Dungeon Princess Bride

Directed by Rob Reiner. With Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Robin Wright, Chris Sarandon. While home sick in bed, a young boy's grandfather reads him the story. There’s no map for the inn/stables, which is likely to be a fight scene. The other location has a photoshopped top-down map without keys; it’s only 3 buildings, but guess which is which. No magic or miracle system is presented. Dead runner in pet sematary. Princess Bride is Ruritanian adventure, so there won’t be spell-casters exactly.

In the Kingdom of Blossom, the evil wizard Crocus casts a spell of eternal sleep on his brother the king. The kingdom's loyal knights set out to find the ingredients needed to revive their king, but they are soon defeated by the wizard's henchmen. Only Lily, who has just graduated to knighthood, escapes the attack. Now she must journey across the kingdom and explore four vast dungeons if she's ever to rescue the king and restore peace to Blossom.Blossom Tales is an unapologetic Zelda clone, with an art style that combines elements from A Link to the Past and Link's Awakening. Lily will explore a spacious overworld, talk with townspeople and complete numerous side quests, combine pieces of hearts to increase her life meter, and smash lots of jars and chairs for money – all your favorite Zelda activities. It plays beautifully, although I wish Lily had Link's dash move or a faster walking speed. Conveniently, Lily encounters numerous fast travel points throughout the overworld and dungeons, allowing her to revisit past areas to complete quests or head in different directions.

The overworld and dungeon maps also display the general area of the current main quest objective, but they don't tell you how to get there.The actual dungeons play quite a bit like the Zelda dungeons of old, but they're incredibly vast to make up for their relatively small number. Lily must use the standard tools, like bombs and arrows, to open new passages and solve various puzzles. One mechanic I really enjoy is that she can shoot arrows through torches to light other torches, triggering switches or burning vines that block her path. Controls and system requirements. Minimum specs:. OS — Windows 7 or higher x64 or x86.

Processor — Intel Pentium E2200 (2. 2200) / AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+ (2. 2200). Memory — 2 GB RAM.

Graphics — GeForce 9600 GS / Radeon HD 4670. Storage — 1 GB available space.Considering that pretty much any Windows machine can run numerous Zelda games via emulation, you'd hope that Blossom Tales (which admittedly has some fancy effects that you wouldn't find in a Super NES Zelda) would run on low-end machines as well.

Thankfully, that is the case. Blossom Tales runs perfectly on my Ultrabook and should work with all Surface Pro machines, as well. A tough but charming adventure. Although Blossom Tales plays like older Zelda games and has a very child-friendly setting and story, the dungeons can actually be a little too hard. Sometimes players must navigate huge rooms of falling platforms or manage multi-part switch puzzles while avoiding huge spinning ball-and-chains or other moving traps.

It's a lot to manage, and it's bound to lead to repeat deaths in some areas. The only penalty for dying is going back to the start of the dungeon, but a little more balancing of the difficulty wouldn't hurt.Most importantly, Blossom Tales perfectly captures the spirit of classic Zelda games while instilling a bit of Princess Bride-style fourth-wall breakage for good measure. Zelda-style games aren't exactly scarce, but it's quite a pleasure to find one that recreates the experience so well while also adding some enhancements and charm of its own. Anyone who loves this style of game is bound to enjoy helping Lily in her quest to awaken the sleeping king.Blossom Tales: The Sleeping King costs $14.99 on Steam.