Rise of the Dragon

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AMG AllGame Guide:

Rise of the Dragon

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  • Release Date: 1994
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Style: First-Person Adventure
  • Similar Games: Snatcher (Sega CD)

Game Description

In Rise of the Dragon you play the part of former cop and current private investigator William "Blade" Hunter. The year is 2053 and Blade has just been hired by the mayor of Los Angeles to find out who is responsible for his daughter's death. As many other people have been lately, the mayor's daughter, Chandra Vincenzi, was killed by a new type of drug. If you find the person behind the new drugs you will find the person responsible for her death.

Rise of the Dragon allows you to speak with other characters and investigate objects using a point-and-click system. Occasionally there are side-scrolling shootouts which you can continuously retry until they are successfully completed. The game can be saved at any time.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide

Review: Overall

With a grim story and a dark setting, Rise of the Dragon was given a MA-17, mature audiences only, rating for a reason. The game opens up with the violent death of the mayor's daughter. Watch as she places a patch on her neck and is almost instantly killed while screaming in horror.

The main character, Blade, is the typical, rough edged private investigator. He lives in a tiny apartment, wears a trenchcoat, and he won't be bullied by anyone. All of the characters in the game have their own personalities and voices to match. The storyline is a basic drug plot with a Chinese prophecy thrown in. Everything about the game has an apocalyptic feeling to it, from the setting to the characters. Players will be pulled into the storyline by the interesting conversations with characters and by the main character's snide remarks.

Game controls are simple to use. Move an arrow cursor around the screen until it changes. If it changes to a word balloon you can speak to someone, if it changes to a magnifying glass it means you can get a closer look, and so on. There are some side-scrolling and first-person action sequences. Nothing intense, simply jump and shoot for the side-scrollers and aim a cross hair for the first-person action. It's a nice break from the slow-paced investigating portions.

Rise of the Dragon features dark graphics to go along with the story. They are fairly well detailed but could use some cleaning up. Sometimes it is hard to tell what some objects are because the backgrounds are so dark. The sounds of the game fit the atmosphere just as well as the graphics. Music and sound effects set the mood while the voices add a nice touch. They also could use some fine tuning though. While most of the voices are clear, once in a while it is hard to understand a word or two.

Rise of the Dragon is not too difficult or long. Some gamers will likely finish the game within a couple of days. It is still a fun game though and one of the better Sega CD titles. If you like these types of games you can also try Snatcher, another high quality game but is not as dark as Rise of the Dragon.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide

Review: Enjoyment

An interesting story and dark setting results in a good detective game.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide

Review: Graphics

Sets the atmosphere well but could use some more detail.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide

Review: Sound

Features voices and sound effects that fit the game perfectly.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide

Review: Replay Value

Finishing the story takes away all of the mystery.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide

Review: Documentation

Instructions are presented in a clear and effective manner.
~ Jonathan Sutyak, All Game Guide
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Rise of the Dragon

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Rise of the Dragon
Rise of the Dragon Game Cover.JPG
Cover art
Developer(s) Dynamix
Publisher(s) Sierra On-line
Platform(s) MS-DOS, Amiga, Mega-CD, Macintosh
Release date(s) 1990 (DOS/Mac), 1991 (Amiga), 1993 (Mega-CD, 1994 (Sega CD) (re-release)
Genre(s) Adventure, Horror, Third-person shooter
Mode(s) Single-player
Rating(s) VRC: MA-17

Rise of the Dragon is a graphic adventure game that was released in 1990 for DOS and Macintosh and later remade for the Mega-CD/Sega CD (1993) as well as the Amiga. It was one of the few adventure game titles developed by Dynamix, a company that was better known as an action and flight sim game developer. In some sense, this game was an experiment by Dynamix to expand its development repertoire (to other game genres) since the company was bought out by Sierra On-Line in 1990. The Mega-CD version added voice actors to the game (including Cam Clarke in the main role as William 'Blade' Hunter) and was given a MA-17 rating by the Videogame Rating Council, most likely for profanity, references to a fictional illicit drug, cross-dressing, prostitution and partial female nudity.

Contents

Story

The game is set in a dark cyberpunk version of Los Angeles in 2053. Rise of the Dragon's seedy vision of the future is inspired by the film Blade Runner. The main character is named William 'Blade' Hunter, an apparent tribute to the film. His clothing also resembles that worn by Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard in Blade Runner.

Blade Hunter is a former Los Angeles Police Department officer turned private detective. When the mayor's rebellious daughter Chandra is found dead and horribly mutated after experimenting with a new designer drug, Hunter is called upon to track down those responsible. This leads Hunter to discover an underground Chinese Mafia operation led by a megalomaniacal drug kingpin intent on world domination.

During the game, Blade has to reconcile with his girlfriend Karyn, uncover the mystery behind Chandra's death and the MZT drug, and sabotage the villains' plans to poison the Hollywood reservoir.

The final battle of the game sees drug boss Deng Hwang use MZT to turn into a monstrous dragon. The coming of the dragon is foreseen in the game by a street drunkard who raves that Bahamut is coming.

Gameplay

One of the two arcade portions

Gameplay in Rise of the Dragon is similar to that of Dynamix's other 1990s adventure games, Willy Beamish and Heart of China. The screen shows the current room roughly from Blade's perspective. Movement occurs with the cursor, which becomes an arrow to proceed to another room or a magnifying glass to get closer to a part of the current scene.

The game has a time meter that reflects the passage of time in the game. Each of Blade's actions takes up a certain amount of time. Some game events will only occur at particular times. The player must find a way to delay the plans of the game's villains, or the game will end after only three days and Blade will not have time to save the day. Travelling between locations can take up a lot of in-game time, so players must plan their moves strategically.

Several puzzles in Rise of the Dragon have multiple possible solutions. Blade's activities can influence the plot of the game later on. Game characters remember his earlier behavior, and if he says the wrong thing to key characters they will refuse to help him with his work. This can render the game unwinnable.

Rise of the Dragon features two arcade-style action scenes and an aim-and-shoot scene. It is possible to beat the game without playing through all of these scenes. If the player tries and fails to complete the arcade scenes several times, the game will offer the chance to automatically win the sequence and move on to the next scene.

Mega-CD Version

Several differences existed between the Mega-CD and DOS versions of Rise of the Dragon, the most prominent being the addition of voice acting to the Mega-CD release. Blade Hunter is voiced by Cam Clarke on the Mega-CD.

The graphics of the Mega-CD version had to use a more limited range of colors than the DOS version, 64 on screen colors compared to the 256 of the computer, which gave it a green tint. This tint has been compared to some of the images seen in The Matrix movies.

Another notable difference between the two versions of the game is the removal of a scene with a French kiss and implied sex from the Mega-CD release. These changes were made even though the game was given a MA-17 label by Sega of America. This was likely due to public concern in the early 1990s about sexual and violent content in popular video games such as Night Trap and Mortal Kombat.

Other small changes from the DOS to Mega-CD version:

  • The munition clip for the handgun (at the side of the computer) was removed.
  • In the Pleasure Dome, where Darcelle is playing cards, there is only one dancer--the one in the bikini was removed. Part of the naked dancer's show was removed as well.
  • At the Pleasure Dome's bar, players can no longer talk to the punk NPC.
  • The arcade scene cannot be passed even if you die more than 5 times.
  • Subtitles were removed, leaving only voiceovers.

Reception

The game was reviewed in 1991 in Dragon #170 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 5 out of 5 stars.[1]

In 1991, Rise of the Dragon won a Special Award for Artistic Achievement from Computer Gaming World magazine.[2]

References

  1. ^ Lesser, Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk (June 1991). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (170): 55–58, 118–119. 
  2. ^ Staff (November 1991). "Computer Gaming World's 1991 Games of the Year Awards". Computer Gaming World (Golden Empire Publications, Inc) (88): 38–40, 58. 

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