

When you're not reading, the game was way ahead of its time. The story was as compelling and engrossing as any Final Fantasy game. As boring as that might sound to a modern gaming audience who demands fully rendered in-game cutscenes for the most inconsequential non-playing moment of story advancement, but it made for a longer, more satisfying game. Because of the source material, much of the events that take place in the game are related as if you are reading a novel.
#BETRAYAL AT KRONDOR IMPROVEMENTS SERIES#
It was an amazingly open ended game, as well, considering that the hallmark series of open ended gameplay - The Elder Scrolls series - was still a few years away from its first installment. We originally got the game because of my brother's great love of the books of Raymond E. Granted, any JPEG with the look of the characters in the game would get unceremoniously booted from the internet these days, but at the time, this game was trying to be different - to bring a breath of fresh air into the gaming landscape. Betrayal at Krondor had something resembling 3d graphics, and it was obvious that the people who made it used photographs of actors instead of artificial sprites. Searching through that mass of CDs, I came across a CD bearing the name of a game which won at least one publication's RPG of the year game back in 1993. I would nickname that system "Rosetta Stone", or perhaps "The Flux Capacitor." But (I promise, this is the last plug for it) thanks to DOSBox, I no longer need to shell it out.

Over the years, I've kept a LOT of old CD-ROM games in the hope that one day I'd be able to purchase an old computer capable of running the old games. That classic which helped introduce elements of the RTS genre got me digging deep into my CD folder. I reviewed Dune the other night - so late at night that the review is probably only barely coherent. For the younger generation, who may never have that sickening experience of being unable to get the classic games of your youth to run on modern computers, simply bear with me - an old gamer at 25 years of age (who'd have thought?).
#BETRAYAL AT KRONDOR IMPROVEMENTS WINDOWS#
Heck, anyone who's tried playing with the inbuilt Windows "compatibility" options and finding no possible way to play any program even just now hitting its 10th anniversary in the year 2007 will understand what I'm talking about. Older gamers will understand exactly what I'm talking about. They've made a lot of improvements to the program, to the point that the program is a lot easier to use and accurately emulates the old Roland and Soundblaster cards of the heyday of DOS gaming. By deactivated-5b50c64c13954 | Review Date: JRecently I downloaded DOSBox after a long hiatus from trying to figure the bloody thing out.
