| Dungeons & Dragons Online: StormReach | 
| From: Atari Category: Video Games
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $9.99 as of 3/14/2010 12:44 CET details You Save: $4.96 (33%)
New (22) Used (9) from $2.24
Seller: HPP Enterprises Rating: 19 reviews Sales Rank: 18,714
Format: CD-ROM Platform: Windows XP Genre: role_playing_games ESRB: Teen Media: CD-ROM Edition: Standard (CD) Batteries Included: No Age: 12 - 20 years Operating System: Windows XP Shipping Weight (lbs): 0 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 1.3
MPN: 100722 Model: 22708 UPC: 742725270510 EAN: 0742725270510 ASIN: B000E7E9JM
Release Date: February 28, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Role-playing game designed more as combat-intensive quests | | • | Create your own unique hero from nine classes, five races and thousands of combinations of skills, feats, and appearances | | • | Control every attacking blow, defensive block, and dodging tumble in real-time battles | | • | Coordinate your tactics and strategies with your party using integrated voice chat | | • | Game is currently available to be played only on US servers |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach is not sprawling game you might expect based on some other online role-playing games. Set in and around the city of Stormreach, you will spend most of your time in the sewers and dungeons hidden beneath this supposedly civilized place, rather than traveling to the far corners of some over-large fantasy world. The gameplay in Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach is designed more as combat-intensive quests, which means you will spend more of your time undertaking meaningful missions and trying to achieve specific sets of objectives than you will spend blindly exploring an expansive fantasy world. Classic Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) conventions, such as saving throws and critical hits, are at work behind the scenes, which allows combat itself to remain simple, fast paced, and packed full of action.
Amazon.com Product Description Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach is not sprawling game you might expect based on some other online role-playing games. Set in and around the city of Stormreach, you will spend most of your time in the sewers and dungeons hidden beneath this supposedly civilized place, rather than traveling to the far corners of some over-large fantasy world. The gameplay in Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach is designed more as combat-intensive quests, which means you will spend more of your time undertaking meaningful missions and trying to achieve specific sets of objectives than you will spend blindly exploring an expansive fantasy world. Classic Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) conventions, such as saving throws and critical hits, are at work behind the scenes, which allows combat itself to remain simple, fast paced, and packed full of action. 
Combat remains simple, fast paced, and packed full of action. View larger. | 
Choose from various non-human D&D races, including elves, dwarves, and halflings. View larger. | 
The quests provide a good balance of combat with light, thoughtful puzzle solving. View larger. | Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach lets you choose from the standard non-human D&D races, including elves, dwarves, and halflings, as well as one new Eberron race called the warforged. The warforged are wood and metal golems, originally created to be a race of soldier slaves, which have since gained their independence and who now live alongside the other races in relative equality. Once you have selected your race, you will need to choose your character class. Here you will find the core classes, such as the fighter, cleric, wizard and rogue, make an appearance alongside the more specialized classes, such as the barbarian, sorcerer, bard, paladin and ranger. With this accomplished, you are free to select your character's appearance, which is where the tough choices must be made. Finally, you must determine what your character can, and can not, do. While the game will suggest a certain set of ability scores, skills, and feats for your character, you're free to customize them in any way you wish. As in other online D&D games, there is an auto-attack feature that allows you to relax and watch the action play itself out, but the real-time fighting -- which utilizes the right button on the mouse to control attacks and the shift button on the keyboard to control blocks -- adds a lot more excitement to the game. Your various spells and ranged abilities are controlled via hot keys. An auto-lock feature makes your ranged attacks a lot easier to manage, but you are still free to aim and fire on your own. Characters pay a four-point penalty if they attack while moving, though you can get around this penalty by using the tumble skill. This convention can take some time to get used to, given that some monsters in the game are highly mobile, but once you manage to get the rhythm of moving and attacking, you will quickly to learn to fight without being penalized. In between all the fighting there is still a lot of exploring to do. The dozens of quests that Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach has to offer provide a good balance of pure, sweet combat with light, thoughtful puzzle solving, and they are structured in a way that keeps you constantly in motion. Whether you are searching out secret doors, swimming across an underwater labyrinth, fighting for your lives against sudden kobold ambushes, or smashing open barrels looking for treasure, you are always moving towards the end of your quest. Each quest is rated in level, length, and difficulty, and you have the option of repeating quests at a higher difficulty level to face greater dangers and receive greater rewards. Unlike other D&D games where you earn experience from each individual kill, Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach only lets you earn experience points upon successfully completing the entire quest. The game was designed this way to help avoid putting players through the typical grind of repeatedly killing the same monsters as a way to level up. All of the quests in Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach are singular "instances" that offer fresh challenges exclusively for your party; you won't be pushed into the middle of an ongoing quest that others have already started. Most quests can be easily completed in a reasonable period of time, although some quests are part of a greater, story-driven series that can take much longer to complete. Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach presents loads of opportunities for party-based dungeon crawling expeditions, all launched from a large urban common area. The taverns located throughout the city of Stormreach serve as social hubs, in which you can find other players to join. For chat capability, Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach requires only a standard microphone and headset that allows you to talk, rather than type, to your party members. You get your first 30 days for free, after which you must pay a monthly fee to remain online.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 19
its pretty true to dnd January 22, 2010 L. Yeh really great for lovers of the pen and paper. just not enough dynamic content to be the same experience of the pen and paper fantasy.
Great game September 18, 2009 Xein Chi (IBig Spring Texas) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
good game it starts you out easy to get to learn game bascis then it's game on find a few friends and go questing
Nobody plays this anymore...it's dying out March 5, 2009 Big T (7 minutes in the future) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This came out 3 years ago. It used to be fun and had a lot of good things about it. HOWEVER, the player base has dwindled severely, servers have merged, the non-US servers WERE TAKEN DOWN PERMANANTLY RECENTLY.... basically all the people that used to play this have left to play other games. The ones that are left get smaller and smaller (and more and more annoying personalities). They'll probably close it all down soon.
Shame. Was fun, but that was 1-2 years ago. It's got more than a foot in the MMORPG grave.
A new review May 3, 2008 J. Naylor (Florida) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I just noticed that most of the reviews for this game are 2 YEARS OLD! The game has come a long way in the last 2 years and is a very enjoyable experience. You can now advance up to level 16 and even unlock the ability to create a Drow Elf character with enough Favor. I have been playing nearly every day for a month and I am only level 6 right now. Also, if you don't like having to group up to complete quests, you probably shouldn't be playing a MMORPG. This is an excellent game for any D&D fan and could be enjoyable to anyone who likes role-playing games. Next month the Monk class will be released, and so you see the game is still continuing to grow. At $9.99 a month it is, in my opinion, well worth it!
Couldnt Do It December 29, 2007 Dr. Freeman (Perry, Iowa United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This game is as good as it gets for someone who loves the D&D world. Character creation was deep enough and the dungeons were good. Problem as said before is forced grouping. After advancing to level 2 solo play is nearly impossible at least for casters which i simply must play. I dont mind grouping, when i feel like grouping but the main problem lies in the fact that you do not really have time to make enough friends before you have to start grouping. Being totally fried on WOW i gave this game several hours and just cannot bring myself to pay for hanging around waiting to group with people who may or may not be fun to be around. Hopefully they will try again and do the D&D world with enough solo quests throughout to keep everyone playing. I would love to see it.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 19
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