Heroes of the Lance
Description official descriptions
Based on the later parts of the Dragonlance book Dragons of Autumn Twilight, the heroes descend into a ruined city in search of the disks of Mishakal.
The gameplay consists of horizontal fighting with a maze like map using doors to change the view. The party consists of the 8 Heroes of the Lance, using one at a time and the player can switch between them at any time. Each character has different types of attacks and spells making them more suited to fighting different enemies as well as acting as lives.
One of the AD&D games that takes a break from the usual RPG style.
Spellings
- ヒーロー・オブ・ランス - Japanese spelling
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Credits (Atari ST version)
14 People
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 63% (based on 32 ratings)
Players
Average score: 2.8 out of 5 (based on 80 ratings with 2 reviews)
Hand to hand combat with a dragon? Uh...it's your funeral
The Good
Another surprise approach, in bringing a side-scroll action game for the heroes of krynn. Unlike other similiar games, in this game you can change your characters anytime you want. It's basically a seven in one character game.
For instance if there's a barrier between you and your enemy, where you can't reach him in melee combat. Switch to your other characters that have ranged attacks, like Riverwind the Ranger or his brother Raistlin the Magi, after wasting the poor chap, change again to other character, etc.
Well, it's a kinda well balanced game since different characters have different traits, so there is some level of strategy in defeating the enemy.
Oh, did I mention there are baby dragons? They fight like hell, imagine fighting their parents...
The Bad
What you can't save the game? What do you mean you can't save the game?
This was probably the main reason I stopped playing this game (that and the building sized dragon you just can't seem to defeat...sigh).
There is no save menu in this game, like most games in that period of time, so when you meet mister nice dragon and turn to ash, you have start all over again...
And that was probably only level one....sigh.
The Bottom Line
Dragons...dragons...everywhere dragons...yikes.
DOS · by Indra was here (20752) · 2004
The Good
Perhaps the only feature to appreciate about AD&D: Heroes of the Lance is that you have 8 characters that you can easily alternate between. This is essential because it is so hard to control characters in the first place and they have the worst time staying alive.
The Bad
There is very little to like about this game. This is the type of game that uses the same maddeningly repetitive graphics to illustrate each and every level so that it is absolutely impossible to differentiate one hallway from another. You are supposed to be working your way through a big maze. But I think it was one of those mazes where if you take door A -> door B, door B does not necessarily lead back to door A. Forget about trying to map this place.
The Bottom Line
There is not much to describe-- all I can advise is "Save Yourself!" because it is too late for me. This was the first of 4 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons games for the NES and it made me want to stay away from anything with the AD&D label on it.
NES · by Multimedia Mike (20664) · 2005
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
Any logical reason to keep the RPG genre here? | Alaka (106427) | Oct 28, 2012 |
Trivia
Cover art
The game box's cover features a painting by artist Jeff Easley, also used as the front cover to Richard A. Knaak's 1988 Dragonlance novel The Legend of Huma.
Title screen
The title screen is an adaptation of a painting by Clyde Caldwell, earlier the cover to Tracy Hickman's 1984 RPG module Dragons of Despair.
Awards
- Electronic Gaming Monthly
- December 1989 (Issue 5) - Best RPG (Forecasting the 1990 Award Winners) (tied with Phantasy Star II)
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Fafnir.
ZX Spectrum added by JRK. Sharp X1 added by Infernos. Amiga added by p-kun. Commodore 64 added by Rebound Boy. SEGA Master System added by Sciere. Amstrad CPC, MSX added by Martin Smith. PC-98, PC-88, FM Towns added by Terok Nor. NES added by Unicorn Lynx. Atari ST added by Belboz.
Additional contributors: Indra was here, Shoddyan, Alaka, Pseudo_Intellectual, Patrick Bregger, Rik Hideto, ZeTomes.
Game added April 4, 2001. Last modified March 27, 2024.