![]() Role playing was always a serious business for me, whether I was playing AD&D, Shadowrun, Werewolf: The Apocalypse or Traveler. I didn't used to appreciate this kind of cross-genre weirdness outside of computer games. It's a game where one of the deadliest enemies in the upper echelons of the dungeon is called The Disembodied Hand That Strangled People a game where you'll have to kill Calvin and Hobbes to get lower than dungeon level 10, and a game where an Ancient Red Dragon is scary, but Barney the Dinosaur is scarier still. Lovecraft to the computer game Doom: It's a game where high-level characters at the lower depths of the dungeon can expect to be challenged by Colours from Outer Space, Star-Spawn of Cthulu, Warriors of the Dawn and rocket-firing Cyberdemons, and where you might end up clearing a room of Uruk-hai one moment before having to kill a pack of Sheriff Lobos the next. The central theme is based around Zelazny's Chronicles of Amber, but the game incorporates elements from everything from H. In this respect it's very much like older versions of D&D. There's no purity of vision involved, unless "let's put in whatever the hell we want" counts as such. The best thing about Zangband is its 'everything including the kitchen sink' approach. (Get hit by a fireball, and your scrolls and spell books might be destroyed by the fire eat the wrong kind of mushroom and you'll see hallucinations throw a potion of sleep at a gang of orcs and it will act like a sleep-causing grenade). But what you won't appreciate until you actually play is just how much is going on, and how realistic and powerful the game engine is. Picture an sign (that's you) moving around a randomly-generated dungeon killing 'o's (orcs) 'T's (Trolls) and 'd's (dragons) and you'll be able to get a rough idea of what game play involves. What distinguishes them from just about any other genre of computer game is a kind of beautiful simplicity which masks great complexity. What are Zangband and ToME? Well, they're Roguelikes: Games in which you take on the role of a character traveling around dungeons killing things and taking treasure. As with people who've never read Viriconium, or who've never seen The Insider, I'm incredibly jealous that you have the chance to come to the games fresh and discover the wonders contained therein, whereas for a jaded old hand like me they no longer hold any surprises. If you've never played any of these games, I truly envy you. (It's about the only game I've never become bored with, in fact - I first started playing it at about 14 and haven't stopped since.) Zangband is now no longer being developed, but it has evolved into Tales of Middle Earth (ToME), which is just as good, anyway. I cited five straight off the bat without really thinking too long it's clear I was being an idiot because I completely left out Zangband, my favourite Angband variant and also my favourite ever computer game. A week or so ago, a meme about gaming influences was floating around.
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