10th March 2009, 10:05 PM
I've only played Camelot, and I'd say it's good. I'm trying out the Robin Hood one now and I have to say I'm impressed. Camelot uses the same engine as KQ4, and Long Bow uses the same one as KQ5. Play them both in DOSBox and they work fine.
Oh, check this place I found: http://www.replacementdocs.com/ You'll need to find those booklets here in order to have the information you need to beat the games.
It's got PDF scans of instruction manuals for all sorts of games. Give them a shot. Not like the 20 or so MB the both of them will take up is going to break your HD.
The scoring system is a bit different than other Sierra games. The things you do are rated in 3 categories. Plus, you may like the details they added to the games to give them a sense of accuracy in the mythology.
Oh, you will die. So if I were you, I'd save every time you did something, preferably in a unique save file for each area.
Oh, check this place I found: http://www.replacementdocs.com/ You'll need to find those booklets here in order to have the information you need to beat the games.
It's got PDF scans of instruction manuals for all sorts of games. Give them a shot. Not like the 20 or so MB the both of them will take up is going to break your HD.
The scoring system is a bit different than other Sierra games. The things you do are rated in 3 categories. Plus, you may like the details they added to the games to give them a sense of accuracy in the mythology.
Oh, you will die. So if I were you, I'd save every time you did something, preferably in a unique save file for each area.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)