Pages

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Dark Sun: Desert Power

 
It's a dry heat.
 
In the last session, the party learned about a mysterious figure named Dagolar who created the Tari and the skulls that housed the Tari ancestors. We learned that to get into his domain, we would need to use the Staff of Parting in the northeast corner of the dungeon. We did that, which drained the water there and allowed us to access a new part of the sewers.
   
I think Dagolar's area was entirely optional--nothing that happened there was required for us to leave the sewers and continue the main quest. It was fun anyway. Despite his relatively benign act of creating the Tari, Dagolar was a corrupt, twisted mage whose domain was full of pain, torture, and horrendous experiments. A particular creation called "Dagolar's Slimes" patrolled the corridors. They hit hard, cast "Web," and had damaging psionics. Although the manual claims they have "nil" magic resistance, clearly that wasn't true because none of my spells seemed to affect them. Human guards, zombies, and shadows--which could only be damaged by magic weapons and spells--were the other primary enemies.
   
There's something I don't quite understand about combat. Sometimes when you encounter an enemy, the game immediately goes into combat mode. Other times, it remains in normal mode until the enemy reaches you. During those times, if you time it perfectly, you can "attack" them from regular mode and do some damage--sometimes killing them--before combat even begins. Other times, you can walk right up to enemies who seem to remain ignorant of your presence (even if you have no stealth or invisibility active) and initiate combat by, again, attacking them from outside combat, and often killing them immediately. It's a nice bonus when either of the latter things happens, but I don't quite understand the variances.
    
The Master of the Water Gate encourages us to kill some guards.
        
After we fought a few slimes, we opened a door and ran into a talking rat, Master of the Water Gate. Eager to escape his slavery, he offered to help us kill Dagolar. I don't think he was a Tari. He helped us in the next few combats and had some commentary about the things we saw in each of the rooms we explored. He told us that to pass through something called the Door of Eyes, each character would need to be wearing a special necklace. We got them by killing a few guards.
    
On the other side of the Door of Eyes, we ran into Keldar, who the rat told us was Dagolar's second-in-command. "He is insane!" Keldar did seem to be a little off. He insisted on writing our names in a book and then asked how we wanted to die. When we insisted that we didn't want to die, he teleported out of the room and left us to kill a bunch of slimes, zombies, and shadows. This happened a second time in a later room. Unfortunately, the Master of the Water Gate was killed in the first of these combats and never got to experience his freedom.
     
Keldar had a screw loose.
      
Every room had evidence of Dagolar's crimes. Skeletons were everywhere (some with minor treasures), along with iron maidens, racks, and other instruments of torture. One room had statues of people fused together in grotesque masses. They cried out in pain saying that Dagolar had sentenced them to torture until the end of time. I couldn't seem to do anything for them, not even after Dagolar was dead.
   
We found a room full of bottles of "Dagolar's powder" and a vat for mixing them. Mixing one bottle produced a zombie that joined our party. A second bottle caused Violencia to drop all her inventory. A third teleported us to another part of the dungeon. We stopped after that.
    
There were several contraptions like this where I couldn't find anything to do, but I wonder if there was something to do just the same.
    
One chamber was marked with a plaque that read: "Goburnix, my only mistake." Goburnix was Dagolar's brother; we had found his journal in the Tari warrens, outlining his quest to find Dagolar and stop his abominations. He had apparently failed, as the room contained the living husk of Goburnix, a zombie barely capable of thought or speech. But he was non-hostile, and with gestures and slurred words, he indicated that he wanted to come with us to find Dagolar. A scroll on his person was written from Dagolar to Goburnix, apologizing for what he had done, asking forgiveness, and promising to face Goburnix again when he'd built up the courage.
        
As usual, the party had "evil" (or at least impatient) options.
          
Dagolar's chambers were beyond an archway of fire, but Goburnix walked through and activated the pressure plate that allowed us to pass safely.
     
We encountered Dagolar in the northwest section of the dungeon. He was appalled to see Goburnix with us, and even more appalled when Goburnix started approaching his brother, his arms open wide for a hug. Before Goburnix could reach his brother, Dagolar blasted him to ash. He started ranting at the party for involving Goburnix. Keldar, also in the room, objected by reminding Dagolar that, "it was only a rotten corpse." Dagolar responded by blasting Keldar to ash, too. (I assume that if I hadn't picked up Goburnix, the battle would have been harder with Keldar's involvement.) Dagolar then summoned 10 slimes and attacked us.
         
This was a bit heartbreaking.
          
Yester, my preserver, had achieved "Fireball" (of course it was the first Level 3 spell I selected) a few combats ago, and the room was laid out perfectly for it. Practically quivering with glee, I called it up and cast it:
     
My first use of "Fireball" was a dud.
         
Well. That was disappointing. The slimes are apparently immune to "Fireball." Only Dagolar was injured. That was enough, though. Unable to cast spells his first round, he unwisely chose to charge us in melee combat, and Sunstroke pounded him to goo. Rather than face the 10 slimes in open combat, we retreated down the corridor to another room and dealt with them one at a time as they came around the corner. "Prayer," "Bless," "Barkskin," and "Aid" all helped.
    
Sometimes, I could kill them without even entering combat.
     
When we were done, we looted Dagolar's corpse and the rest of the area. Dagolar had a "Living Cloak" that keeps "Intertial Barrier" going constantly, which halves damage from certain attacks. He had a wand that casts "Control Body" and a +3 dagger. There were plenty of gems, rings, and piles of coin, too.
     
I love how clear the game is as to the capabilities of the various objects you find.
       
There were lots of empty rooms in the southwest part of the dungeon, and I suspect that if I'd adopted a different exploration pattern, I would have encountered things in these rooms before killing Dagolar. I wonder what would have happened if I'd reached him with the Master of the Water Gate or if I'd not picked up Goburnix. I'll have to remember to look these alternate paths up in a cluebook later. Until then, suffice to say that I love that the game gives so many potential options for these encounters, in both a macro sense (the order that you explore the map, big decisions) and a micro sense (dialogue and encounter options).
      
The party finally breathes fresh air.
       
We returned to the warrens and took another exit, emerging from the sewers into the sunshine at last. For a game set on an apocalyptic wasteland, Dark Sun has sure taken its time actually exposing us to that wasteland. In fact, it would continue to take longer, as we emerged into relatively lush fields of wheat and other crops, tended by a bunch of nameless serfs "too old to fight in the pits and too weak to help with the pyramid." They told us we were in the fields outside Draj. They warned us that the perimeter is patrolled by guards--increasing numbers lately, as the sorcerer-king seems to be preparing some major campaign. There are vicious beasts in the wilderness outside, even if we could get past the guards. When asked for help, they directed us to "Old One-Eye."
   
Although we were outdoors, we couldn't just walk across the fields. Mounds and canals kept us to fixed paths, much like dungeon corridors. The outdoors was really just a dungeon with outdoor textures.
    
We tangled with a few (easy) guards as we looked around for Old One Eye. We eventually found him in the center of the map. He told us there are two ways out of the area: kill the guards or knock down a weak spot in the eastern part of the bone wall. We chose the second, and he led us to the location, asking us to "come back and destroy this blasted city." He also gave us a scroll of "Armor."
        
The party attracts some attention destroying the fence.
    
We managed to bash down the wall just fine, but we had made such short work of the guards that I figured we might as well clear them out of the area. Also, I hadn't really explored everything. I'm glad I took the time, because on the west side of the map, I found my first "shop"--a serf selling magical crops. He had pears capable of "Cure Light Wounds," grapes of "Bless," lemons that restored psionic points, "Barkskin" corn, and grapes of "Neutralize Poison." Moreover, he bought all the extra junk I'd been lugging around. I sold him everything I could spare and bought a healing pear. I wouldn't mind if the interface had offered an easier option than clicking on each item and then dragging it over to the "sell" button.
      
The manual said water was more valuable than gold, but this guy will only give me one coin for a pot of it.
    
Elsewhere, a serf wanted us to agree to let him follow us out in exchange for a gem that someone had stolen from an obelisk in the area. We agreed. The game let us put the gem back in the obelisk, but I'm not sure what it accomplished, if anything. Maybe we're just meant to sell the gem.
   
After we'd wiped out the guards, we took the north exit. The serf bid us farewell and said he could handle the wilderness, but his methods were too technical for us "barbarians." He was then immediately eaten by a bulette (I guess that bulette had a buffet!) that we had to kill.
 
Just outside the exit, we found a body with a scroll on it. The scroll's message had been written by someone in the palace named Rajak. The message warned that the armies amassing in Draj are "not for some far away campaign," but rather to destroy the free villages in the area. Rajak begs the recipient to flee, as "I see no band of 'heroes' that will come and save us from the might of Draj's army." This apparently refers to a prophecy from a "visionary." 
     
This is the desert map I was expecting!
      
An old man immediately wandered over after we'd read the scroll.  He introduced himself as Egrus. He had read the message, too, and said that the carrier had been bound for the village of Teaquetzl to the north. He suggested that we forget we read the scroll, as nothing can stop the sorcerer-king's armies. We told him we would, but that would give us nothing to do for the rest of the game.
   
We wandered north, fought a couple of easy enemies called "sand howlers," and met a lizardwoman named Laussa, "of the Grey Isles tribe." (The "isles" are boulders poking out of the sand.) She had left her tribe after some human merchants engineered a coup that left the former leader, Laussa's lover, dead. Laussa is seeking a new tribe, away from humans. I couldn't find any way to help her, and she kept referring to us as "prey," so I left via an eastern exit into a red-tinged area. I had frankly expected a world map to pop up once we were outside, but instead there seems to be a series of interconnected maps.
   
The red area was sparsely populated. In the southeast corner, I met an "animal trainer supreme" named Demothi. He was in the process of domesticating a large mastyrial, which is basically a giant scorpion. He had named it "Alita," intending to sell it to a tribe in "The Hinterlands." We had a dialogue option to ask to buy the beast, but Demothi wanted refined salt for it, and of course we didn't have any.
     
No idea what these are about.
     
As we walked away, an old man named Algernon approached, fawning over us for having escaped the Arena. He said that we must be "from the Veiled Alliance." When we protested that we'd never heard of the organization, he chuckled, assuming we were just keeping their secrets. He had something to say about each of the magic items we had collected. He "donated" two items to us as we left: a wand that can detect metal, and a gem for an obelisk in the area. As before, it fit into the obelisk's hole, but I still don't know what these things are for.
   
An elf named Notaku had set up a laboratory on the central mesa in the region, selling spell components for mages. He offered us 500 gold pieces to carry a bag of "ranike pith" to Father Garyn in Teaquetzl. He also said he'd buy any sand howler eyes and fire eel tongues that we found. Teaquetzl is reportedly one square west and one square north. 
          
Notaku's sweet setup.
       
We should have headed directly there, but the inscrutable exhortations of our souls drove us south instead, to another region of red sands. Shortly after we arrived, we ran into a group of "magera"--basically the orcs of this setting--escorting human prisoners to slavery. After a failed initial attempt to kill them without much preparation (they hit hard), we reloaded, buffed, and tried again. We used the old "catch 'em in a 'Grease' trap and fill them with arrows" trick and managed to kill the party. 
     
A tried-and-true tactic.
        
The rescued slaves told us that the rest of their party was nearby, "with no supplies or defense!" We escorted the group back to their destroyed wagon but got trapped in a circle of NPCs--I couldn't find any way to get them to move out of the way--and I had to reload.
        
You have to get out of the way!
       
After we defeated the second group of magera, the grateful humans gave us a magic +1 bone hornblade. We had the option to tell them "I'm allying against Draj's army," which was news to us. They said they'd join us and asked where we should all meet. We responded Teaquetzl. I think I was supposed to visit Teaquetzl first. The game has so far been better about not allowing such plot developments outside of our exploration order.
   
As we crossed a bridge in this area, the game alerted us to a "corridor" beneath us. If we had a rope, it said, we could lower ourselves down. I didn't have a rope, so I left the area to the west, which took us back to the farmland and the bone gate we'd previously smashed. We headed back north, defeated a pack of wild muls led by a couple of defilers, rested at Egrus's camp, and continued on. We fought some more sand howlers, this time taking care to grab their eyes. Another north exit, we were in the town of Teaquetzl.
       
Good thing we crossed the bridge!
       
A guard posted at the entrance demanded our business; we said we were there to see Father Garyn, but there were other options that probably would have gotten us in. The guard said we should talk to Chahl, their leader and founder of the village. The guard let on that the town was more prosperous than most of the free desert villages because of a well that has never gone dry. He also told us about a crazed halfling called "the visionary" who's ranting about something.
 
In the council chambers, Chahl immediately welcomed us as the prophesied heroes (the Visionary had apparently drawn them a picture). He and Kwerin, the chief lieutenant, said that we're supposed to save them from an army coming from Draj. Chahl thinks the solution is joining with the other gladiator villages while Kwerin thinks Teaquetzl should try to stand alone. Ignoring some more obnoxious dialogue options ("I have no wish to help you," etc.), we agreed to do our best. Chahl, overjoyed, assigned us a house (with "gifts") to the southeast. He suggested we visit the other villages while his people collected intelligence on Draj.
      
The party acquires the main quest.
        
I'll cover more about Teaquetzl next time. A few miscellaneous notes until then:
   
  • I haven't mentioned in previous entries that the game offers two methods of seeing the party while in exploration mode. In the default, the party is represented by only one of the four characters. You can switch among them with the number keys. But hit the 5 key, and all four party members appear, like they do in combat. Exploring in this mode reminds me strongly of Ultima VI, and I wonder if the developers weren't a little bit influenced by that game.
          
Exploring Dagolar's place in "group" mode.
         
  • I'm having some significant pathfinding issues in combat. I'll click on an enemy so a character will walk over and attack him, but the character will turn and walk in the opposite direction. Apparently, he can't find a direct path so he figures he'll circle the entire dungeon and come at the enemy from the rear. This happens even when there's a fairly obvious direct path.
  • Chahl is said to have escaped from the fighting pits in "Nibenay." I can only imagine that Bethesda took the name of the region of Tamriel from this setting.
  • The manual says that gladiators reach Level 8 at 150,000 experience points, but the character sheet for Violencia says that she'll hit the level at 125,000.
  • As I close, Violencia is a Level 7 gladiator (out of 9). I had originally planned to dual her to a preserver or psionicist at Level 8, but I think maybe I'll just max her as a gladiator after all. That requires 300,000 experience points, and she's only earned 98,266 so far, so it's not exactly close. Sunstroke is a Level 6/6 fighter/cleric. Featherweight is a Level 6/7 ranger/thief. Yester is a Level 6/7 preserver/druid. 
     
I'm still having a great time with the game. It's fast and fun with great encounters and combats. This would be a great game to replay on a higher difficulty level, once I have a good sense of the new enemies, spells, and combat rules. 
   
As I mentioned in my Pool of Radiance entry, though, I think I still find Gold Box combat marginally better. That might still change as I get more expertise with Dark Sun's, but for now I feel that Sun has perspective issues (e.g., characters or monsters hidden behind other characters or monsters), pathfinding issues, and ambiguities that the Gold Box mercifully lacked. On the other hand, Dark Sun is a clear winner in its game world, character creation, NPCs, and quest design. Right now, I'm thinking it's possible that we're going to end this with a new "top game."
   
Time so far: 14 hours
      

59 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. I'm not sure how to explain the spells he cast at me, the way he summoned slimes, or how he managed to torture people by fusing them into stone.

      Delete
    2. Given that this is Dark Sun, he's probably a psion - and as mentioned in earlier comments, a mage and a psion get the exact same results using slightly different mechanics, so this isn't much of a difference anyway.

      Delete
    3. Come to think of it, fusing people together into some suffering monstrosity might be easier accomplished by psionic of "psi-metabolism" school than a mage? At least, at a lower level. Since psi-metabolists are already changing their bodies Tsimisze-style, changing its physical strength, healing or hurting it, etcetera...

      Delete
    4. A psion is a mage as far as I'm concerned. He's not a defiler or preserver, but he's a mage.

      Delete
  2. >One room had statues of people fused together in grotesque masses. They cried out in pain saying that Dagolar had sentenced them to torture until the end of time. I couldn't seem to do anything for them, not even after Dagolar was dead.

    This is one of the things that i remembered from the first time i played this game (twenty years ago or so).

    Those poor bastards got stuck in my head.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Reading about Dagolar and his experiments immediately made me think of Jon Irenicus' dungeon...

      Delete
  3. That gatemaster seems to know a lot about the dungeon.

    Dagolar's dungeon has no fireplace and no way out other than killing Dagolar. In my first game I got stuck there when I entered with a weakened party and saved after the gate closed behind me. I guess a better player would have managed to beat him anyway, but I couldn't.

    As for the obelisks, despite knowing what they are for, I never figured out how to use them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. IIRC, I got stuck in Dagolar's laboratory as well in at least one playthrough.

      Honestly, this makes me want to play Darksun again, as it's been probably a decade and a half since I loaded it up, but I'm in the middle of a modded Might and Magic 3 run (Ludmeister's mod), and I already don't have time to sleep. Maybe when I get to my vacation time I can get to it.

      Delete
  4. If I remember correctly, you'll be very thankful later in the game that you placed those gems. It has been nearly 30 years.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Also, based on your title, you've been out to see the new Dune film. Thoughts?

      Delete
    2. I was tempted to spoil him on the monolith gems but I think he isn't in too much danger of missing the in-game explanation.

      Delete
    3. Nah, I haven't see it. I just knew that it was out. Honestly, Dune does nothing for me.I don't know why--it's got some pretty cool lines.

      Delete
    4. Same here. Couldn't read it, couldn't watch it.

      Really enjoy this song though, which samples the movie pretty heavily. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ni7YY7_GFs4

      Doubt Chet will like it - I think one of the areas we don't overlap a ton is musically! One day I'll understand Jazz.

      Delete
  5. That scroll you picked up from the corpse right after your escape is the one I mentioned in an earlier comment. If you never pick it up it can screw up the endgame.

    But you did pick it up and read it, so the game's worst bug has been successfully avoided!

    ReplyDelete
  6. There's a lot to do and a lot of freedom now that you're out in the open. While level scaling is contentious among RPG players, I think Dark Sun could have benefited from it to keep the challenge consistent. As is, the difficulty will generally curve downward as your party gets stronger, then shoot up again for the endgame.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They should just have increased the challenge of some midgame encounters. I generally dislike level scaling, and I don't think it's the solution for Dark Sun's difficulty balance issues.

      The problem here stems from most midgame encounters being of a similar level range, and you reach a point at which you outclass them all. But then the endgame has a HUGE difficulty spike.

      The obvious solution is to add more encounters to the mid-lategame that range in difficulty between the extant midgame encounters and the final battle.

      Delete
    2. If the issue is that most of the game's encounters can be beaten by a, say, level 6 party but then the endgame is difficult for a level 9 party, you don't need level scaling to fix it.

      You just have to add more 7th and 8th level encounters.

      Delete
  7. Don't dual class the Gladiator until at least level 15'ish. They get Weapon Specialization with all weapons so maxing the number of attacks they get (10/round hastened) will do way more than having another spellcaster

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But IIRC Dark Sun's level cap is lower than 15. Unless you export your party to the sequel.

      Delete
    2. He pretty much always does doesn't he? But yeah 9th or so I think in this one

      Delete
    3. The sequel has a level cap of 15. There is no third game. I think you'd be fine in dualclassing the gladiator whenever you like.

      Delete
    4. I like the idea of a high-level character of just one class. I hate the idea of maxing character development halfway through the game. We'll see what passion drives me in this case.

      Delete
  8. AlphabeticalAnonymousOctober 30, 2021 at 8:24 PM

    Seems like an enjoyable game - I'm certainly finding the writeups to be entertaining.

    Also: I recently started playing Ambermoon, the 1993 sequel to the Amberstar reviewed here last year. I'm having a good time with it but seem to have reached the point where I'm stuck on the starting island. If anyone had any light hints on how to leave it - or how to enter the Thieves Guild - or how to find Anthony - I'd be grateful. Regardless, more than ever I'm now looking forward to seeing this game reviewed in the next year or two.

    Also also: unless there are any hidden, unindexed posts then I think I've finally read them all and caught up to 'real time.' What a ride!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hardly a spoiler but still ROT13 to be safe:

      VVEP Nagubal fubhyq whfg or va gur puncry va Fcnaaraoret naq gur guvrirf thvyq erdhverf n cnffjbeq gung lbh trg sebz n dhrfg. Vs lbh unira'g svavfurq gur fjnzc srire dhrfg, lbh'er abg ernql gb yrnir gur fgnegvat vfynaq.

      Delete
    2. AlphabeticalAnonymousNovember 1, 2021 at 12:12 AM

      Buck: thanks, that did the trick.

      V unqa'g ernyvmrq gung gur erdhverq fgrcf jrer svefg guvrirf, gura tenaqcn'f pryyne, gura Nagubal svanyyl zngrevnyvmrf, gura ivfvg gur fjnzc, gura fjvz gb Oheaivyyr Vfynaq -- n zhpu zber fgevpgyl yvarne cngu guna V unq rkcrpgrq. Gur frpbaq vfynaq vf n fhofgnagvny fgrc hc va qvssvphygl: V unq gubhtug gur rpbabzl jnf zvyqyl oebxra, ohg abj V'z fcrrqvat guebhtu zl fgnfu nf V xrrc erfheerpgvat cneglzrzoref.

      A very interesting game!

      Delete
  9. Did the Elf Notaku offer you 500 gold, or ceramic chits/pieces? Just curious, not having played the game (I do own it thanks to GoG), as I thought ceramic was the currency of the Dark Sun setting

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Right. Ceramic pieces. I'm just so used to saying "gold." I think we need to establish a rule that I'm just going to put $ in front of any amount of money, and we all understand that it's in the game's local currency, not actual dollars.

      Delete
    2. Dollar signs will get interesting for Serpent Isle, which has four different currencies.

      Delete
    3. If you play a Continental-European game,
      will you use € ? :)

      $€¥... Oh ! New keyboards have
      no more the symbol for British Pounds :(

      Delete
    4. Brexit included the removal of the pound sign from any keyboard not manufactured in the UK.

      Delete
    5. I've just read that the scarab ( ¤ ) denotes unspecified currency. From now on, it'll be "the elf offered me ¤500."

      Delete
  10. This was cool to read. I think I missed that area entirely when I played. There's a way to go directly from the sewers to the fields, and I guess I missed being told about how to find this other location. Neat!

    ReplyDelete
  11. When I visited Dagolar's realm, I didn't experience this episode with his brother, but the talking rat survived and turned out to be ... This game certainly is a hidden gem with interesting stories to unravel. Have fun!

    ReplyDelete
  12. About the use of "Nibenay" in "The Elder Scrolls", I've found a reddit thread in which Michael Kirkbride, a former writer and designer for Bethesda Softworks mentions some names from "The Elder Scrolls" lore which come from other fantasy works.

    - - - - - -

    "I think The Eternal Champion is another embarrassing name the early games cribbed from other fantasy works, in this case Michael Moorcock.

    Hammerfell: Name swiped from Marion Zimmer Bradley. Valenwood: Name swiped from The Dragonlance Chronicles. Morrowindl [sic]: Swiped from Raymond E. Feist.

    I’ve already copped to inadvertently stealing “Nibenay” from Dark Sun, so I get that most of these were probably subconscious swipes. Still, I wish we had renamed everything that was cribbed when I suggested Red Year, a perfect time to change the map. But no go. At least I got to throw a moon-turd into Vvardenfell, keeping it safe from future tampering."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. As a teen I came up with my own fantasy world to set future CRPGs in. It was a pretty messy kitchen sink setting. I named it Dalaran because that sounded like a good world name to me. I thought the name was original and I had come up with it on my own...

      But when I replayed Warcraft 3 some time later, I realized that's the name of the wizard city in that game! I must have forgotten about it and subconsciously stolen it for my own setting.

      Sometimes it's not intentional!

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    3. Yep. Mr. Kirkbride says that the use of "Nibenay" was not intentional, and I have a friend who built his own fantasy world for a "Rolemaster" campaign, which was named Kendoria, and when I said "Have you played Ishar?" his answer was "Oh, crap. Now I know why I had the nasty feeling of having seen Kendoria used in some other place".

      Delete
    4. Very cool! Thanks for the source.

      Delete
    5. H.P.Lovecraft wrote a short story called 'The Doom that came to Sarnath' as part of his grand mythology, and was reportedly very miffed when informed that a real city of that name existed in northern India.

      I like that anecdote because it nicely illustrates how serious he took his own work, and in context, how he took pride in inventing those names.

      Delete
    6. Edit: I read about this in Sprague de Camp's Lovecraft biography, for what it's worth.

      Delete
    7. It's a fun story, although L. Sprague de Camp is not the greatest source. His biography of Robert E. Howard is notoriously discredited by most modern Howard scholars now.

      Delete
    8. "Nibenay" was also probably Dark Suns stealing from "Elric of Melniboné", pronounced "mel-NIB-o-nay".

      Delete
  13. Master of the Water Gate is actually Dagolar, under an illusion magic. If you attack him, he'll disappear. After that, you can find a human prisoner in another part of the dungeon, asking you to join the party. That is Dagolar too. If you attack him again, he'll be bewildered at the party's ability to see through his illusions and will flee to his room. In both cases, he can be outed by Goburnix, who recognizes his brother under any illusion, perhaps due to being undead.
    There is also a magical book on a pedestal somewhere in that dungeon. It can be interacted while having a preserver as the lead character.

    As for a rope to reach the corridor beneath the bridge, it can be found in the same area. It is just not exactly the rope, more like something to make one from.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, that's weird. If it's actually Dagolar, why does he give me all kinds of help getting into his lair? You'd think he'd tell me NOT to wear the special amulets before going through the Door of Eyes. But thanks for the information--I love that so many different possibilities can play out.

      Delete
    2. Dagolar is a fantasy version of the Mad Scientist trope. Likely, he is studying the party, using them as lab rats, while being disguised as one himself and keeping close.

      Delete
  14. 'Desert Power'

    I see what you did there, splendid!

    ReplyDelete
  15. You can Psionic Disentegrate Keldar before he interacts with you the first time and save a majority of the slime battles.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I wonder if that combat oddity is the game trying to model AD&D surprise mechanics?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That would have been my first suggestion as well, the possibility to catch foes flat-footed.

      Delete
    2. My recollection is the engine is trying to replicate that whole "Monsters Advance" aspect of Gold Box games, where some melee monsters intentionally advance within range, while other groups prefer to start at range. I thought I saw similar behavior in Dark Sun - where casters would just enter combat, while Giants and such would walk forward a bit before combat started. That, and the fact you can click the "sword" icon before combat led to what Chet is seeing.

      Delete
  17. Regarding the gems and obelisks,

    Gurl ner gryrcbegngvba qrivprf sbe dhvpx geniry. V qba'g erpnyy jurer gur jnaq vf gung npgvingrf gurz ohg vg'f cbffvoyr gb pbzcyrgr gur tnzr (ohg gnxrf zhpu ybatre, boiwbhfyl) jvgubhg.

    ReplyDelete
  18. "We opened a door and ran into a talking rat..."

    Master Splinter, is that you?

    ReplyDelete
  19. "Magic resistance nil" doesn't mean they have no means of resisting spells; there are at least three different attributes of any particular character/monster in D&D of the time that could help with that:

    - High saving throws in the relevant areas
    - Straight-up immunities to particular status effects (like paralysis) or types of damage (like fire)
    - Magic Resistance, which is a % chance to just ignore any given magic thrown their way

    ReplyDelete
  20. I replayed both Dark Sun Games recently. They were a tremendous leap for CRPGs. I liked the non linearity, side quests and especially the setting. Shame they didn't use for more games. But i still do think they were just a step towards the Infinity Games with an unrivaled BG2. Didn't try BG3 though. The only downside in my view of DS 1 and 2 are the final battles. They're superflues and make the impressions as though final battles are a mandatory duty...

    ReplyDelete
  21. I played Dark Sun with a Half Giant gladiator and a Thri Kreen multiclass Fighter/Psionic. Those two alone can win battles alone...

    ReplyDelete
  22. Hey guys, what happens if you hex-edit your party to be high-level and keep fighting in the arena at the beginning instead of following the plot?

    ReplyDelete

I welcome all comments about the material in this blog, and I generally do not censor them. However, please follow these rules:

1. DO NOT COMMENT ANONYMOUSLY. If you do not want to log in or cannot log in with a Google Account, choose the "Name/URL" option and type a name (you can leave the URL blank). If that doesn't work, use the "Anonymous" option but put your name of choice at the top of the entry.

2. Do not link to any commercial entities, including Kickstarter campaigns, unless they're directly relevant to the material in the associated blog posting. (For instance, that GOG is selling the particular game I'm playing is relevant; that Steam is having a sale this week on other games is not.) This also includes user names that link to advertising.

3. Please avoid profanity and vulgar language. I don't want my blog flagged by too many filters. I will delete comments containing profanity on a case-by-case basis.

4. I appreciate if you use ROT13 for explicit spoilers for the current game and upcoming games. Please at least mention "ROT13" in the comment so we don't get a lot of replies saying "what is that gibberish?"

5. Comments on my blog are not a place for slurs against any race, sex, sexual orientation, nationality, religion, or mental or physical disability. I will delete these on a case-by-case basis depending on my interpretation of what constitutes a "slur."

Blogger has a way of "eating" comments, so I highly recommend that you copy your words to the clipboard before submitting, just in case.

I read all comments, no matter how old the entry. So do many of my subscribers. Reader comments on "old" games continue to supplement our understanding of them. As such, all comment threads on this blog are live and active unless I specifically turn them off. There is no such thing as "necro-posting" on this blog, and thus no need to use that term.

I will delete any comments that simply point out typos. If you want to use the commenting system to alert me to them, great, I appreciate it, but there's no reason to leave such comments preserved for posterity.

I'm sorry for any difficulty commenting. I turn moderation on and off and "word verification" on and off frequently depending on the volume of spam I'm receiving. I only use either when spam gets out of control, so I appreciate your patience with both moderation tools.