Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Dragon Warrior Text Adventure

Often the question is asked: why did gamebooks decline as home video games were on the ascendant? Were their trajectories related? This item doesn't answer the question, but it does demonstrate that you can't hitch a ride up when you're on the way down. Since March/April of 1990, this little choose-your-own episode has languished without a machine-readable form. But could the world really do without Nintendo Power magazine's 4-page promotional gamebook for Enix's Dragon Warrior for the NES playable through your web browser? Well, probably. (Note: arrrrrrgh! I do my best to avoid reduplicating the labours of others, as the merit of someone converting one of these even once is debatable let alone twice... but as I started this one offline I failed to verify that no one else had transcribed the lousy thing yet! But mine has the original magazine illustrations -- lossy screenshots -- and is all laid out on a single page to justify itself. But I will be using Google more judiciously in the future before I undertake further conversions. Chee whiz, I bust my hump in an effort to provide Google spiders with exclusive content! My coffee break today could have been invested into marking up a totally unrepresented hypertext! Ah well, I'd better get over myself... but it always stings to be beaten to the draw by one of the cultural vanguard on a Tripod account.)

Dragon Warrior Text Adventure
Have you ever wondered how decisions are made in a Role Playing Game such as Dragon Warrior? In this text adventure you'll see how your choices lead to particular results. It's the same sort of process that's at work in the computer chips of your NES -- what we call "if, then" statements. This is also a good way to learn about the strategy of Dragon Warrior and have some fun.
Rules of the Game
As a warrior about to set out on a quest you have 10 Hit Points (HP), 0 Magic Points (MP) and 120 Gold. Read what happens in each frame, then either choose from the list of options or go to the frame number indicated if there is only one option. When attacked by monsters your HP will be reduced, and if it reaches 0, the game is over. Your success depends on how well you make decisions and how well you remember wrong turns and dead ends. There are many dangers, and the choice that works once may not work in a different situation.




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As the descendant of Erdrick, a great warrior of old, you are about to set out on the first leg of a quest to defeat the Dragonlord who has taken over the Kingdom of Alefgard. You begin in Tantegel Castle and, as you stand at the gate, you must decide which direction to take.
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Town of Brecconary: Buy a weapon and armor before setting out.
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You are lost in a mountain cave. Suddenly a Drakee appears. What do you do?
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Before you lies a great lake. As you draw near a Ghost appears.
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Looking north you see rugged, impassable mountains. Which way do you go?
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Proceeding to the West, a Red Slime appears. Do you . . . ?
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You have come to the town of Brecconary. Pay 6 Gold and recover your strength at the Inn before moving on.
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Before you waits a Slime, but it hasn't seen you. What action do you take?
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After a strong attack you defeat the SLime and receive 2 Experience Points and 1 Gold. You set out, this time toward the...
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Attacking with your bare hands wasn't such a good idea. You inflicted 1 damage point while you received 5 damage points from the monster. Now what?
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You've escaped!
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You are attacked before you even see the monster
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Heading to the right you enter the forest where a Drakee appears, looking rather mean.
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Going left brings you to a field. Which direction do you go now?
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Luckily you've escaped, but you can't earn Experience Points of Gold by running away.
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A Magician attacks using the Hurt spell. You respond by . . . ?
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Seeing a cave to the North, you proceed to the ... ?
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You've attacked an enemy before it was prepared and won a great victory, gaining 8 Experience and 10 Gold. You go up 1 Level and learn the spells of Heal and Hurt. Your HP is at 30 and your MP is at 16. Where do you go next?
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Your attack inflicted 1 point of damage on the enemy while you received 5 points of damage. Your HP is at 2.
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Good punch. You knocked down the enemy and gained 2 Experience Points and 1 Gold. Now let's go back to town.
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A great blow! The enemy is defeated. It's time to go back to the town.
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Crossing the bridge, you see a Magician.
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A bridge lies to the South and some hills to the North. Where do you go?
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You are inside Erdrick's Cave. With the torch lit, you discover a treasure chest. Inside is a tablet that tells of ancient deeds. It also tells you that you must find 3 special items to succeed in your quest. Where do you go from here?
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The attack on the Magician leaves you with 10 points of damage form the Hurt spell and the Magician with only 3 points of damage.
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You received 3 points of damage during the attack, but managed to run away. For protection you must use one of the items in the list.
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In the hills a Drakee attacks!
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Going North you reach the ocean. Where do you go next?
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You spot a town ahead in the distance
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Nothing happened after lighting the torch.
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Sprinkling the Fairy Water all over you will keep the monsters away.
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Herb heels your wounds and you recover your strength.
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The Dragon's Scale doesn't do anything.
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Once you've put on the wings they speed you back to the castle.
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A Magician appears.
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You've attacked the Drakee and both of you received 3 points of damage.
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Running away from the enemy, you find yourself back at the castle.
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Near a lake in the woods you come upon a Slime.
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You have reached the town of Garinham and discovered that there is a locked door, behind which lies an important secret. You also learn that the princess is somewhere to the East. Where do you go?
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Crossing the bridge you walk southward along the ocean shore where you see another bridge. Which direction do you go?
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You really should go eastward.
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Once you've crossed the bridge a Magidrakee appears, but it doesn't see you.
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Heading West takes you into the Poisonous Swamp. With every step your HP goes down. What do you do?
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Unfortunately, you haven't mastered the spell yet and you pass away in the bog. Alas.
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In the eastern desert you encounter a Scorpion.
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To the North you see a town. You head toward it, intending to rest at the Inn and restore your strength.
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You are in the Poisoned Swamp. What should you do?
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The Scorpion's attack inflicted 5 damage points while you gave it 8 damage points. What do you do now?
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You are attacked and lose a great deal of HP. You need to return to the town and recover. Which direction do you go?
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The Hurt spell is delivered and the enemy gets 10 damage points.
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A Skeleton attacks before you reach the village.
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You inflicted 5 points of damage and defeated the monster, but you need to recover HP at a town.
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The Hurt spell inflicted 8 damage points.
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Weakened from battle, you come upon a cave and, with a lit torch, enter. There a Druin attacks from the shadows. Your HP is down to 5. What do you do?
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Your attack gave the monster 20 points of damage.
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The attack on the Skeleton leaves you with only 6 HP and 0 MP. The Skeleton received 6 points of damage.
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The enemy has cut off your retreat and attacks!
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Your Hurt spell inflicted 8 points of damage while you received 10 damage points.
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Your attack gave 7 points of damage to the enemy and you sustained 6 points of damage.
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Using the Hurt spell you inflicted 10 points of damage, but received 6.
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Alas, you have died without completing your quest.

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You have escaped and, after recovering your strength at an Inn, you are ready to go.
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Your attack using the Club defeats the enemy with 15 damage points. Your level goes up to 7. Your Maximum HP is 39, MP 26.
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You cannot use the spell because your MP is 0.
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Congratulations -- You have reached a village where people tell you to go South through the Poisoned Swamp to the town of Rimuldar. But first you should buy a Copper Sword, half plate armor and a small shield. Also stock up on Herb for the long journey.
You have succeeded in overcoming the early stages of Dragon Warrior, just as you would in the real game. Congratulations. It is a game of choices and strategy, as you can see, and the further you go in this world the more you are able to do. Items must be found and mysteries solved, but you must also continue gaining experience against the monsters ot the Dragonlord.

3 comments:

  1. Even in 1990 people were casually mixing up CYOA and text adventures, which must have been especially galling to the interactive fiction crowd (hm, I suppose there wasn't one in 1990) which has only in the last two years come to terms with their overlap in domain.

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  2. Ah jeez, I remember owning this exact issue of Nintendo Power and reading this as a kid. The image that immediately popped into my mind was that teardrop-shaped Slime with the creepy smile, and nearly getting killed by that fucker even though I got the jump on him...

    The ending is unintentionally hilarious now. "Congratulations -- You have reached a village where people tell you to go South through the Poisoned Swamp"... er, thanks? "Also stock up on Herb for the long journey." Hell yeah you know it, dude.

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  3. That's, uh, awesome and tragicomic. I don't even have your excuse -- the magazine was no part of my nostalgia, though a friend and I did rent Dragon Warrior for one woefully inadequate night. This posting was a species of slumming it for myself -- extending the "gosh, aren't video games based on movies terrible?" truism to a further extension: "yow, gamebooks based on video games preserve only their worst elements!" I don't think that this particular work was credited to a specific author, and that's probably a stroke of mercy to them.

    Of course, such titles also garner additional attention due to their franchise tie-in, and that was a factor contributing to my posting it here. My comic book ads blog really spikes in activity when I post ads for popular games and most of the territory I cover here is marginal at best 8)

    Mostly I posted it because it was easy to get together. (I should devise a substitute for my manual transcription, since compounded with my manual HTML marking-up... it does make these more labour-intensive than they really warrant.)

    When I post these it's very much with no expectation that they'll ever be seen or appreciated as their appeal is a bit niche even to me. So it's... challenging to my loserly narrative to find that someone actually has glowing childhood memories evoked by this weird and, ultimately, terrible gamebook. But ultimately it tells me I'm on a good track... I'm not so antisocial that evidence of an audience is discouragement 8)

    Hence... thanks a lot for weighing in! These posts draw out very little commentary, without which it's hard to know that any non-spiders are actually encountering them.

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