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Need RPG Reviews
Hi, I'm the editor of the CRPG Book Project (www.crpgbook.wordpress.com), a non-profit, crowd-sourced book on the history of Computer Role-Playing Games being written since 2014.
Our latest release is a 350-pages long e-book, covering almost 200 CRPGs, and it's entirely written by fans, devs, journos, modders, indies and industry personalities like Chris Avellone, Ian Frazier, Warren Spector and former-CGW Scorpia, among others. You can freely download it HERE However, to finish the book we need help from the RPG community. There are still many games - like Akalabeth, Stonekeep, Might & Magic III, Freedom Force, Questron, Evil islands, etc - that needs reviewing (full list HERE). Anyone here willing to help? And sorry if I posted this on the wrong sub-forum. |
Hello, felipepepe.
Actually, I seen your advertisement year or more ago, and tried to wrote you about wrong/non-exact reviews... but never got an answer. I, personally, is not very proficient in English, as I am Russian, but I can try to help you, proven that someone will edit my ramblings. :) Will you? ... Additionally, "Sorry, the file you have requested does not exist." says Google. So no full list. |
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And sure, it would be great to have more help! I can edit, and we have some proofreaders who check things whenever they have time. I've updated the list link, take a look and tell me if there's any unassigned (white) game you could write a review for. :) |
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very polite note
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Dear felipepepe, CRPG Book Project is great project. I like it very much. As many mates know I am not big specialist in RPG area with my poor 70 passed games. The real RPG giants for me are KMonster, Scatty, Capo, SS. Anyway I want to make one very polite note and do not want to offend anyone: 1. Change Return to Antara with Betrayal at Krondor 2. Remove Skyrim :OK: |
I can write something about child of light, might & magic X and deus ex maybe.
But how much text do you need, what kind of review do you need ? |
Capo, there is number of page in list - I believe, it's amount of text required. Book linked above will give you good image of what is required, I think.
felipepepe, I sent you mail with list of corrections and suggestions. I am not very good in _writing_, but I can review some games too. Oh, and M&M10 too (hmm, either I missed it from the list, or it's assigned already?). Oh, and I totally forgot to mention Elminage Gothic. I totally can review this strange Japanese Wizardry clone. :) |
Smiling Spectre, got your e-mails this time, gonna reply them ASAP.
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There isn't a strict style guide, the only "rule" is that someone who never heard about the game before can read the text and understand how it plays and why it's an interesting title. You can add historical context, development trivia, personal experience and anything that helps get the point across. Deus Ex already got reviewed, if you could write 2,500 characters on M&M X that would be great. :) |
Will work on it asap, but it may take some time :OK:
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Looking at the list, I see that Space Rogue isn't assigned. I wrote the review for it on Abandonia, as well as a walkthrough for it on Abandonia and GameFAQs, and have dug into the game files a bit. I should be able to write something about it.
Is the book intended to be a comprehensive compendium of cRPG games? There are plenty of games that don't seem to be included in the list, like Curse of the Azure Bonds. I don't know if you had particular criteria in mind in determining the list of games to be reviewed. |
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We added it to the book ages ago, but looking at it now there's no character creation, no stats, no level up, no party, no skills... Quote:
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So in some ways it's sort of like Star Control 2, or possibly like Elite, or Star Trek 25th anniversary (two other games which I've dabbled in, but not as much). But although you can also upgrade your ship in Elite, that game is more about exploring an expansive universe, rather than Space Rogue where the universe is limited (there are just 9 star systems) and there's a definite central plot. Although Star Trek 25 anniversary had a plot, there wasn't really much about leveling up your ship or improving on it (that I could remember, anyway). So it really depends on where you draw the line at how many elements are needed before a game is considered an RPG. It doesn't have a party system (there is only one character), so it lacks Star Control 2's ability to switch out your "character" (i.e. ship) for a particular fight, for example. It doesn't have a character creation system, i.e. all new games start off the same. But it does have significant upgrades to your "character" (i.e. ship) as you progress throughout the game, and there is very much a central plot with puzzles and rewards for solving them as you talk to the different people you'll encounter throughout the game. |
Yeah, having now spent more time with the game, I'll remove it from the book.
Star Control 2 is a very special game, with more RPG elements, and the review was written by Tim Cain - creator of Fallout and founder of Troika -, talking about why SC2 is an amazing open-world RPG. I stand 100% behind that review. But I cannot in good faith include a Space Rogue review and then not include games like Elite, X, Freelancer, Wing Commander, etc... Your points are valid, but it's too much of a slippery slope. Thanks for the kind offer and debate anyway. :) |
Yeah no problem.
I think part of the difficulty is it was made before we really had more clearly defined genres and requisite characteristics for them, so it doesn't fit as cleanly in or out of a given category. Star Control 2 simply had so many unique plot elements and ways you could go about your character and party (building up your ship, getting allied ships to join you for different "characters" to use in combat, etc.) that it's fine to call it an RPG. It really transcends a variety of defined genres -- I think people who like different genres would all enjoy Star Control 2. Whereas for Space Rogue, it's a relatively simpler game, not as all-encompassing as what we typically think of for RPGs. I typically classify Space Rogue as an Adventure game, sort of like Avalon, where yes even though it has some RPG elements, the variety of plots and subplots, the different directions in which you can approach your character, and the expansiveness of the universe really isn't as great as what you'd think of for an RPG. Yeah in some ways Space Rogue belongs in the same category as Elite and Wing Commander and those games; games like Elite can arguably be considered more RPG-like than Space Rogue in that you have more ways to customize your "character" (i.e. you can pilot different types of ships). Elite has always seemed to me more like an open-world type of game though rather than one that focuses (gradually) on a central plot. |
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What about Space Rangers, BTW? Are they in the list? (I cannot remember it there). |
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