Quest for Glory V: Dragon Fire

aka: Hero's Quest 5: Dragon Fire, QFG5, Quest for Glory 5: Drachenfeuer, Quest for Glory V: Fogo do Dragão, Quest for Glory V: Le Souffle du Dragon, 영웅의 길 V: 용의 불꽃
Moby ID: 174
Macintosh Specs

Description official descriptions

After having survived the dangers he encountered on his previous journey, the hero travels with the wizard Erasmus to a Greece-like country called Silmaria. Its king was recently murdered, and, according to the land's traditions, the crown will be given to the one who passes a contest known as the Rites of Rulership. The hero enters the contest, aided by Erasmus, Rakeesh, and other old friends. However, as the competition progresses, contestants are being systematically killed by an unknown assassin. All the victims are murdered near the Dragon Pillars, which keep the Dragon of Silmaria in captivity. The hero must investigate the crimes and save Silmaria from a grave danger.

Dragon Fire is the final game in the Quest for Glory series. Like the previous games in the series, Dragon Fire is a hybrid between puzzle-solving adventure and role-playing game. The player talks to the world's inhabitants, gathering clues and items necessary to acquire in order to complete the quests and advance the story. Unlike all its predecessors, Dragon Fire has no separate battle screens; the action-based battles take place on the exploration screen, utilizing a simple point-and-click interface, similarly to Diablo. The game has heavier weapon and armor management than other Quest for Glory games, strengthening the RPG angle.

Many quests are optional or can be completed in different ways. The hero can also marry one of the several major female characters in the game, provided the player does the right thing to impress the girl.

Spellings

  • Quest for Glory V: אש הדרקון - Hebrew spelling
  • 英雄傳奇5:火龍試煉 - Traditional Chinese spelling

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Credits (Windows version)

166 People (142 developers, 24 thanks) · View all

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Designer
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Character Design
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[ full credits ]

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 77% (based on 35 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.8 out of 5 (based on 68 ratings with 7 reviews)

A great end to the series

The Good
The big jump in graphics from Quest for glory 4 to Quest for glory 5 were quite astounding if you ask me. And the music in this game was the best I have ever heard. I could have been walking around the main city of Silmaria and the music would be sending tingles down my spine the whole time. Also the fact that if you enjoy the thieving aspect of games, this game actually gives the feeling that when you are breaking into a house, you are actually going to get in trouble if you are caught unlike in Baldur's gate where you could pick a lock and walk in the front door and the owner of the house would greet you and let you be off to your looting. And the scenery looks great for a game of its time anyway especially the city scape. So even though I have had to defend this game from criticism many times it is definitely a worthy end to the Quest for glory series.

The Bad
The same as all other Quest for glory games, the combat system could do with alot of work so it could be more than just the 'hack and slash' routine, a factor that has brought other games down on countless occasions. But apart from that I think it is a great game and well worth the time of any RPG or QFG fan.

The Bottom Line
As i've said, if you enjoyed the previous QFG's or you are a RPG fan then this game is a must.

Windows · by Horny-Bullant (49) · 2003

So you want to be a hero … again?

The Good
Sierra’s Quest For Glory series is the closest some adventure players ever want to get to the role-playing genre. In all of the QFG games, adventurers can experience the exploration, conversations and puzzle solving they’re accustomed to as well as get a taste of some of the basic elements of role-playing games - combat, stealth and spellcasting. Essential activities include resting, eating and collecting money, armour, weapons and spells. Choose to play as one of three character classes (Fighter, Thief, Magic User or Paladin), and skills improve with practice. You can also choose from several combat difficulty settings for your level of skill.

In this 5th installment of the series, your character will find a large group of quests to complete during the Rites of Rulership, which could earn him the title of “king”, should he desire to accept it. During those quests, he’ll be fighting, numerous soldiers and woodland animals, skeletons and other undead in Hades, a multi-headed Hydra, as well as the deadly Dragon, to name a few. To solve the multitude of puzzles, he’ll find himself collecting feathers from the illusive Pegusus mountain, assembling parts of a flying machine, collecting plants to heal a friend, as well as swimming underwater.

I loved the sprinkling of romance that Sierra added into the picture so the future king could have a queen. There are four lovely women in the game and one is the perfect match for each of the character types. You just have to figure out which one to woe, stay attentive and faithful (as your chosen one could become jealous) and she will be yours.

The most noticeable difference between Dragon Fire and the previous games is the modernized interface. Fighting and spellcasting have been made much easier with the newer point-and-click interface. The graphics are beautifully rendered in 3D, although they loaded more slowly than expected sometimes. (I blamed this on my graphics card.) The music is wonderfully appealing and atmospheric with appropriate sound effects added in for realism.

I was pleased to see that there was more for my thief to do in this game than the earlier games. Honing you thief’s acrobatic skills makes it possible to perform true martial arts techniques in combat! They even devised a specialized quest so you can become “Chief Thief” involving more sleuthful sneaking and pilfering than ever before. You can even rob a bank! Picking specially locked treasure chests is quite a challenge in this game, too, no matter what character class you have chosen.

I also thoroughly enjoyed the evolving story and the puzzles, which were in keeping with the series and Sierra adventure games as a whole. The endings are different for each character class, too, giving the game even more replay value.

You can import your character from previous Quest for Glory games, but I found that this tends to confuse the game. For instance, if your fighter knows magic, some of the non-player characters may ask him strange questions about your other ability. I think picking a “pure” character type is the best way to play this game.

The Bad
Graphics glitches (mentioned briefly above) were my biggest problem, some of which were cured by applying the patch. But even with that done, the final dragon conflict was so graphically intense that my system slowed to a crawl. Otherwise I loved everything else about the game.

The Bottom Line
If you have been afraid to try a true role-playing game, this will give you a tiny taste of what they are like without sacrificing the wonderful adventure elements you are used to. The story is interesting and unfolds gradually as the game goes along. Puzzles are in keeping with Sierra’s adventures and similar to the other games in the Quest For Glory series as a whole. All in all a great adventure and “role-playing want-to-be”, I highly recommend it.

Windows · by Jeanne (75962) · 2001

The GOD of RPG's

The Good
It had the best interface, it had different classes to play as the charecter that best fits your personality. You could do things above and beyond the game. If you felt like it you could slaughter the town, which didn't need to be programed but sierra online had to much time on thir hands. There was an in depth plot, kind of contrived but certainly surpasses all vedio game standards. It had great graphics, and 3d charecters. It also wasn't to serious while throwing corny jokes everywhere. It also was realistic, where there are quests that you don't have to do, including get married!

The Bad
510 mb (pre-compressed) minimal installation

The Bottom Line
I have had this game for four years, and i am still having fun with it.

Windows · by Nicholas B (2) · 2002

[ View all 7 player reviews ]

Trivia

Lori and Corey Cole, after leaving Sierra, started the new company TranSolar Games. They attempted to buy the rights for Quest For Glory from Sierra to continue the series, but Sierra refused.

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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Eurythmic.

Macintosh added by Cantillon.

Additional contributors: Rebound Boy, Indra was here, Jeanne, Shoddyan, chirinea, jlebel, Crawly, Paulus18950, lee jun ho, Dudujones.

Game added July 20, 1999. Last modified January 23, 2024.