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Dreamfall: The Longest Journey

Dreamfall: The Longest Journey
From: Aspyr

List Price: $39.99
Buy Used: $9.00
You Save: $30.99 (77%)



New (11) Used (17) from $9.00

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 29 reviews
Sales Rank: 4193

Platform: Xbox
Genre: Adventure Games
ESRB: Mature
Media: Video Game
Edition: Standard
Batteries Included: No
Age: 17 - 20 years
Operating System: Xbox
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 0.1 x 0.1 x 0

MPN: 11268
Model: 11268
UPC: 618870112688
EAN: 0618870112688
ASIN: B000F3Z59S

Release Date: September 8, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 16-20 of 29



5 out of 5 stars Fantastic game. Hands down one of the best experiences I've had gaming in a while.   May 26, 2006
Jeff (Toronto, ON)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I love this game. It's one of the best experiences I've had gaming/being told a story/being entertained whilst looking at a screen. It brought up emotions, had me empathizing with the characters in a way that I think maybe no other game has, and gave me that oh so good feeling of being immersed in something grand and esoteric and playfully meaningful. Buy it if you like great stories.


5 out of 5 stars Best game I've played since the first Longest Journey!   June 14, 2006
Susan Dennard (University of Georgia)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

If you've played the original Longest Journey following the steps of April Ryan and you enjoyed the game, then you will absolutely love this one. The puzzles are much easier in Dreamfall, but the character development, interesting dialogue, and complex, amazing storyline are all there again! I liked this game more than the first because I thought the voice acting was better done this time around, I really liked Zoe's character, and the graphics were stunning. You get to travel a lot more places in Dreamfall, as well, which I thought gave the game a much "bigger" feel than the first one. BUY THIS GAME! IT'S WORTH IT!!
If you've never embarked on this series before, I suggest playing The Longest Journey first and then this. But, if you've not the patience to play through uno before dos, then go ahead and start this one and get some exposure to the best adventure game series out there!!



5 out of 5 stars Excellent (Book-like)   November 13, 2006
S. Klips (Columbus.)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I loved this game. I had friends who were coming over as i played, and who stayed and simply watched the vid scenes due to the extreme strength of the plot. It was sincerely like playing a game, but being in a well written book.
The plot is absolutely spectacular, and the graphics for the most part are fairly well done.
There is the occasional annoyance with movement. I found that i got aggravated when running across a particular bit in front of the temple, as it was slow. But for the most part, it's perfect.
There's tons of variability in the worlds, and it's a surprise when you come to each new place.
The fighting system is weak, i must say, but that isn't really a problem with this game, as fighting is not the point. It's great for people who love myst, and want to see that convert (well) to xbox.
A delightful game. I highly reccomend it.



4 out of 5 stars A novel posing as a game - it depends on your gaming style   September 24, 2007
Lisa Shea
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Dreamfall - The Longest Journey is the sequel to the original adventure game named The Longest Journey. This game is more like participating in a 10 hour movie than playing a game, and your primary goal is to watch cut-scenes, solve a puzzle or two, and run on gathering quests.

I'm not saying at all that this is not FUN. The graphics are really immersive and push the XBox to its limits. Each world is fully developed and integrated, with the textures, atmosphere, sounds and visions all merging in together nicely.

The sound is equally well done. The dialogue and voices are simply stellar, Sure, there are one or two exceptions, but in general this game provides a standard that others games could be held against. You really believe these are individual people who have a history and personality.

Like any good novel, there are a TON of characters, each with their own wants, desires, aims and goals. Refreshingly in the gaming world, most of the main characters are female. You start with Zoe, a smart college drop-out who is trying to find a new goal in her life. Her best friend is a savvy computer wiz - a female - who is able to help with all sorts of issues. Another character you play is also female, the leader of her group. It's really great to see so many powerful female characters in one game.

The down side is, for being a "game", there is not a lot of "playing" here. There are a few puzzles worked in. There are an awful lot of "find item X and bring it to place Y" missions. There is combat - but the combat system drove me completely insane. You could block, hit hard or hit soft - and the controls were sluggish and difficult to work with. I think I've played most combat games that are out there, and this rates down near the bottom. Sure, combat isn't a main part of the game, but if you die repeatedly due to a really silly interface, it makes the game not fun.

Another part of the game that gets tedious really quickly is the fact that you somehow don't know where anything is, even in places you apparently live in. You have to search all over to find your best friend's apartment? I can understand when you get into new towns that you have to track down the bar or whatever, but hunting in your own hometown for places you really should know how to find is nonsensical.

The maps in general are very unwieldy. I know they mean to add to the adventure to cause you to search for a half hour to find place X, but it doesn't make the game more fun to do that. It seems like a way for them to claim the game took more than 10 hours to solve, because half the time you're roaming aimlessly on a map looking for something. The other half of the time you're trying to click on the exact right spot to open a door or to perform an action. Aim slightly off, and you could find yourself climbing down a ladder you didn't mean to get on, or heading off into another loading screen.

Again, it's not to say the game is bad. For people who love "playing a novel", and who have a lot of time and patience, this is a really great game. But for gamers who are only alloted 2 hours after homework is done to play something enjoyable - and who then waste 2 hours roaming around a rainy map trying to track down one specific doorway - it can lose its shine very quickly.

Finally, while the game boasts super-long cut scenes and interactive dialogue (where you can be, say, pushy or docile in response to a question), it became a bit excessive. Many choices seemed unreasonable, and in many cases when I chose one option, it ended up doing things I didn't want it to do at all. For example in one situation I tried to be uncooperative and not divulge private information - and the next thing I know, Zoe is blabbing every last detail. It makes for a bit of frustration.

There's going to be a sequel to this, so we'll see if they find the right balance between longer gameplay that involves actual gameplay, instead of adding in even more super-long cut scenes and maps you have to wend your way around for hours on end.




4 out of 5 stars Bleak Horizons   November 12, 2007
Marc Ruby™ (Warren, MI USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a perplexing game. I'm torn between giving it a high ranking or a low one. It's not easy for me to explain the why's of that either. But sit down. We have some time and I have a story to tell you...

Once there was an adventure game called The Longest Journey. It was an intricate tale of approaching doom. Once there was a woman named April Ryan who could live in two worlds. The Longest Day was that unusual thing in games of the time - it was thoughtful, with a rich plot and any number of interesting characters. Long after I have forgotten what happened, I still remember scenes from the game and the pleasure of playing it. That was in 2000, and I had yet to consider adding a game console to the household entertainment.

Now, it's 2007 and my PS2 and XBOX are faithful companions. I was surprised to discover that, miracle of miracles, a sequel had been made, this game - Dreamfall. Dreamfall recaps the style of the original, in terms of a complicated plot that ranges over two worlds and many cities but with some definite differences. We have a new heroine, Zoe Costanza, who lives in Casablanca in the 23rd Century. While there is a great deal of technology about, society has a carefully studied not quite technical style. This helps minimize the contrast between the world that is Zoe's home (called Stark) and the more medieval world where a good bit of the game takes place - Arcadia.

When Zoe volunteers to help her ex-boyfriend out by picking up a package she little expects that this will catapult her out of a state of self-pitying numbness and into an adventure that will turn her life upside down. Soon we are shifting back and forth between Stark and Arcadia. In the former Zoe struggles to stop a corporation from taking over the world by making us all dreamers. In Arcadia April is trying to stop the Azadis from completing their own conquest of the world and the magic in it.

Gameplay is a bit awkward, but bearably so, but fighting control is inadequate. However, fighting isn't really what the game is about. Like a classic adventure game puzzles are the order of the day. Most are interesting, if surmountable, but there is one and only one way to pick locks and it happens way too often. But once again, it is a pretty game, with strong characters and it's easy to forgive any number of sins. Except for one.

At best, this is a bleak game with an endless supply of dark moments. Hope, of course, is an important factor in the playability of the game. Unfortunately, Dreamfall leaves you very little of that, and ends in a truly depressing cliffhanger. In fact, there's no indication from the game that there is any hope of a continuation. It took a desperate search of the Funcom site to discover that the Norwegian Film Fund, of all things, was going to pay for some number of continuation episodes that might, if we are all very good, appear as a collection some day. And that irritated the heck out of me. After all, who, in this world, needs depressing cliffhangers with only a faint hope of relief?

Well, there you have it. After a great deal of hanky twisting I've decided to recognize the game's artistic merits and give it four stars. But be warned. Also be warned that there are some moments of gratuitous profanity that add nothing to the story or atmosphere and one wind up giving the game an unnecessary Mature rating.



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