Lol King’s Quest was a funny journey for me. I started with KQV as a kid and was always curious about the previous games. It wasn’t until I got them all via abandonware sites as an adult that I realized 5 was the perfect one to start on because the previous ones all relied on vague text parsers to handle all the actions, ones where typing “grab stick” instead of “get stick” could be the difference between having a fun or frustrating time.
So you’re saying there’s now a version of KQIV that has an interface similar to KQV and involves no guessing which verb/noun they want specifically?
Though my record with point and click adventure games hasn’t been great since KQVI. I did beat both 5 and 6 on my own as a kid (getting the 100% win on 6 with no help still gave me a pang of pride when I thought of it just now, when all those pieces start fitting together), but find I don’t have the patience to solve similar games these days (even without the “sometimes punishes clicking the wrong pixel with death” that KQ liked to do). I never did finish KQVII, even. Action games were just more engaging.
Most - or now all, of the point & click series received fan-remakes that modernized the series up to KQVI standards, with voices, graphics, and interface.
Also, if you want more action while still doing adventure gaming stuff, give the Quest for Glory II remake a shot. It has RPG mechanics, a battle system, while still having King’s Quest style stuff. The parser is optional there, but helpful when you want to talk with NPCs.
Lol King’s Quest was a funny journey for me. I started with KQV as a kid and was always curious about the previous games. It wasn’t until I got them all via abandonware sites as an adult that I realized 5 was the perfect one to start on because the previous ones all relied on vague text parsers to handle all the actions, ones where typing “grab stick” instead of “get stick” could be the difference between having a fun or frustrating time.
So you’re saying there’s now a version of KQIV that has an interface similar to KQV and involves no guessing which verb/noun they want specifically?
Though my record with point and click adventure games hasn’t been great since KQVI. I did beat both 5 and 6 on my own as a kid (getting the 100% win on 6 with no help still gave me a pang of pride when I thought of it just now, when all those pieces start fitting together), but find I don’t have the patience to solve similar games these days (even without the “sometimes punishes clicking the wrong pixel with death” that KQ liked to do). I never did finish KQVII, even. Action games were just more engaging.
Most - or now all, of the point & click series received fan-remakes that modernized the series up to KQVI standards, with voices, graphics, and interface.
Also, if you want more action while still doing adventure gaming stuff, give the Quest for Glory II remake a shot. It has RPG mechanics, a battle system, while still having King’s Quest style stuff. The parser is optional there, but helpful when you want to talk with NPCs.
AGDI: KQ1, KQ2, KQ3, and Quest for Glory II.