In a rare case for The Adventure Gamer, this game was actually played by two of us. Reiko introduced us to the game and started it, making the first gameplay post, and then I took over when Reiko was unable to complete it. As Reiko was fairly early in the game, I started it anew, quickly playing through the first chapter in order to catch up.
And as I played the game, it grew on me… grew on me like a malignant tumour. I started off finding it acceptably average, but it quickly became tedious as each chapter devolved into a game of trial-and-error, and sometimes the worst form of trial-and-error, where the randomisation had me continually try the same thing over and over until luck fell my way.
Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is a definition of Rome: Pathway to Power - Albert Einstein |
This isn’t really a game with puzzles at all. I wouldn’t even classify it as an adventure game - it’s more of a cross-genre strategy/adventure game with more strategy than adventure.
But you could say each level is a puzzle of sorts. Each level has a goal, which can be considered the puzzle, and how we go about achieving that goal constitutes the solution. Let’s examine chapter 2…
Goal: Stop myself being made a scapegoat of the Emperor’s murder.Interestingly, the solution to every Chapter apart from the two RTS Chapters starts with, “Make enough money to…” apart from Chapter 6 where the solution is “Have bought the dagger in Chapter 1”
Solution: Make enough money to bribe my way into the palace in order to warn the Emperor.
Now, if I get technical, another potential solution to Chapter 6 would be, “Have ended Chapter 4 with at least 100 sesterces to spare” but seeing as it’s so hard to make money due to the strict time limit and the best way to make money involves having bought the dagger in Chapter 1 anyway, I’m sticking to first-chapter- dagger-purchase as the only realistic solution.
There are two ways to survive Chapter 1. After delivering the message you’re given in the opening cutscene, taking your reward of 3 sesterces and seeing Vesuvius erupt, you can use your 3 sesterces to...
- Buy a boat ticket to Rome and safety
- Buy a dagger
How does option 2 work out? Simple, after buying the dagger, threaten citizens until you have enough money for a boat ticket, then continue committing extortion so you also have enough extra cash to buy some loaded dice to cheat at gambling later, and if you have time and money also pay a priest to make a sacrifice in order to give you better luck later in the game.
If starting the first chapter like this is the only viable way to finish the game, perhaps the game should have told me I’m playing a murderous bastard from the get-go |
So barely any puzzles to start with and topping it off with a crippling dead-end..
Rating - 1
Interface and Inventory
Now, the interface in Rome is mostly functional. It’s not exactly intuitive at first but once you get used to it it’s okay.
This is the inventory screen. I currently own two humans. |
The map was actually quite good. It gave a whole map of the city and shows all the people as brown dots, that move, allowing you to see where people are going.
Everyone goes back to their daily business after congratulating me on my successful campaign in Egypt. |
Items pillaged from the British villages are immediately turned into cash, and money is used with the DO - PAY command. So there’s nothing to be done with inventory management in this game.
Something else worth mentioning in this section is the horrific pathfinding. It’s only an occasional inconvenience in the city sections but in the Real Time Strategy chapters it really makes the army hard to manage. It’s probably the main reason I didn’t restart the game from the beginning in order to get the dagger and more cash early - I just couldn’t bear the thought of quelling the British rebellion again.
So, a nice map; functional menu on the left but everything else below par…
Rating - 3
Story and Setting
The story started off fine - I was a slave trusted to deliver a message who then managed to escape the eruption of a volcano and start a new life in Rome, ingratiating myself with the Emperor due to an act of patriotic heroism.
By the time it became obvious that Hector would accept nothing less than being the Emperor of Rome, the story became a bit unbelievable and Hector a much less sympathetic protagonist.
To top it all off is the timing. This didn’t become obvious to me until the final cutscene, as I thought the game must have taken place over a number of years and just skipped over the time Hector did a job he was assigned to. As it was, apart from being an unqualified General, Hector never got to do any of the jobs he was assigned to. He was a Senator for a day before becoming Consul, and he spent that day campaigning for office. He was Consul for a day before becoming Emperor and he spent that day plotting and organising the deaths of the two people who ranked above him. To make it somewhat realistic the game just needed to have some text each chapter saying something about the years in the job becoming mundane. Even the crew of Darth Vader’s Star Destroyer get more time on the job before being promoted over their incompetent superiors.
So, a solid Rome setting, less solid other locations and somewhat silly story...
Rating - another 3
Sound and Graphics
There wasn’t much sound - the game was mostly silent. There are a few sounds - sword clanks during the games or strategy chapters, a bit of music during the start of chapter cutscenes, the herald’s trumpet, but mostly there was no sound at all. The Amiga version has a few more environmental sounds based on the longplay I used to watch the ending.
Though the graphics weren’t great it’s hard to judge them too harshly as there are a lot more moving people in this game than most others. The graphics were serviceable - trees looked like trees, aqueducts looked like aqueducts, etc. The mostly still scenes between chapters looked a lot better but were just stills with perhaps a few moving parts with text.
The cardboard cutout looking pictures (like these ones of a God) could surely have been replaced with an increased viewable area instead, making people I want to talk to leave the screen less swiftly. |
So, minimal unexceptional sound and average to disappointing graphics…
Rating - 4 (I was very close to a 3 here due partly to the lack of graphical variety, but ended up leaving it at 4 - the game is okay at drawing grey stone, at least)
Environment and Atmosphere
Now it’s time for me to say my second nice thing about the game. It did an excellent job of making Rome seem like a real bustling city where the people went about their daily business and I was merely another citizen.
On reflection, there’s probably less than 30 people in the city but it feels like a lot more. Making a city feel realistic in a game without being ridiculously overwhelming with realism is very hard, and this game made Rome feel real despite being much smaller than any real city would ever be. Round of applause, Rome AD92. Round of applause!
But because I can’t say too much nice about this game without tensing up, I’ll say something bad about it too. The strategy sections and cartoonishness detracts from the atmosphere. The strategy maps are too… ah… gamey, for want of a better word. They don’t have the scaled down realistic design of the city of Rome and just seem like randomised standard strategy maps.
And as for cartoonishness, the final chapter in particular is the opposite of atmospheric. The Emperor, who was perhaps not portrayed as a genius earlier, became batshit insane in the final chapter (which is only days after the previous chapter, remember.) In all of fiction there has never been and never will be a change from competent leader to murderous insanity as abrupt and unbelievable as this one.
Emperor Gluteus at the end of Chapter 4 |
Emperor Gluteus at the start of Chapter 6 |
Rating - 5
Dialogue and Acting
There were no dialogue options - when Hector clicked ENQUIRE on people he’d ask them a chapter specific question, such as “What is this I hear about the Emperor going mad?” or “I am standing for election to Consul. Can I rely on your vote?” Other characters' responses are largely hints for achieving the current chapter’s objective.
HINT: Give me money and I’ll vote for you. |
HINT: Kill the Emperor and take his job. |
HINT: Give me money and I’ll vote for you… okay, that one was less hint and more spoiler! |
Final Rating
=1+3+3+4+5+3 /.6, which equals… 32
I want to take a point off because I feel the whole is truly less than the sum of its parts in this case when viewed as an adventure game. Though I don’t think the RTS sections would fare any better in a strategy gaming blog either. So I’ll end up with a 31.
Reiko’s conclusion:
I gave up on the game partly because I was having a lot of trouble with making progress in chapter 2, and I didn't have time at that point in the year to keep poking at it. But another reason was because of how despicable the main character is. It starts with petty theft (and extortion, if you take that route) in chapter one, but by chapter two you're already up to buying and using slaves. By the end, you claw your way to the top using murder and assassins.
I simply don't have any desire to play a game that forces you to do things like that. Given the title (and not too much else, as I didn't want to be too spoiled before playing it), I thought it would be more of a historical scenario, but, as we've both discussed in various posts, it's not realistic in the least. And it doesn't give you any choices for how to accomplish what you need to do. Well, no palatable choices, anyway.
So now we can all be glad this one's done and we can move on to something else.
CAP Distribution
50 CAPs to Reiko
- Blogger Award - 50 CAPs – for starting (and concluding) the playthrough of Rome
- Blogger Award - 50 CAPs – For continuing the playthrough of Rome
- Assistance Granted Award – 10 CAPs – for giving assistance when it was requested
- Cheating Award – 5 CAPs – for showing me cheats for the Amiga version of the game that could've helped me win the game if I could get the Amiga version working properly
- Uncommon Award – 5 CAPs - for letting me know that the rarity of the dagger is a bit of a trope in video games – which didn't make me feel any better about it at all
- When In Rome... Award - 5 CAPs – For starting the score guessing in Roman numerals
- I have a Vvvla In My Movth Award - 5 CAPs – for noticing that the Us were all replaced with Vs in the game
- Grand Theft Toga Award - 5 CAPs – for first suggesting that the game could be renamed Grand Theft Toga – and being more correct than he thought
- Gone Babel Fishing Award –5 CAPs - for translating and working out where one of the game's plays came from
- Now You Tell Me Award – 7 CAPs - for giving coded hints that a dagger can only be bought in Chapter 1, but not quite knowing how important that dagger would end up being.
- Psychic Prediction Award - 10 CAPs - for being the closest guesser to the score of Rome
- A Voting Dozen Award – 5 CAPs - for pointing out that Rome has a very small amount of voting citizens, making me realise that the game had done a good job in making the city's atmosphere
- Cheaters Never Prosper Award – 3 CAPs – for attempting to help me cheat but with cheats that ultimately didn't work
- Catholic School Teacher Award – 5 CAPs - for correcting Michael's Latin
- Punished from Up High Award – 5 CAPs - for letting us know that prayers were made to enact vengeance on real life Toga thieves like Hector.
- When Somebody Asks If You're A God... Award – 5 CAPs - for angering the Celtic War God by pointing out that his name shouldn't be the same name as the land he was in
- Tea Time Award – 5 CAPs - for letting us know why the Celts were sitting down in the middle of a foreign invasion.
- Crikey Award – 5 CAPs - for telling us that Australians stole more than just loaves of bread from their parent country.
- Crikey Award – 5 CAPs - for doubling down on pointing out that TBD doesn't know where words come from
- Total BS Award – 5 CAPs - for being the only person to get the joke about British Standards.
- Looper Award – 5 CAPs - for noticing some time loop movie references thrown in to emphasise how repetitive the game was getting
The historic inaccuracies can be written off as artistic license, but the whole sequence playing out in a matter of days is just ridiculous; especially as there is such an easy way to explain it away as years passing in between.
ReplyDeleteThis is most apparent in the brutal deeds you need to commit, it would be OK if it was one or two isolated evil deeds in your rise to power years apart, but here you barely get to rest your stabbing arm.
For now, this is the third worst game of the year, with only Hugo III and L.A. Law beating it, although I guess Curse of Enchantia might still shake things up.
ReplyDeleteThe race for worst between Rome and Enchantia is probably the most exciting and nail-biting so far! The timing with both Won(?) at about the same time couldn't be better.
DeleteExciting and nail-biting as long as you don't have to actually play these games ;)
DeleteI've just started reading the Enchantia posts and I have found it a lot of fun reading about other people's frustration - which probably says something about human psychology.
DeleteSchadenfreude?
DeleteYou know, I played far less than half of the game. I shouldn't get as many CAPs as TBD for this.
ReplyDeleteMaybe, but that would require me doing maths and I prefer to go with the 'dinner with friends' policy of just splitting the bill equally rather than working out how much each person's entree cost.
DeleteHeads up that Scott Adams has announced the development of "Adventureland XL" for Amazon Alexa and other platforms. I don't know much about this yet, but the thought of playing adventure games on an Alexa is both amazing and slightly scary...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.clopas.net/
Long time lurker, first time commenter. I fully agree with TBD. I definitely enjoyed all those painful testimonies of playing Rome and the Curse. And yes, it tells a lot about human psychology. There is a little fun in watching other people having fun. But when it comes to watching other people experiencing very bad game design... While reading the blog I impatiently wait for games which I remember as bad or annoying from my old days.
ReplyDeleteI was a vivid fan of adventure games during the Amiga years and the Enchantia repelled me after few screens with its pesky interface. I was just a kid spoiled by all those Lucasart games.
R: the deleted spam comment, I gotta say, trying to sell "sugar free biscuit dubai" is a new one on me.
ReplyDeleteJust read through the playthrough now, thanks for the writeup. Funnily enough I remember enjoying this game 30 years ago, but now I wonder if childhood nostalgia is getting in the way. I'm tempted to try the game again now and see if it really is this bad.
ReplyDelete