Every article tag can be clicked to get a list of all articles in that category. Every article tag also has an RSS feed! You can customize an RSS feed too!
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

Dark Gates RPG Reviewed

By -
image
Game Information:
Name: Dark Gates
Released: In Alpha right now
Developer: DFour Games
Rating: 6/10

Hardware Specifications:
Processor: AMD A10-5800K
Video Card: Nvidia 650ti
Memory: 8GB DDR3

System Specifications:
Distribution: Ubuntu 12.10 64bit
Graphics Driver: Latest stable
Desktop Environment: Cinnamon with compositing

Something I personally still think Linux lacks is a range of RPG-like games, while there are a few (Dungeons of Dredmor, Sacred Gold, Monster RPG 2) but not many that are really "amazing" in my eyes so, enter Dark Gates an RPG from DFour Games a 6 player party RPG game which reminds me a little bit of Final Fantasy, only a little though.

Dark Gates is a party based dungeon crawler where each game can play out differently since the paths are randomly generated so each game should be different and here is my review from the moments I have spent playing the game (courtesy of DFour Games for sending me over a review copy on Desura). Just be aware the game is in Alpha so anything could change.

The game pretty much throws you in at the "deep end" with no tutorial or story as such to get you started, you select your party and off you go to explore the dungeon to hopefully find some evil mage and kick his butt. While there isn't any tutorial the game basics are very easy anyone who has played any kind of turn based RPG will pick it up within seconds which is one of the great points about this title that is really is that easy to just pick up and play.

imageimage

The movement is very simple and tile based you just press one of your arrow keys in a direction and you move, same goes for wanting to attack a creature just try to move to it's tile. This is where I was bugged by the game a little as well, only your party seems to move in the game the enemy once found seem to stay on their tile and make no attempt at chasing you - boring, give me a chase!
The movement does bug me a little with this type of game. I kind of expect there to be some sort of visual indictor for when I am moving my party on the screen or trying to open a door, but it doesn't have anything.

The combat in the game is where it reminds me of Final Fantasy (although not sure why that game springs to mind since most turn based RPG games will probably work this way) where you take it in turns to fight although you can try to get out of a fight by "Negotiating" or "Bribing" the enemy. The combat is where the game bugged me right away, you get to attack with all 6 of your characters before they get to land a hit making the game seamingly easy that is until...oh crap a troll, the troll has a shield and blocks your attacks sometimes...well this is a bit more interesting. Another quirk is that the Enemy has a "movement turn" which I'm not sure what happens as...well nothing happens.
Another niggle is that if you select a character for combat, select his weapon and then find out you can't use him you have to press excape twice to get back to being able to chose a differenty character before you can press F to skip the current character - you should be able to just press F to skip as soon as you know you can't hit anyone - don't make players jump through even small annoying hoops.
The developer said this about the skipping character bit:
QuoteNot really. Thanks for feedback :) i will add skip while selected in the next release.


Once you explore a bit more two things I found made me chuckle, you can find a "Magic Bed" which heals one character and Spiders that sound like Lions both for some reason gave me a small chuckle and made me want to see if there was more to the game than meets the eye. Apart from the chuckling sound of a Spider Lion the sound in the game is actually of decent enough quality I don't really have any issues with the sounds at all.

The in-game text also seems to need a bit of spit and polish on the flow of the text, for example I came across something called an "Altar" where a Demon is worshipped to get this text:
"Demon is trying to penetrate body and mind of the protagonist. Suddenly hero passes out on the floor. Team is rushing to help. Demon has inflicted some damage."

What I would like to see more of is animation, the game is very "paper based" (imagine playing a Dungeons and Dragons board game) so everything feels quite flat, it needs a little more on-screen activity I think just to keep people hooked in and interested.
The developer had this to say about the animations:
QuoteIn time i want to do more animations. Last release introduced magic & damage animations. I would like to continue add more but i can't give you any specifics as this is not my main focus right now.
Main exploration screen probably will stay as it is for now. At least i want to add trap door damage animations.

In original game monsters were static and did not move, so apart from some cosmetics i did not thought about any extras yet.


You can currently buy the game on Desura for £6.99 and get updated as the game progresses.

The Game as it stands, I will give overall a 6/10. As you can tell from my review, it has rough edges but It's in an alpha state for a reason so remember that folks, with a bit of work I could easily see this game being rather good. If you like turn based party RPG games it will be an easy hit for you.

To sum it up

What I liked
Random generation - keep each game new
Enemy portraits in combat are really nicely done
Sounds are good

What needs spit and polish
The game text
More animations
A little more explanation of the games functions
Needs a save system

image

Forgive me if this review isn't as good as Hamish's usually are, writing lots isn't a strong point of mine but I wanted to give it a go. If you have feedback go ahead...just be nice! Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Review, RPG
0 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. You can also follow my personal adventures on Bluesky.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
All posts need to follow our rules. For users logged in: please hit the Report Flag icon on any post that breaks the rules or contains illegal / harmful content. Guest readers can email us for any issues.
6 comments

Braqoon Dec 29, 2012
Thanks for honest review. Cheers
Hamish Dec 29, 2012
Forgive me if this review isn't as good as Hamish's usually are, writing lots isn't a strong point of mine but I wanted to give it a go. If you have feedback go ahead...just be nice!


Well, as a suggestion, you could get me to look over it as an editor. I always get mine checked over by someone else and you are always surprised about all the small little problems another pair of eyes can find.
Liam Dawe Dec 29, 2012
Well, as a suggestion, you could get me to look over it as an editor. I always get mine checked over by someone else and you are always surprised about all the small little problems another pair of eyes can find.

I actually had cheese look it over last night did he miss some issues? :P
Hamish Dec 30, 2012
Mostly formatting irking me - but I think I could just be being a little pedantic here. ;)
Bumadar Dec 31, 2012
After reading the review I been trying the demo. Liamdawe, the movement turns is when there is room for monsters to move, when I had a pack of 6 mobs and killed one in the front row, during the movement turn the back row would move forward. I would have expected the movement turn to be part of the combat turns myself, so either move or fight so to speak.

It needs a lot of polishing, more stats, party design more custom, clearer classes, stuff like that, but then for a 0.2 alpha version it has a lot of potential and I had a good enough time to alpha fund it
jhansonxi Dec 31, 2012
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.