How do you deal with a malcontent general threatening to leave with his own men? Do you spend the time to investigate a murder or quickly side with one party or the other? And is it always best to invite stragglers into your company or does the risk they’ll run off with your supplies mean it’s wiser to leave them freezing in the snow? And these are the people whose loss you’ll likely mourn, because The Banner Saga is the kind of story where every victory is Pyrrhic, and every decision is a sacrifice.Although you can sense some influence from BioWare games such as Mass Effect, in the moral-based decisions, the game is purposefully secretive about the outcome of your verdicts. There are larger than life epic elements, of course: the death of the gods, a secret guild of magicians, a wave of darkness pursuing man and Dredge indiscriminately, a lost prophecy of a serpent set to devour the world itself.īut where a typical game would focus on these elements (and hopefully more of the mysteries of the world of The Banner Saga will be revealed and perhaps even explained in future games), this one chooses to tell smaller stories: the widowed hunter trying to keep his daughter safe, the loyal soldier suddenly thrust into leadership, the scarred old veteran’s reluctant return to battle. Eve of DestructionĪ story that begins with the death of the gods is unlikely to be a happy one, and in keeping with the overall character of the Viking myths and legends, The Banner Saga is a grim tale, if not unrelentingly so there are touching and even bleakly funny moments in the midst of the game’s overall sense of doom. So there are a lot of choices to be made do you level up a character to become more effective during combat, or do you buy food for your caravan? Remember, most of the people traveling with you are women, children and the elderly, not seasoned warriors. The catch is that Renown is required to level up your characters and to purchase supplies or bonus items (unlike most RPGs, The Banner Saga doesn’t involve weapon and armor choices, but each character can equip a bonus item that adds extra Willpower, Strength, Armor or other effects during combat). Successful battles win you Renown, the only currency The Banner Saga has to offer. A third statistic, Willpower, lets you utilize special attacks which vary by character it can also be used to move extra squares during a turn or deliver more damage than usual. Unlike most tactical games, therefore, the more damage you take, the less you’re capable of dishing out yourself, so the odds are drastically reduced of making a devastating last ditch effort to kill an overwhelming enemy if he’s already been whaling on you for a while. Strength, though, measures both your health and your ability to do damage to your enemies. Armor is obvious it helps keep you from taking damage to your Strength. It starts hard and continues to get harder, thanks in part to a unique twist on the usual combat statistics.Įach hero has Armor and Strength. Combat is a turn and grid-based, small-scale tactical kind of thing. Interspersed with the day to day management of a doomed refugee caravan fleeing a race of monsters carved from blackened stone, you’ll face dangerous turn-based combat against both the Dredge and other humans and Varl (as the world ends, man fights ever harder for scraps). Will you take on a new group of refugees, despite the potential drain on your food stores? You’ll need to make your decisions carefully the consequences could be dire. During the journey, you’ll encounter random and scripted events and be forced to make tough decisions, while also keeping an eye on your caravan’s supplies and morale. You’ll manage your rag-tag caravan of townsfolk, mercenaries, itinerant Varl and the odd heir to the throne or two, a monstrous horde of Dredge behind you, unknown dangers ahead. In practice, this works a bit like the classic educational game, Oregon Trail. The overarching theme, then, is that of a forced march, a long-term retreat from overwhelming forces. Post-apocalyptic loosely by way of the vikings, the world of The Banner Saga opens with the gods who created man and giant (or “Varl,” as the race of giants is called in the game) now dead, the sun stopped inexplicably in the sky, and a third race, the monstrous Dredge, marching down from the frozen northern wastes to which they had once been banished. Difficult gameplay combines with atmospheric, hand-drawn-inspired animation, richly drawn characters and heartbreaking plot twists to make The Banner Saga a beautiful but bittersweet experience. A hybrid of strategy, adventure and RPG, the debut game from Stoic Studio is set in a world inspired by, but not directly imitative of, Norse myths and legends.
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