Quest 64
Quest 64 | |
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North American Nintendo 64 cover art | |
Developer(s) | Imagineer |
Publisher(s) |
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Director(s) |
Ichirou Honma Atsushi Ohsuga Yasushi Kamegai Tomokazu Hattori |
Producer(s) |
Atsushi Ohsuga Kouichirou Sakurai |
Writer(s) | Tomoko Suzuki |
Composer(s) | Masamichi Amano |
Platform(s) | Nintendo 64 |
Release date(s) |
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Genre(s) | Role-playing game |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Quest 64, released as Holy Magic Century in Europe, Australia and New Zealand and as Eltale Monsters (エルテイル モンスターズ Eruteiru Monsutāzu)[1] in Japan, is a single-player role-playing video game developed by Imagineer and published by THQ. It was released for the Nintendo 64 in 1998 and was the first role-playing video game released for the system in the United States.
After Quest 64's moderate financial success, a sequel was in consideration by the developer Imagineer.[2] However, only the sequel's story was revealed before it was ultimately cancelled. Imagineer released two other related games for the Game Boy Color: Quest: Brian's Journey and a maze game called Quest: Fantasy Challenge.
Plot
Story
The playable character is an apprentice mage named Brian. Brian sets off to find his father who has left the monastery of the mages—the player learns later that his father is looking for a thief who has stolen the "Eletale Book". The player must also collect elemental amulets, which have been hoarded by powerful criminals and are integral in the defeat of the game's final boss.
Setting
The game's story is set in Celtland, a fantastic medieval world that resembles Ireland.
Gameplay
The game differs from most other RPGs in that the experience system is not based upon a traditional "level-up" model. Instead, experience is gained for specific stats based on how the player performs in battle. If the character gets hit a lot, for instance, defense will increase. Also, whenever the player finds a wispy white spirit, they can choose an element of magic to upgrade (from Fire, Water, Earth, and Wind). Leveling up these elements grants the character new attacks and strengthens existing ones.
The game has no money system which is unusual for an RPG. Every item is either found in a treasure chest, given to the player character free of charge, or dropped by a monster, if the character doesn't have one already. If Brian runs out of HP, the game will return him to the last inn at which he saved. He retains all spells, items, and experience he has gained before death, but any items used before death will not be returned.
Development
The game was first previewed at Space World in 1997 under the working title Eltale (エルテイル).[3]
Because North American and PAL releases of the game were considered too short and easy, Imagineer added new events and tightened some of the repetitive gameplay for the game's Japanese localization. Expectations were high for the game as in 1998 when the game was released the Nintendo 64 didn't have any hit RPGs on the system.
Reception
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Quest 64 received mixed reviews upon release with GameRankings giving it a score of 54%[4] Though praised for its high quality graphics[10][11] (IGN wrote "Quest proves beyond a doubt that compelling RPG graphics are possible on a cart"[11]) and inventive spell system,[10][11] reviewers criticized it for lacking depth on all fronts: gameplay, storyline, and exploration.[10][11] GameSpot wrote "Quest 64's individual puzzles and challenges are similarly straightforward. Go to Town #1. Converse with townspeople. Discover that there's a villain scaring everyone and making it impossible to get through Forest #1 to Town #2. To boot, he's stolen Unique Elemental Magic Item #1 from Lord #1."[10] The general conclusion was the game was competent enough to charm gamers who had never played an RPG before, but too simplistic and trite to interest anyone else.[10][11]
References
- ↑ "Buy Eltale Monsters". Play-Asia. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
- ↑ IGN staff (January 26, 1999). "Quest 2". IGN.com. Retrieved 2008-11-24.
- ↑ "SPACEWORLD'97" (in Japanese). Nintendo. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
- 1 2 3 Critic reviews at GameRankings
- ↑ AllGame review
- ↑ Edge staff (August 1998). "Quest 64". Edge (61).
- ↑ "Quest 64". Electronic Gaming Monthly. 1998.
- ↑ GamePro review
- ↑ Game Revolution review
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 GameSpot review
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 IGN review
- ↑ "Quest 64". Nintendo Power. 110. July 1998.
External links
- Official site (via Internet Archive) (Japanese)
- Quest 64 at MobyGames