with you guys?
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yogsloth: This is the worst-written announcement ever.

I can't tell what are games, what aren't, what's available, what isn't... what the hell is wrong with you guys?
Seems simple to me. In the text, if you actually read it, all clickable links are games. As for the headers, first two are about dungeon crawlers already on GOG, and then it goes through the new additions one by one.
Holy Yezdagert, Batman! The Quest! This game is a modern classic, and it's finally here. Every phone I've ever had has had this game (even my iPod touch) and I've never gotten sick of it yet. Hundreds of hours on just the original itself without the expansions, and so many more with them. Hopefully, the expansions will come here.
If you want Zarista's DLC here, you might consider respectfully contacting them. I know they've mentioned fear of DRM-free but the chance for more sales here might change their mind.
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tfishell: If you want Zarista's DLC here, you might consider respectfully contacting them. I know they've mentioned fear of DRM-free but the chance for more sales here might change their mind.
This is a noble suggestion but personally I doubt this will do much in this case. My communication with the developer revealed a pretty hard-line "no DRM-free" stance, no wiggle room. And it looks like other user got similar response. I wouldn't waste my time with developers like this who are so stuck in their anti-ownership, anti-consumer ways. Rather than make more money, they want to stay in a comfort zone serving the masses on Scheme who don't know or care better. This isn't the first instance of this phenomenon and it damn sure won't be the last. In any case, it seems more productive to reach out to other, different developers who "haven't really thought about" the DRM issue yet one way or another, in hopes of showing them the eager customers here and getting other desired content here. I think the third-party expansions for The Quest are a lost cause.
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Xabyer_B: I miss The Fall of the Dungeon Guardian Enhanced Edition, why not it's here?
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karnak1: Put your vote on the Wishlist (if you haven't already). At least we have bigger chances now of getting it here:

https://www.gog.com/wishlist/games/the_fall_of_the_dungeon_guardians
Thanks! Added my vote too. I think we're going to need more votes, I hope some day seeing it here on GOG.
I hope I will se the : "Demise: Rise of the Ku'Tan" game in GOG some day.

Please vote if You like it too.