Pilgrim: Faith as a Weapon
Description official descriptions
Pilgrim is an adventure game loosely based on Paulo Coelho's novel The Pilgrimage. It is set in Southern France in the year 1208. Summoned to his father's side, the protagonist Simon Lancroix is told that he must obtain a valuable manuscript in a secret room and deliver it only to Petrus, a friend who lives in Toulouse. His pleading hints that this mission might be dangerous, but Simon agrees even though he doesn't understand. Shortly thereafter, his father dies. The interaction begins in the library as you start Simon's adventure.
This is a first person, point and click game with a somewhat unconventional interface. The inventory contains objects which can be used as well as clicked on during conversations. Icons of the people Simon has met or heard about also act as conversation topics when clicked on. The game features an in-game hint system which provides very vague clues to the many puzzles Simon will encounter. A comprehensive encyclopedia is accessible at any time to document and elaborate upon the historical facts of the era and the game itself.
Angels, demons and people from all walks of life will help (or hinder) Simon's progress towards his goals as he travels around France's towns and countryside. Locations are varied with marketplaces, villages, a ruined fortress, gothic churches and, later, fanciful environments. Puzzles include several mechanical problems, helping other characters with objects and information as well as creative environment manipulation.
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Credits (Windows version)
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 65% (based on 16 ratings)
Players
Average score: 2.9 out of 5 (based on 17 ratings with 4 reviews)
I broke both cds to this games! Worst ten bucks i ever spent!
The Good
It was cheap to buy.
The Bad
Everything!
The graphics were terrible! The engine is similiar to myst (Im a fan of 3rd person myself). The people looked like they were made from balloons(Actually , more like the diplomats in Civilisation 2).
The voice acting was Awful! I wanted to hit the main charachter because he sounded like a pansy.
Its just one of those games were finishing the puzzles is no fun. Everytime you finish one annoying puzzle , you are rewarded with a more irratating puzzle.
The Bottom Line
Go buy Kings Quest 5!
Buying this game would be punishing yourself.
Windows · by Shayne Bates (12) · 2001
The Good
A haunting soundtrack, and some really thought-provoking content. Best of all, unlikely to attract the usual collection of halfwits and nerds, since it requires a modicum of original thought.
The Bad
Unable to run in full screen mode and rather dark.
The Bottom Line
Draw the curtains, open a bottle or two, turn out the lights and enjoy the pure atmosphere of it all. Not for the kiddies.
Windows · by The Hog (2) · 2004
Arxel Tribe's first creation .. provocative and entertaining
The Good
Pilgrim takes place just after the Crusades .. the most traumatic, bloody period in the Catholic Church's history. It is a time of superstition and controversy .. a time when church leaders confused politics with religion and zeal with faith .. an age when anyone who spoke out against the Church was put to death as a heretic. Secretive groups formed to fight against the Pope and his minions, the Knights Templar and the Inquisition.
You play Simon de Lancrois whose father, Adalard, was the leader of one such secret Order, "The Tradition". As he dies, Adalard entrusts his son with a sacred manuscript, tells him to travel to Toulouse, France, and deliver it to a man named Petrus. Simon soon learns that the precious scroll could be the last gospel of St. John, and that the Pope's Inquisition members have been dispatched to find it .. at all cost. While at first a naive and insecure young man, gradually Simon grows up as he learns about his destiny and important heritage.
It sounds like there will be fighting .. but there's not. The situations in Pilgrim are pure adventure with no "action" at all. You'll be helping other characters by way of conversations and using inventory objects with people and to solve puzzles.
I played the 2001 re-release of Pilgrim for Windows 95 and was excited that it installed and played great in Windows XP. (So many old games these days don't.) Both of the CD-Roms are necessary for installation and Disc 1 must be inserted each time you start the program. After installing, disc swapping only happens once at a specific point in the story. A handy walkthrough can be found on Disc 1, which I admit needing! In the Windows version, the game screen appears on your desktop as a 640x480 window topped with your standard program bar. Although at first I wasn't particularly fond of the small screen, after awhile it became inconsequential. As an added bonus, while playing the game you can move the whole game screen around and "multi-task" with other programs without problems.
The interface is simple and intuitive. Icons represent picked up objects in your "bag" as well as a separate area for "people" and "items", which are both used during conversations. All of the icons have a title so you know immediately what you picked up. You can access the main menu, the in-game hints, speech and encyclopedia at any time by clicking on the proper words above the iconic inventories. Keywords appear periodically to help you hop to that particular section in the encyclopedia. Saving and loading games is elementary, too, and there seems to be no limit to the number of saved game files. I liked being able to name my saved games, too, even though limited to 8 characters.
The graphics in the game depict the Middle Ages very well, although drawn in a cartoon-like fashion. Homes, markets and churches look realistic enough made of wood and stone, interiors illuminated only by lamps and candles. Characters are puffed up in layers of clothing with the stern faces of those who want to appear pompous and important.
I enjoyed most of the music which seemed to represent the period of time well. Some flutes and lyres as well as violins. Sometimes, though, the music did drown out the voices. The only option is to turn the sound completely on or off (music, sound effects as well as voices). [Sigh] At least the subtitles are always on so you can read along.
There are 2 endings and neither one is considered "bad".
The Bad
Pilgrim is linear to a fault. So much so that it can be a show-stopper. Do something in the wrong order and you may need to restore.
I didn't like the tiny interactive cursor, even though the directional arrows are easy to see. Speaking of direction, sometimes it's difficult to get yourself in just the right position. Some puzzles, for instance, can only be viewed from one angle.
Although you can ignore the encyclopedia for most of the game, you'll need it for a final question and answer trial. And, to me, that was way too much reading.
I hate chess and know very little about it, so playing it in a computer game is just not my thing. Luckily I had saved a game before starting it. Even using a walkthrough, the mechanics of the puzzle itself were weird and hard to use.
The Bottom Line
If you browse through the early adventure titles produced by Arxel Tribe, you'll realize they all have common elements, although their actual storylines are completely different. Consider Faust, Ring: Legend of Nibelungen and The Legend of the Prophet and the Assassin, for instance. All of those games explore the complexities of the human spirit, the depth of the soul, and the sins as well as virtues of man.
Pilgrim is their very first game .. and the underlying meaning in it is very similar to those that followed it. It forces players to think about themselves and their relationship to others. While this game isn't as "emotive" as some of their later releases, I found that I did have inner feelings about some of the content.
This game is entertaining and I would recommend it to all adventure lovers .. especially those of you who like games with history or religious backgrounds. It will take you about a week to finish (even using a walkthrough) and it plays well on computers with operating systems much faster than the one it was created for.
Windows · by Jeanne (75843) · 2005
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
I found a way to run it in fullscreen | Nicholas Parkanyi | Jul 28, 2010 |
install problem | alex grros | Sep 6, 2008 |
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Related Sites +
-
Official Walkthrough
This is the solution provided on the game discs. -
Walkthrough by Crash
written Sept. 1999 -
Walkthrough by MaGtRo
posted on Gameboomers.com (Oct. 3, 2001)
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Andrew Hartnett.
Windows 16-bit added by Jeanne.
Additional contributors: Jeanne, JRK, Tapio.
Game added September 19, 2000. Last modified June 2, 2024.