Laws concerning the use of this software vary from country to country. We do not encourage or condone the use of this program if it is in violation of these laws. Softonic may receive a referral fee if you click or buy any of the products featured here. What do you think about Fable - The Lost Chapters? Do you recommend it? Fable - The Lost Chapters for Windows. More about Fable - The Lost Chapters Since we added this game to our catalog in , it has already reached 16 downloads, and last week it achieved 4 downloads.
The game begins as the player's character enters the fantasy land of Albion, a growing, interactive environment that develops and changes with each new event. The character grows and changes as well, beginning the adventure as a youth but slowly aging as he or she lives life in Albion, gaining wrinkled skin, graying hair, and hopefully becoming quite elderly by the end of the story.
The game is designed such that every choice and action the character makes can have an effect on his or her development. Physically active characters become more fit, while those who spend their time studying the arcane arts may develop receding hairlines. Characters who spend time working in the hot sun will get a tan and individual wounds heal into distinct, telling scars. Less tangible characteristics mature according to behavior as well.
Players are free to commit nearly any conceivable action, but acts of cruelty will lead to vilification by NPC townsfolk, while noble and altruistic deeds may inspire loyalty and adulation from the masses.
Instead of focusing on a limited number of scripted "good versus evil" plot points, character development in this game occurs mostly through hundreds of minor day-to-day decisions that gradually come to define and refine the character's place in the game world.
In short, role-playing gamers are offered a virtual lifetime of choices to play through. As hinted by the "Lost Chapters" subtitle, this PC port of the original Xbox release features additional quests, characters, and regions to explore, as well as new weapons, armor, and enemies. It's been a year since fans have enjoyed their first taste of Fable, the game touted to be best RPG of all time.
I'm afraid that it doesn't have the depth or originality of Diablo for the PC. So it's definitely not the best RPG ever created but it's in darn good company and there's no reason not to play it - but if you already have you might not get your money's worth out of The Lost Chapters. Fable: The Lost Chapters is essentially an expansion pack. It contains the same core gameplay with some additional features such as new characters, locations, weapons, spells, enemies and side quests.
There are also some new stories but they are just small branches wrapped around the core that essentially lead to dead ends. Originally, Fable's main claim to fame was the ever-changing character development which encouraged you to play with either a good or evil persona.
Your character's physical attributes would change depending on his mental and moral course. This would also alter other characters' reaction to him based solely on his appearance. The uglier he was inside, the uglier he would look on the outside. By playing through the game as both good and evil, it was like getting two games for one price.
Not so with Lost Chapters if you've already played the original since it retains the majority of the gameplay, characters, weapons, locations, etc. Only if you haven't played it will this game reveal itself to be a treasure trove of digital delights.
Choose the path of righteousness or dedicate your life to evil. Muscles expand with each feat of strength. Force of will increases with each work of wit. Obesity follows gluttony, and skin tans with exposure to sunlight and bleaches bone-white from moonlight. Earn scars in battle and lines of experience. Each person you aid, each flower you crush, and each creature.
Fable: Who is it?
0コメント