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Description
Originally released in the arcades as a laserdisc game, Dragon's Lair is an interactive cartoon movie. Players control Dirk the Daring as he struggles his way through a dungeon to fight Singe, the Dragon, and rescue the beautiful Princess Daphne. The game consists of animated scenes, during which the player has to press direction buttons or the sword button in the right moment to trigger the next segment of the movie.Screenshots
There are no Windows user screenshots for this game.
There are 117 other screenshots from other versions of this game or official promotional screenshots.
Promo Images
Trailer
Alternate Titles
- "龙穴历险记 " -- Chinese spelling (simplified)
- "Логово дракона: Побег из замка Синджа" -- Russian spelling
- "Dragon's Lair CD-ROM" -- DOS title
Part of the Following Groups
- Don Bluth / Readysoft interactive movies
- Dragon's Lair series and versions
- Fantasy Creatures: Dragons
- Games made into comics
- Video games turned into board / card games
User Reviews
There are no reviews for the Windows release of this game. You can use the links below to write your own review or read reviews for the other platforms of this game.
Critic Reviews
Gamer's Pulse | Aug 27, 2000 | 88 out of 100 | 88 |
PC Games (Germany) | Feb, 1999 | 19 out of 100 | 19 |
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Trivia
1001 Video Games
The Arcade version of Dragon's Lair appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.Board Game
Milton Bradley released a Dragon's Lair boardgame conversion in 1983.Budget
The game is said to have cost approximately $3 million to develop. Animator Don Bluth raised $1.2 million. Rich Dyer, the technology inventor and Cinematronics, the machine's manufacturer and distributor, raised the rest.Cartoon
This game spawned a Saturday morning cartoon. Before commercial breaks, Dirk would be presented with several options, like jumping for a rope, standing and fighting some goons or taking a right down a tunnel. Upon return from the break the T.V. show would inform the viewer of the results of the various actions with the phrase, "If Dirk had done this..." and a clip showing the demise of the poor adventurer if he'd chosen the wrong path.Nipples
If you are one of those that felt funny when watching the ending clips of Dragon's Lair when you were 8-10 yrs old you might be interested in knowing a little known fact about it: Princess Daphne's animations were not only inspired by Playboy magazine pictorials, but showed nipples, as described by Don Bluth himself in the DVD edition of the game. Bluth resorted to extense "documentation" for crafting the character poses, and while animators almost always remove nipples even if their characters have skin-tight clothing, Bluth left them in making an entire generation of videogamers very happy indeed.Ports
Dragon's Lair has been ported to nearly every single console/computer platform under the sun. From the IBM PC to the Amiga...from the NES to the Sega CD...even from the Jaguar CD to DVD players. Coleco Industries was the first to acquire the license for a home port in 1983. They paid $2 million for the home console rights and released the game for the Coleco Adam the following year.Revenue
The game generated more than 117 million dollars in revenue by 2000.Information also contributed by Pseudo_Intellectual, Zovni, Satoshi Kunsai and FatherJack.
Related Web Sites
- TrueAchievements achievement guide (The TrueAchievements achievement guide for Dragon's Lair)
Satoshi Kunsai (2074) added Dragon's Lair (Windows) on Jun 10, 2002
Other platforms contributed by Jeff Sinasac (407), Charly2.0 (251179), Corn Popper (69071), Lain Crowley (6785), Kartanym (12738), firefang9212 (73764), Sciere (696729), Kabushi (252781), Opipeuter (17092), Pseudo_Intellectual (63130), Satoshi Kunsai (2074), Ben K (23897) and LGR (248)
Credits (12 people)
Dragon's Lair Created by:
Digital Leisure Inc.: