Settle down by the fire fellow adventurers and make yourself comfortable. I have a tale to tell that will undoubtedly bore a lot of you to tears, but there’s always the hope that one or two of you might indulge The Adventure Gamer’s tendency for overmeticulousness, not to mention his talent for using words that don’t exist. This tale begins way back in 1964, when an author by the name of Lloyd Alexander wrote the first novel in a fantasy series targeted at children. The series would eventually be known as The Chronicles of Prydain, and would be made up of five novels that can be considered a bildungsroman (that means they follow the protagonist from youth to maturity over their course for anyone quite reasonably assuming that was another case of me making a word up). The books would go on to win a few awards, and are often spoken about in the same sentence as C.S. Lewis’ similarly titled The Chronicles of Narnia.
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Thursday, 19 January 2012
Game 7: The Black Cauldron - Introduction
Settle down by the fire fellow adventurers and make yourself comfortable. I have a tale to tell that will undoubtedly bore a lot of you to tears, but there’s always the hope that one or two of you might indulge The Adventure Gamer’s tendency for overmeticulousness, not to mention his talent for using words that don’t exist. This tale begins way back in 1964, when an author by the name of Lloyd Alexander wrote the first novel in a fantasy series targeted at children. The series would eventually be known as The Chronicles of Prydain, and would be made up of five novels that can be considered a bildungsroman (that means they follow the protagonist from youth to maturity over their course for anyone quite reasonably assuming that was another case of me making a word up). The books would go on to win a few awards, and are often spoken about in the same sentence as C.S. Lewis’ similarly titled The Chronicles of Narnia.
11 comments:
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I definitely had this game as a kid, but I don't remember a thing about it, so I'm looking forward to your posts!
ReplyDeleteI wonder if you're supposed to throw the Cauldron into a volcano at the end.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I haven't played this one before, so I'm looking forward to reading about it.
"Save the pig, save the world" has go to be the best paraphrasing ever. The more I read, the better this blog gets. Keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteBlack Cauldron, a magical device that could create an army of undead warriors called the Cauldron Born, with which he could conquer the world. Taran, with the help of a princess named Eilonwy, a bard named Fflewddur Fflam not, and a strange creature named Gurgi established to prevent this, and how he found witches, elves, magic swords, and the boiler. I love this new game.
ReplyDeleter4 cartes
1) Mmmm, bacon. What prophetic pig?
ReplyDelete2) HEY, I read the first couple of these in grade 5!
The series is quite good. Taran bumbles his way through all five books, making poor decisions and getting himself in trouble through a sort of "Lawful Stupid" mentality, then finds that his hard-knock life earned him the wisdom to heal the land at the end.
ReplyDeleteAlso, the Cauldron-Born have already been created when the first book begins. They are undead warriors who are literally invincible--nothing can kill them. They are, however, limited in how far they can travel from the Dark Lord's realm.
ReplyDeleteIf we're going to discuss how good the books are, how about the mythology its based on as well? I mean, it's nice to get a break from the Greeks once in a while ;)
ReplyDeleteThis one's near and dear to my heart. I loved the books as a child and still do. The Disney movie takes the first two books, mashes them together, excises a fair chunk of the main characters, and comes up with a vaguely related story. Lloyd Alexander himself said it best: "It's a good story, but it's not my story."
ReplyDeleteI'm not even sure it's a good story. It was Disney's first animated feature to be released with a PG rating and the reasons are obvious.
You'll do well to take the (short) time to read at least the first two books. Characters such as Prince Gwydion, Prince Ellidyr, King Morgant, Adaon, Achren, and Arawn play important roles in the story. Not to mention the plot, while revolving around The Black Cauldron, is entirely different.
I did enjoy the game's interface and thought it fun to play through.
For anyone who wants to play along, it can be done legally and free at Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/msdos_Black_Cauldron_The_1986 However, you can't save. That said, in many adventure games that isn't too much of a problem.
ReplyDeleteMan, I LOVE hearing the history behind these games. Thanks for sharing it!!
ReplyDelete