Lands of Lore III

Lands of Lore III is the third game in the Lands of Lore video game series, a sequel to Lands of Lore: Guardians of Destiny. The game was released after much delay in 1999 by Electronic Arts. The game set uses a first person perspective.

Lands of Lore III
Developer(s)Westwood Studios
Publisher(s)Electronic Arts
Designer(s)Jeff Steven Fillhaber
Programmer(s)Scott K. Bowen
Writer(s)Rick Gush
Composer(s)David Arkenstone
Frank Klepacki
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
Release
  • NA: March 3, 1999
  • EU: June 26, 1999
Genre(s)Role-playing
Mode(s)Single player

Plot

The story takes place some time after Guardians of Destiny, and is based on the adventures of Copper LeGré, the son of Eric and fourth in the line of succession, whose uncle Richard rules the Lands. In the beginning of the game, Copper's father and two half brothers are slain by a dreadful rift hound, and Copper's own soul is torn from his body. As a result, Copper must not only retrieve his soul, but also settle the allegations now leveled against him as he was the only survivor. As the new sole heir to the Kingdom of Gladstone, many believe he orchestrated the whole incident with his father and brothers. Coupled with that is the fact that he is the result of an illicit affair between his father and a Dracoid barmaid—a half-breed heir. He must not only deal with those issues but also seek out answers to help close new rifts that have appeared throughout the Lands.

The story unfolds over many portal worlds in which Copper has to retrieve lost pieces of the Shining Path (which shattered when the Draracle left the Gladstone world). The same Draracle has sent Copper on his quest to save his life and soul as well as to save his home and world.

Gameplay

Set in a first person perspective, the game mechanics work as hack and slash when utilizing melee weapons. It uses many common elements of RPGs such as the guilds the player can join, having both weapons and magic attacks, and several portal worlds. There is an inventory screen, where the player can collect many weapons, armour and other items such as food. The leveling system works whereby using abilities enough will lead to levelling up in the guild that specialises in that particular ability, and higher levels unlock more skills.

Guilds

There are four guilds: a warriors' guild, a magicians' guild, a clerics' guild, and the illegal thieves' guild. Each one has its own set of quests to accomplish throughout the game, a familiar (a creature who accompanies and assists the player throughout the game), and a guild building containing shops, guild masters and sometimes training areas. The avatar, Copper, must join at least one, but has the option to join the others also.

Reception

Lands of Lore III received "mixed or average" reviews by critics.[1][2][3][4][5]

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
CGW[1]
CVG30/100[4]
GamePro[3]
PC Gamer (UK)59%[2]
Computer Games Strategy Plus[5]
gollark: AMD had a terrible architecture for ages and didn't fix it until Zen.
gollark: Intel was sandbagging a lot due to low competition and also got apified by process issues.
gollark: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2105.09938.pdf
gollark: A fun bit is that tasks and the privilege level are entirely orthogonal, and the security level of a thing is basically just what environment and upvalues it has.
gollark: All the background tasks are just Lua coroutines. You simply submit a function to run and a bit of metadata, and it runs them in the event loop.

References

  1. Janicki, P. Stefan (July 1999). "Strike Three". Computer Gaming World (180): 133.
  2. Bennellack, Owain (June 1999). "Criminal". PC Gamer UK (70). Archived from the original on February 14, 2002. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  3. Olafson, Peter (January 1, 2000). "Lands of Lore III". GamePro. Archived from the original on March 4, 2004. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  4. Randell, Kim. "Lands of Lore III". Computer & Video Games. Archived from the original on May 31, 2009. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  5. Altman, John (May 1, 1999). "Lands of Lore III". Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on February 9, 2005. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
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