Enough talk! More action!
Day 7
Day seven gets started with a bang.
I’m sorry. That was way too easy, even for me. But it got your attention. Let’s start this over.
Day seven starts with a burning desire to bury a shaft of wood in—
Dammit!
Christmas Comes Early
Robin awakens after his adventure in the fens with one more sartorial offering in his wardrobe: The black monk’s robe. I don’t know when I’d ever want to go back to their monastery, but in a game as good as this, I doubt the option to do so is there just because.
Decisions, decisions. |
Alright, alright! Tough crowd! |
“The trees argued amongst themselves to decide who was first amongst the trees.”
“In Latin they spoke:
I just wish it made the Zelda treasure sound. |
Willows, in particular. Sounds useful! Which, of course, means that she won’t share this knowledge with Robin. It’s up to Marian, as the current priestess of the forest, to do. Taking the hint, I go to the sacred willow grove.
Marian is indeed waiting for Robin; the willows told her, too, that he was on his way. While happy to see Robin, and relieved to hear that Fulk is safe, Marian wants to know if Robin was successful before. I hand over the scroll (200), and Marian reveals its purpose.
In Marian’s hands, the hand scroll glows with letters, revealing the secret Druid’s code. This explains the hand with letters on it in the game’s manual. I quickly use the code to spell “COPY PROTECTION.”
To ensure his understanding, Marian has Robin spell his own name using the code. This is a pretty slick move, since it also shows the player how the Druid code interface works. The game does this automatically, but this is the procedure: Click “Hand” on Robin, touch the appropriate parts of his hand using the manual as a reference, and then tap Robin’s palm to finish. I approve how this is integrated into the gameplay and doesn’t feel like a narrative-breaking tutorial. And you just know it’s going to come up later, hopefully in an epic game of “This Little Piggie” (wrong appendage, I know).
The spy at the Fair will be disguised as a scholar carrying a book of royal coats-of-arms, suspiciously similar to the coats-of-arms in the game manual. Robin is to ask to see the coat of the Cornish Kings, upon which the spy will show Robin a whole bunch until Robin identifies the correct coat. Upon successfully completing this test, Robin is to give the spy the scroll. But, Marian warns, Prince John will have spies there as well, just waiting to trip Robin up.
Robin is excited by this. He also wants to enter the archery completion at the Fair. Marian tells Robin to keep a low profile, and if he sees her in town, do not make contact. I never saw her in town, but maybe I missed something. Robin then asks if Marian will stop by after this mission is complete. She agrees to come the night after the Fair. Things are sure looking up for Mr. Hood!
But it’s not over! Marian has another mission: Now that Robin knows the hand code, he is to seek out the blessing of the Green Man, guardian of Sherwood, who lives in the ancient oak in the forest. As the Sheriff has been gearing up to scour the forest of all outlaws, Marian believes this blessing could save Robin’s life. She doesn’t give any hints as to how to do this, but I have a feeling this is a problem that cannot be conquested by the longbow.
Remember what happened? |
I can show Marian a bunch of other items, including Fulk’s scroll, which she keeps. She also comments on the rings: While the water ring gives her a pleasant feeling, water being her favorite elements, she does not like the fire ring. I don’t think this is correct. If adventure games have taught me anything, it’s that water elementals fear air.
“Bummer, bro! Right when this post was getting good!” |
When they are finished, Maid Marian returns to wherever it is she goes when she is not gallivanting around the forest and sleeping with outlaws, leaving Robin to seek the Green Man’s blessing.
If Wishes Were Trees
With nobody coming down Watling Street, there really is nothing to do, so I assume that I have what it takes to get the Green Man’s blessing. I stand in the forest like a dummy, thinking about what to do. Before long, I hear a piping flute and see a strange, small figure skitter by. The little forest elf! I had forgotten about it since my first play session. Again, I couldn’t get a screenshot of it, but when I clicked “Eye” on the passing figure, Robin remarks that it’s actually a pixie who, once caught, will grant any wish.
A wish! Perhaps I can wish to speak with the Green Man. But where’d the pixie go? Luckily, standing still on any empty forest screen does the trick. Now I’ve got to catch the little bugger. Longbow? No . . . ah! The golden net given to me by the Widow after I saved her sons! She did comment that I should “use it in the forest,” after all.
After some timing trial-and-error, I catch the pixie (10). It turns out that pixies don’t grant wishes; only the Green Man has the power to do so, and agrees to summon him for me in exchange for releasing him. Does Robin really look like a heartless bastard?
- Riddle 1: “My first master has four legs, my second master has two legs, my first I serve in life, my second I serve in death, Cure me and I live beyond my death. Tough I am, yet soft beside, ‘gainst ladies’ cheeks I oft reside.” This one took a bit of thought, but I focused on the words “legs,” “cure,” and “death,” and came up with the correct answer: LEATHER.
- Riddle 2: “Metal or bone I may be, many teeth I have and always bared, yet my bite harms no one, and ladies delight in my touch.” I resist the urge to input my initial guess, “Piranha,” and instead settle on what turns out to be the correct answer: COMB!
- Riddle 3: “Not born but from a mother’s body drawn, I hang until half of me is gone, I sleep in a cave until I grow old, then valued for my hardened gold.” I’ll admit, I had no clue. “Egg”? “Cheese”? “Milk”? I try MILK. It is not the answer. I was tricked by “from a mother’s body drawn.” Now that I think of it, maybe the answer was “Honey”? In any event, I fear death until the Green Man, nice tree that he is, offers me another chance.
- Riddle 4: “I am two-faced but bear only one face, I have no legs but travel widely, men spill much blood over me, Kings leave their imprint upon me, I have greatest power when given away, yet lust for me keeps me locked away.” Easy: COIN!
“But do you fear getting naked for a complete stranger?” |
If you click “Hand” on the yeoman, he immediately draws his bow and makes Robin disarm and step aside. How humiliating! Robin says he can catch up to him, but I have a better idea: Restore! Let’s threaten him with our own Longbow.
DAMN! After some trash-talking about who’s the fastest draw in the land, they off each other simultaneously! I only wish the game could go on somehow after this. This may be my favorite image in the whole game. Yes, I am sick. Nothing left to do but take the boring option and bribe the guy (100).
The Fair is in full swing when Robin comes to town, and is in fact the only place where anything is happening.
Corey, you dog! |
Al Lowe? |
Nice callback to the story from the scroll in the fens monastery. |
She gives you tons of points, then takes away tons of points, before setting you back to your original amount. No mention of Jem and the Holograms. |
These guys are everywhere! |
- Get my fortune told (25)
- Purchase some lovely scarves for Marian (25)
- Give money to a beggar (10)
- Give money to a one-legged beggar (10)
- Buy some fragrant rose oil for Marian (25)
- Lose money playing dice with a cheater (0)
No, I think it’s his face. |
PRO-TIP: It’s this one. |
Adam Bell, Your Time Has Come
SICK BURN! |
“Bro! It’s me!” |
- Round 1: Standard archery fare. Three men shoot, two men move on.
Good enough to move on. P.S. Robin uses the alias “Puck of Barnesdale.” Much better than “Brother Eustace.” |
- Round 2: Things are heating up! But not really, because Robin rules.
On to the final round. |
- Round 3: The moment of truth. Hood versus Bell. FIGHT!
EAT IT, ADAM! |
I love Robin’s passive-aggressive response. |
Session Time: 1 hour, 30 minutes.
Total Time: 8 hours.
Inventory: Horn, money, gem, hand scroll, water ring, fire ring
Ransom: 10,300
Outlaws: 34
Score: 4305 out of 7325
Problems Conquested by the Longbow (as of this post) – 5: The longbow is the most useful tool devised by mankind.
Day 1: Saved a peasant woman from being raped and murdered by one of the Sheriff’s goons.
Day 2: Rescued Maid Marian from an evil fens monk.
Day 4: Saved a poacher from arrest and execution.
Day 5: Got the brown robe from the St. Mary’s monk by threatening him, but I didn’t do this because that’s the coward’s way. Bribery is where it’s at!
Day 6: I got to threaten a black monk with the longbow, and then murder him with a quarterstaff. I’m retroactively saying that this counts. You can shoot the monk if you want, but the quarterstaff fight doesn’t happen without the threat of a good old-fashioned shafting.
Day 8: The yeoman certainly conquested his problem with his longbow. And then there’s the double-longbow-ing, which is just so awesome we should look at it again:
*5 CAPs to Joe Pranevich . . . the challenge is on!
*5 CAPs to Corey Cole for reminding me that I forgot to mention the arrow-splitting as an integral part of the Robin Hood mythos.
What I don't get is why Robin (Sorry, Puck) wins. Both arrows hit exactly the same spot. Shouldn't it be a draw? The way it is it's way too much of a handicap going first for what should be a fair test of skill.
ReplyDeleteAnd it's not like there aren't two unused archery tracks standing next door so they can both have a go at hitting centre without getting in each other's way or anything.
Now that I think about it, it would have been much better for them both to fire in separate tracks at the same time, then if they kept getting bullseyes, keep going until one of them loses or the crowd gets bored and stones them to death.
It's surely harder to split an arrow than to hit the centre of the target.
DeleteYou're right of course, the fairest way would be to have separate targets.
It wouldn't be a Robin Hood game without splitting an arrow. That shot is still known today in modern archery as a "Robin Hood". Of course modern fiberglass and aluminum arrows don't split properly, so breaking the nock counts. I've done it once, much more luck than skill in my case.
DeleteYes, the arrow-splitting is classic Robin Hood, something I should have mentioned in my post. Of course, TBD's suggestion would be more fair, but I appreciate the opportunity to show up that poseur Adam Bell.
DeleteMythbusters did an episode on the arrow-splitting thing BTW. Not possible.
DeleteDo you want corrections? There is one place in this post that says "coasts-of-arms".
ReplyDeleteSo that's what a "hand scroll" is. Somehow I missed the original explanation and was wondering for awhile if it was a hand-sized scroll (i.e. smaller than normal) or something. I get it now.
Good one Reiko; thanks!
DeletePerhaps I didn't explain what the hand scroll was well enough earlier. It does sound rather like a very tiny scroll, doesn't it?
So, this is like the third game this year with a reference to Dan Quayle (the other two being Larry 5 and Free D.C.). That has to be some sort of record.
ReplyDeleteSurely a record that won't be beaten by another political figure!
DeleteYet in the modern era, with 8 years of a vice president at *least* as stupid as Quayle was perceived to be, and nary a mention in a video game. Odd.
DeleteI was thinking you actually had to decode what trees were being referred to in the poem. I've got yew, maple, and pine so far.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteSorry about the deleted messages, I was trying to figure out how to post a link (failed). Rudyard Kipling listed the most important English trees as oak, ash, and thorn - http://www.sacred-texts.com/bos/bos382.htm
DeleteThat would be pretty cool if the Kipling poem could have been integrated. Anachronistic, yes, but when has more Kipling ever been a bad thing?
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking amber for the third question you could not guess for the Green Man.
ReplyDelete"Cheese" seems the right answer to me. The liquid whey drips off (half the body) leaving golden (yellow) treasure.
DeleteI'm tempted to check a walkthrough. After I'm finished. These riddles didn't give me as much trouble as the ones in Camelot, oddly enough.
Delete@Corey
DeleteWell, I checked a walkthrough and "Cheese" is, indeed, the correct answer.
Congrats on answering the riddles correctly on your first try! I had to cycle through a few. Thankfully there aren't as many as in Conquests of Camelot.
ReplyDeleteI suspect the fair scene hides more inside jokes than we can probably detect. Some of the character names were quite unusual.
Thank you sir. These riddles are also not as obtuse as the ones in Camelot.
DeleteThe fair scene was a hell of a lot of fun. I didn't have enough money to buy everything to offer, like the dagger or the bowl of "lamb" stew (mainly because I didn't have a bowl). I also don't know if you can expose the guy (Bob Fishbach) who cheats at dice. Corey, did Mr. Fishbach have a history of cheating at games of chance?
I dare you to play "Robin of Sherwood: The Touchstones of Rhiannon" as a Missed Classic after this. :)
ReplyDeletehttp://www.worldofspectrum.org/infoseekid.cgi?id=0006903
Uh oh. A dare. I have a bad feeling about this game . . .
ReplyDeleteI'll totally do it.
That's the spirit! Don't let the fear control you.
DeleteIt's a Brian Howarth game, the first we would play for this blog, so it may not be all that bad. He was a relatively prominent adventure game developer of the 1980s and did a number of games for Adventure International UK-- I've seen him referred to as something of a British Scott Adams.
DeleteI know of 3-4 more Robin Hood games of that era, but that one is the only one I have been tempted to play.
@TBD
DeleteFear? Please. I played Police Quest III. I can handle anything (short of Les Manley or Wizardry IV).
@Joe
I'm actually looking forward to it!
I my playthrough (a few years ago) I didn't get Robin and Marian kissing because I hadn't shown the jewel a few days prior. :-(
ReplyDeleteDang, it cut away just before the H-scene. Where's the uncensor patch?