Broken Sword 3
Hey, guys. I recently finished Broken Sword 1 and 2, and enjoyed both of them immensely. The story and art were amazing, yet voice acting could have been better.
Anyway, I wanted to ask: Is Broken Sword 3: The Sleeping Dragon worth the buy?
Anyway, I wanted to ask: Is Broken Sword 3: The Sleeping Dragon worth the buy?
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Still worth a buy if you can get it cheap. The storytelling makes it worth it.
Good 'ol Games offers Broken Sword 3 for 6 bucks. DRM-free.
http://www.gog.com/en/gamecard/broken_sword_3__the_sleeping_dragon
This is not true. The story of the 4th game was so bad the writer (assuming there was one and they didn't come up with the "dialogue" off the cuff... assuming they could afford shirts with cuffs) the dialogue is awful, the acting... Well, the new actors they got to replace old and to play new characters were clearly prostitutes desperate to get into the acting 'biz'.
This game should be played by nobody looking for a decent story and certainly not by anybody with even a slight respect for the [voice] acting or writing professions.
I remember BS4 as an overall enjoyful adventure. Like BS2 and BS3 it wasn't as good as the original anymore and so had it's personal highs and lows. Third class 3d engine (low detail, stuttering, some camera and steering issues, nice story, this magical Broken Sword mood, quite some good riddles and also some nice jokes, less Sokoban. The beginning isn't this hot but also BS3 had quite a few lame scenes like for instance Glastonbury.
Definately worth buying and playing it, more as it's a budget title today.
But BS1 and 2 are damn near perfect in my humble opinion, so take from that what you will.
I have all 4 games, and I still regularly play them all. I find 2 is the best, with 1 very close up.
BS3 was done entirely by Revolution, BS4 was a collaboration between them and Sumo Digital, but it was still written by Charles Cecil and Revolution's staff.
I meant the engine and the control style, not the story and the script. Are you sure 3 was entirely by Revolution? I always thought it was an outside company. And I know Sumo Digital did a lot more work on BS4 than Revolution did
EDIT: To clarify, I thought BS3 was done in the same engine as the GTA3-Vice City-San Andreas games?
And I remember reading an interview with Charles Cecil around the time of BS4, and I'm sure he said they were outsourcing the dev for BS4 to another company and in future they would only be outsourcing because it's much cheaper...
But having said that, I'm also fairly certain Revolution developed BS1: DC internally...
Yep, it uses RenderWare, but the development of the game was done by Revolution. Many games use third-party engines these days so it never crossed my mind that was what you meant.
Forgive me, I've worked about 50 hours in the space of 3 days, and I'm not used to it, brain cells are spontaneously combusting everywhere!
Broken Sword 4 I have a harder time recommending. If you want it, I recommend paying no more then $15 for it, or you'll end up disappointed. The writing's not as sharp, the characters not as likeable, there's more frustrating stealth sections, and the puzzles don't make as much sense.
On the plus side, I think it was the first adventure to use the 'WASD to move, Mouse to click on stuff' control scheme Telltale's been randomly using as of late and it's pretty much refined to a tee, and the hacking challenges are quite fun, if a little tricky.
It's definitely the weakest of the four (or is that five now?), but for the right price, it's not too bad.
Haha, wow. I'd say that's <$1 well spent.