The Guild of Thieves

The Guild of Thieves is an interactive fiction game by Magnetic Scrolls first published by Rainbird in 1987. The game takes place in Kerovnia like the previous game The Pawn.

Start of the Amiga version
You may be looking for Thieves' Guild.
The Guild of Thieves
ZX Spectrum cover art
Developer(s)Magnetic Scrolls
Publisher(s)Rainbird Software
Designer(s)Rob Steggles
Platform(s)Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Amstrad PCW, Apple II, Archimedes, Atari ST, Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, Macintosh, ZX Spectrum[1]
Release1987
Genre(s)Interactive fiction
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay

The player's character is "an aspiring member of the infamous Guild of Thieves" and is to steal all the valuables that can be found in and around an island castle. The game features "extremely atmospheric"[2] descriptions and 30 artistic renditions of key locations. Included in the game package are a faux newsletter of the Guild of Thieves titled What Burglar providing instructions and hints for the game, a Bank of Kerovnia Trading Account Card, a guild contract detailing the arrangement between the player's character and the Guild of Thieves and small dice.

Reception

Reception
Review score
PublicationScore
Crash90%[2]

The game was voted Best Adventure Game Of The Year at the Golden Joystick Awards.[3]

Dragon complimented the game, calling it an "exciting sequel" to The Pawn, citing its "witty dialogue, outstanding graphics, wry humor, and challenging puzzles".[4] Computer Gaming World in 1988 approved of the game's sophisticated parser, British humor, and high-quality graphics. It concluded, "the game must be highly recommended and it is tough ... it compares well with the best of Infocom".[5] The magazine's Charles Ardai in 1992 called its puzzles "pretty good, requiring a certain amount of ingenuity ... None are particularly memorable, though. The game is good, but lacks the sparks of innovation that would elevate it above the level of dozens of similar games".[6]

Antic stated "The outstanding graphics of The Pawn are matched by those in Guild of Thieves. High-resolution pictures transport you into a medieval world of thieves, castles and treasure. The only complaint I have about the Atari XE/XL version is that most of the detailed graphics had only shades of one or two colors."[7]

Legacy

The game was re-released in 1992 as part of the Magnetic Scrolls Collection.[6] The new version had an updated UI and came with an art poster depicting the island.

In June 2017 Magnetic Scrolls successfully recovered the source code of The Guild of Thieves (and other games) to remaster and re-release them.[8][9] In December 2017 the remastered and enhanced edition of the game was published.[10]

gollark: It's not user-unfriendly. The users are just bad.
gollark: By the way,> You agree that your mind, thoughts, soul and other distinguishing characteristics may be repurposed/utilized at any time for the training of GPT-██ or other artificial intelligences at the discretion of the PotatOS Advanced Projects team.(PotatOS privacy policy)
gollark: [POTAT-O5 CLEARANCE REQUIRED]
gollark: Maybe he thinks it's related to GPT. It's not.
gollark: Pjals is presumably just printing GPG output randomly.

References

  1. Meier, Stefan. "Magnetic Scrolls Fact Sheet". Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  2. "Adventure Trail", CRASH, Newsfield Publications (51): 42–43, April 1988 Alt URL
  3. "Golden Joystick Awards 1988". Computer and Video Games. Future Publishing (79): 39. May 1988.
  4. Lesser, Hartley; Lesser, Patricia; Lesser, Kirk (November 1987). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (127): 74–80.
  5. Roberts, Alan (February 1988). "Guild of Thieves". Computer Gaming World. p. 38. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  6. Ardai, Charles (November 1992). "Virgin Software's Magnetic Scrolls Collection". Computer Gaming World. pp. 64–64. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  7. Manor, John (May 1988). "Product Reviews". Antic. Vol. 7 no. 1.
  8. Dev rescues '80s text adventure source code by baking tapes in an oven on Gamasutra.com by Alex Wawro (June 28, 2017)
  9. Magnetic Scrolls Original Games Source Code Recovered! on strandgames.com (June 19, 2017)
  10. "The Guild of Thieves by Magnetic Scrolls Restored". strandgames.com. Retrieved 2017-12-23.
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