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The dungeon crawler genre is not dead, but the monsters that crawl through the dungeons soon will be.

Legend of Grimrock will send you on a grand quest for fame, fortune, weapons, and experience like you haven’t seen on the PC for ages. For one week (until 18 April 2012 at 12.59 PM EDT), you can pick up this fantastic dungeon crawler for just $13.49--10% off the regular full price of $14.99!

If you remember playing titles like Dungeon Master or Eye of the Beholder, you probably own Legend of Grimrock already. Die-hard fans of classic dungeon crawlers looked at the this indie gem as a chance to revive the good old days when hacking your way through a dungeon prison really meant something. If you’ve never heard of the dreaded Grimrock mountain that never releases its prisoners alive, you have an amazing chance to scavenge, fight, level up, puzzle, and learn the classic formula for RPG-ing.

Legend of Grimrock sports tile-based movement combined with real-time combat. You control a party of four prisoners, either using the pre-made adventurers or by carefully creating your own desperate crew. You have only three classes: fighter, rogue, and mage, but the addition of minotaurs or insectoids races mixes things up a little and assures future replay value. Then the crawling and hacking begins--and that’s what’s most important about an action RPG. The fights are tough and require planning and some evasive movements, but the learning curve allows you to adjust to the grid-based waltz of step forward--attack--step backward--magic--step left--avoid in a minuet of death. The combination of atmospheric sounds (wind, whispers, and monster growls somewhere), some clever and demanding puzzles, amazing monster design (killer snails!), and impressive detail poured into Grimrock dungeons make the game one of the finest dungeon crawls ever made.

If you’re a born dungeon crawler: reawaken the feeling of excitement when you turn another corner and know not what to expect. If you’re a first-timer: be assured that the modern execution, simple UI, great graphics, and something absolutely magical will suck you in and not let you out unless you free your party from the magic-, mayhem-, and monster-filled catacombs of Legend of Grimrock.

Check out this early contender for indie game of 2012 (It’s already got a 95 from Destructoid, and a slew of other top reviews from publications all around the globe!) here on GOG.com for a limited time offer of $13.49
Oh my god it happened. GOG.com is swarmed by 13-year-old nobrainers from all over the world with stupid reviews, spamming 5 and 1 stars, and making me feel like I'm on steam.
yeah, but there are also people who "I am giving 5 star to balance that 1 star" reviews. It's freaking kindergarten after few minutes after release. Just like on steam forums :P
bought, downloaded... but I guess I'll wait a little bit for the right moment to start playing :)
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keeveek: Oh my god it happened. GOG.com is swarmed by 13-year-old nobrainers from all over the world with stupid reviews, spamming 5 and 1 stars, and making me feel like I'm on steam.
The flaw here is thinking human idiocy is restricted to one single platform :)

You see the same with MMO's. The people playing 'disliked MMO I'm not playing' are always bungling idiots, until they play something else, then that MMO is suddenly included :)

Ontopic: I managed to outlast the pre-order so now I can wait on actual reviews and/or a sale, yay! :D
Post edited April 11, 2012 by Pheace
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keeveek: yeah, but there are also people who "I am giving 5 star to balance that 1 star" reviews. It's freaking kindergarten after few minutes after release. Just like on steam forums :P
This game was rated 5 starts with twenty ratings before it even came out. I have no idea how that happened, since as far as I can tell, it's impossible to rate a game before it's come out (at least based on Botanicula).

So yeh, taking the reviews and ratings with a pinch of salt, here.
OK, it's been a couple of hours since the game's release. Any first impressions from fellow GOGers?
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gm192206: it's impossible to rate a game before it's come out
It is now, but wasn't before. They changed it a short while after legend of Grimrock was made available for preorder.
Well installed running it and loving it. Graphics re good and has a great feel to it harking back to my atari st days. Think this game will ruin my life :)
It was rated 5 stars before release, because GOG.com didn't think of turning reviews off immediately, and couple of kids already rated it.

Now it's minutes after release, and people are already "reviewing" it.

Makes me want to kill people.
Well, since it seems that people have already completed the game (seeing as it's already getting reivews), anyone want to tell me how long it is?


kinda sarcastic. But I do want to know how long it is :P
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jefequeso: Well, since it seems that people have already completed the game (seeing as it's already getting reivews), anyone want to tell me how long it is?


kinda sarcastic. But I do want to know how long it is :P
Gamespy and Rockpapershotgun say about 15 hours (Gamespy took 34, but "but I spent time trying out different characters, experimenting with many traps, and, ahem, got stuck once or twice; focused players should finish in 15 hours or so")
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keeveek: It was rated 5 stars before release, because GOG.com didn't think of turning reviews off immediately, and couple of kids already rated it.

Now it's minutes after release, and people are already "reviewing" it.

Makes me want to kill people.
GOG is getting larger, it gets more attention, more new games, more new members... couldn't last forever, but hey, it won't be that bad... and you can always ignore the reviews, I mean, who even looks at those?

but it might be nice if somehow reviews of people with high Rep would be always on top of the pages or their "value" was bigger or something like that...
Hmm installer is only 435mb? :P
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Kunovski: GOG is getting larger, it gets more attention, more new games, more new members... couldn't last forever, but hey, it won't be that bad... and you can always ignore the reviews, I mean, who even looks at those?
I think many people, including me. People really need a guide about those games - how they work, if they are playable to the modern gamer, if it's just nostalgia, or that game is still really that good like it was before, etc etc.

When I am about to buy a GOG that I don't know really well, I really rely on reviews.

But lately, their value is decreasing rapidly. Thank God you may rate the review also, which clears things up a bit.
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gameon: How about ratings can be rated like forum posts. So then if others dont agree, it moves down the order.
I don't think that would work, fanboys would vote for other fanboys' reviews... but I'm sure GOG will think of something, many people don't like the review system obviously ;)