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Game info
Amiga

Dragon's Lair II

Dragon
GenreAction Adventure
DeveloperSylvian Bluth
PublisherReadySoft
Released1991
Rating
Graphics:9.0
Sound:9.0
Gameplay:4.0
Overall:7.0
Reviewed byndial
Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp is an impressive 1991 laserdisc video game released for the arcades by Leland Corporation, and later ported to several home systems like the Commodore Amiga, Atari ST, PC (MS-DOS), Apple Macintosh, Philips CD-i and the 3DO Interactive console. Dragon's Lair II has gorgeously animated graphics and impressive sound, but its huge difficulty and rather minimalistic gameplay (much like its predecessor) make it frustratingly hard to play!
 
Review
DragonSTORY / GAMEPLAY
An evil wizard kidnapped lady Daphne and used a ring of mystical power with which he can manipulate the strings of time. Dirk's only chance to save the lady is his trusty sword and a rusty old time machine that he has to use to dive into the time stream. Unfortunately he'll probably end up getting lost along the way. In Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp, you control Dirk the Daring as he travels his way through time. Time Warp is the sequel to the phenomenally popular Dragon's Lair laserdisc game by Rick Dyer and Don Bluth. Like the original game, Dragon's Lair II is completely cell-animated by Don Bluth's company. You don't freely control Dirk the Daring but rather you move the joystick or push the sword button at a given time, where you must act to a moment of danger for our hero. So all you have to do is to make the correct move at the appropriate moment so that Dirk will survive the scene. This means that just by pressing "Right" doesn't mean Dirk will move right. If you fail to do so, the game shows a scene of Dirk's death and you must try again.
Unfortunately, the gameplay is nothing but a memory test of correct joystick movements at the right moment. But the whole presentation (visuals and sound) are quite impressive, even as a six-disk animated demo! Otherwise, this game is damn hard to beat.

GRAPHICS / SOUND
The Amiga port has impressive graphics although there are several details and colors missing from the original laser-disc version. The cartoon-ish visuals have 16 to 32 colors on-screen and the variety in the camera perspective makes a very decent visual show for a couple of minutes. The animations are based on the laser-disc arcade version with the mandatory cuts due to the memory limitations of a floppy disk format. Take a look at the impressive screenshots and you'll realize what I mean.
The sound is great and reminds us of a cartoon movie as it features sampled sound effects and soundtracks to accompany particularly eventful scenes. Back in the 90s I used this game to impress my friends but nothing more, as the game was too difficult to play!
 
Screenshots
  • Dragon
  • Dragon
  • Dragon
  • Dragon
  • Dragon
  • Dragon
 
Comparable platforms
Commodore Amiga OCS/ECS
Atari ST
 
 
Hardware information

Amiga 500/500+

Amiga 500/500+CPU: Motorola MC68000 7.16 MHz
MEMORY: 512KB of Chip RAM (OCS chipset - A500), 512 KB of Slow RAM or Trapdoor RAM can be added via the trapdoor expansion, up to 8 MB of Fast RAM or a Hard drive can be added via the side expansion slot. The ECS chipset (A500+) offered 1MB on board to 2MB (extended) of Chip RAM.
GRAPHICS: The OCS chipset (Amiga 500) features planar graphics (codename Denise custom chip), with up to 5 bit-planes (4 in hires), allowing 2, 4, 8, 16 and 32 color screens, from a 12bit RGB palette of 4096 colors. Resolutions varied from 320x256 (PAL, non-interlaced, up to 4096 colors) to 640x512 (interlace, up to 4 colors). Two special graphics modes where also included: Extra Half Bright with 64 colors and HAM with all 4096 colors on-screen. The ECS chipset models (Amiga 500+) offered same features but also extra high resolution screens up to 1280x512 pixels (4 colors at once).
SOUND: (Paula) 4 hardware-mixed channels of 8-bit sound at up to 28 kHz. The hardware channels had independent volumes (65 levels) and sampling rates, and mixed down to two fully left and fully right stereo outputs
read more...
The Amiga 500/500+ (default) color palette
12bit RGB 4096-colors palette
(32 to 4096 colors on screen)
 
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