A wayward adventurer seeks the legendary Tower of the Wraiths hoping to find a mythical device capable of curing a mysterious disease threatening the men of his home. Climb the tower, uncovering its secrets, and brave traps and transformations, to discover the true meaning of the Tower of the Wraiths!
I found this game quite odd. The prologue is a fantastic bit of world-building which promises engaging characters and dialogue in a post-apocalyptic sci-fi setting. Then it's like a totally different game: one of the characters is inexplicably sidelined, the other seems to lose his identity, the plot is mostly abandoned, the setting shifts from sci-fi to fantasy, and you get hit with a series of poof TFs and complimentary mind control with no elaboration.
I ran into what I presume was a softlocking bug in the castle(?) floor where an NPC would not acknowledge that the beds had been changed and I could not leave, but my interest had already waned.
If the rest of the game is ever somehow aligned with the prologue, I'd love to give it another shot, but as it stands I'm not impressed.
This game is awesome. Got me 3+ hours of fun gameplay. I had it on my drive for a few months because I thought it was the type of game that focuses mainly on TF endings, because I read the review of the guy below me.
Quote: "Unfortunately, once I actually got a chance to poke around a bit in the real game, I immediately got turned into a dress and got a game over screen... losing about 30 minutes of game time. So, yeah. It's one of those games."
I mean, I ran into that ending too, but truly unexpected endings like that are very rare in the game.
Plus, what they didn't mention was that before you get turned into a dress, in the dialogue that leads up to it you get a YES/NO choice, where you can opt out, save, and then start the conversation again.
You have a ton of different TFs. You have to ascend in the Tower the game derives it's name from, and as you climb the floors you encounter traps that TF you, which is all part of the story, you go from TF to TF as you play through the game, each TF slightly influencing the way the MC talks and acts.
Also there is no combat, which for me is a plus.
This is a game with an interesting premise and a deep story. The prologue made me quite invested with what was going on and I was on board for what was to come.
Unfortunately, once I actually got a chance to poke around a bit in the real game, I immediately got turned into a dress and got a game over screen... losing about 30 minutes of game time. So, yeah. It's one of those games.
If you stick with it though, there is plenty of story to be found here. Just save before you do EVERYTHING.
This game is not new but we more than welcome back its creator.
As a game has been revived it come with the expected bugs(mostly ironed out now) more immersive story and new content
graphics the same old rpg maker standard
content wise the tags will tell you all
game progress and content integrity: you can call it periodic ts story per level with their game over
if you like this kind of game then you will have a lot of Fun
once only because replay value is nil
I have recently discovered this game. There is a lot of content. Most of the text is in good shape as far as errors are concerned. There are some bugs, but the author is squashing them as fast as can be. Personally feel this is a great game and especially so because of the potential that remains. At this point, it was a lot of fun but I am really excited about what's coming, if you'll forgive the pun.