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01-12-23
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Staff
System:
Nintendo NES
Developer:
Interplay Productions

Country Origin: US
ESRB: E

Game Genre:
Role-Playing (RPG)
Game Perspective:
1st-Person Perspective
Genre Non-Sport:
Medieval / Fantasy, Turn-based

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Play The Bard's Tale - Tales of the Unknown (NES) - Reviews | Nintendo NES

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The Bard's Tale - Tales of the Unknown

The BardThe Bard
Bard's Tale, The - Tales of the Unknown Box Art FrontBard's Tale, The - Tales of the Unknown Box Art BackThe Bard
Rating: 8.3
(16 votes)
Plays: 1,733
M:99%
F:1%
Filesize: 80kb

The Bard's Tale - Tales of the Unknown Reviews 

Overall 8.3    Graphics 7    Sound 7    Addictive 4.5    Story 4.5    Depth 4.5    Difficulty 5.5



6.5
Bard's Tale   warmaker
Bard's Tale is an average RPG with average playability and is moderately forgettable.  The game opens in a tavern.  There is no back story nor do you know why or who you are.  You create a party of six members with various classes available.  Hunters and Warriors are strong physical attackers.  Rogues are nimble and can disarm the many chests you find. Bards can sing various songs and work like a power mage.  The bard has a full compliment of songs at the beginning and makes him the best class to start.  Wizards and sorcerers round out the magic-using part of the team.
When you order your characters, you can only allow the first three to attack physically.  The back three can only sing or chant spells.  This leads to some strategy as you outline your party system.  The battle system is menu based and you can select attack, guard, cast, sing, or use items.  The menus are familiar to any RPG player.
The graphics are interesting only in the game is a first-person view.  Think Wolfenstein at the time.  You get an overhead map and you can explore the area around you.  The monsters have average graphics and the world around you is not detailed.  Generic is the word of the day for graphics.
The music and sounds are average at best.  It is a repetitive song played depending on the action.  The battle music is fun, fast-paced, and engaging.
The story is incredibly weak with very little to catch your attention.  This was before the time of Final Fantasy sprawling, detailed, shocking stories but came after a believable Dragon Warrior.  An evil mage has taken control of the city and you have to find a way into his tower.  You battle him to free the town of control.  The problem is there is nothing more than that.  He doesn't even seem to be doing anything bad as the city folk you talk to have their taverns and businesses open as usual.  The exception is the monsters walking around but there is no link between them and the evil mage.
The story has very little depth.  PIck some characters, learn on the fly, and level up.  There are some underground mazes and some interesting items to discover but this is an early NES/8-bit game.  You cannot expect much out of it.
The difficulty is the tough part.  If you can survive the punishment you first take when you start, the game gets easy.  The characters get wiped out early and often at the beginning of the game and the 300 gold to revive a player can frustrate even the most patient of gamers. The difficulty is finding the right enemies in the beginning and successfully fleeing the ones that will destroy you easily.  As long as you can survive to level 3 or 4, you can make it.  Getting that far will lead any old-school player to throwing their controller at the TV.
The game is not addicting.  You can play to check it off a "Games Played" list but there are no solid positives to Bard's Tale.  It is forgettable and not worthy of playing more than once.  The battle system is average, the music is okay, the storyline is poor, the graphics are what you expect from the generation and it spawned nothing in the way of continuation games.  Play away but you may find yourself unimpressed after the end.
  Graphics 7   Sound 6   Addictive 5   Story 6   Depth 4   Difficulty 8

      Review Rating: 3.7/5     Submitted: 05-12-13     Review Replies: 0


7
A Bard's Tale: NES   Ghostbear1111
"It is a time of swords and magic. In a distant world there is a town called Skara Brae. The town has prospered thanks to many years of peace."
But an evil wizard named Mangar has seized control of the town and turned it to eternal winter. It is up to a band of adventurers to work together to find a local protector, Kylearen, who possesses a key to sneak the band into the tower of Mangar. There, the band may challenge Mangar and end his evil ways.
*****
The story sounds good. This is something I can wrap my mind around and gear up and fight enemies and come to the rescue of a town that needs my help. What a great premise for a game. A Bard's Tale is a Nintendo remake of a game (of the same name) meant for PC. I have never played the original game so I can't compare it to anything. I know I can compare Bard's Tale against other RPGs of the day, say Dragon Warrior, Final Fantasy's early games, and so on.
I am going to do this from a positives and negatives, not an aspect by aspect approach.
THE BAD:
I did not score this game highly and I will discuss the why. The biggest concern isn't even the story, the graphics, the music, or the progression. The menus and submenus require a large amount of effort to complete some of the most simple tasks. For example, two characters purchasing equipment at a store resembles something like: "Select Trade, select character, select Pool Gold, select purchase item, select item, back out, back out, back out, select alternate character, select pool gold, select purchase item." And equipping gear, using items, performing almost any task within the menus is so unwieldy it gets old really quickly. I challenge anyone to tell me there's any level of efficiency with handling the equipment and spells side of things.
The other challenge is the insanely tough beginning. The first three levels of the game is hard and if you die or make a mistake, you're punished aggressively, to the point where it is easier to create a new character instead of finding a way to raise the money to heal or revive a dead character. Other games scale the cost of coming back to life dependent on the level. A Bard's Tale does not. And it is expensive early on. Gear and equipment is the first thing a player does and that takes perhaps an hour of game time just amassing the money to purchase weapons and armor.
And speaking of weapons and armor, there is one weapon store in the whole game. There are only four places you will ever need to check into when you play and the map is extremely small. A Bard's Tale is spent for 90% of the game grinding up levels and finding experience. There are only a few small maps, the town, the sewers, the baseball, and a pair of towers, for exploration and most of the places to go are empty. You end up walking up and down the same halls fighting enemies to get more levels and spells to fight more enemies to get to the end. The repetition is mind-numbing and the pay-off isn't worth the effort. Once you've purchased the basic weapons and armor, there is no reason for money outside of buying new spells. You'll suddenly amass thousands and thousands of gold pieces and have no need for them. You work hard for every one early on and later you find yourself passing up treasures chests because you don't want to deal with the time it takes to sell the gear.
Another criticism is the look of the game. There's a mini-map showing the dungeon or town you're in, a menu showing HP, MP, and AC of your characters, and a 3-D view of the world around you. It looks similar to the First Person shooter view of Doom or Wolfenstein. The biggest challenge to it is the entire world looks the same. All the doors are the same, all the walls are the same. The only change is the coloring. I was at first interested to see how the First Person view went but I quickly got over it and focused only on the top-down map to navigate. And there are only a few places I would need to go anyway. If it weren't for the hours spent leveling and grinding, the game would be very quick to play. You go to a bar, you get some grape juice from the cellar which leads you to a sewer where you end up in a catacombs, a tower, a second tower, and it's over. It's straight forward.
I can go on but the last big part is: No interaction. The game says most of the town was wiped out or ran away and we're trying to save an empty city but there are no characters to talk to or interact with. There are a few bar owners but they sell drinks for the bard. There's a shop owner named Lars. There is a healer and a council to level up. That's it. Even the characters don't have a backstory and there is no plot development. A Bard's Tale is way off the mark by not incorporating this element into the game. Even the 'bosses' to quote don't have more than a single line of dialogue. 90% or more of your time is simply spent fighting countless battles.
THE GOOD:
Jeez, Ghostbear... Is there anything good to the game?
Yes.
The battle music is catchy and I never thought it got old. I think A Bard's Tale has some of the best combat music in the history of RPGs. The overworld music and the rest of the audio are average at best.
The magic users are unique and interesting. I like the large number of spells available through leveling and how unique their effects are. It's not healing magic and damaging magic. There are spells that create a variety of buffs to characters and enemies and it goes beyond the standard spells in every Final Fantasy game. It is difficult to track what spell does what without looking at the manual or an FAQ and many of the spells have specific and timely purposes that bring the experience together.
The really in-depth part of A Bard's Tale is the multi-party system. You can create two separate parties and hone their skills and abilities to work with each other and play two games almost at the same time. This is unique, exciting, and not nearly as helpful since it is held back by the rest of the negative points of the game.
THE REST OF THE STORY:
A Bard's Tale for the Nintendo Entertainment System was an attempt to bring a Dungeons & Dragons style game as close to reality as possible for a non-PC platform. The designers tried to show the depth and creativity available for a game of this style and they ended up making a clunky, unplayable, forgettable RPG that even fans of Dragon Warrior wouldn't want to pick up. It was a nice try and after some experimenting, they may have learned some lessons and made a better game but they simply missed the boat.
You can skip this one.

  Graphics 7   Sound 8   Addictive 4   Story 3   Depth 5   Difficulty 3

      Review Rating: 3/5     Submitted: 03-09-17     Review Replies: 0

The Bard's Tale - Tales of the Unknown Box Description

Long ago, monsters were set loose in the city of Skara Brae by Mangar the Dark, a malevolent mage. Now you create a band of six adventurers to seek out and conquer the monstrous creatures that lurk within. Choose each hero's class: Warrior (weapons expert), Rogue (sneaky fighter), Hunter (ninja assassin), Wizard (21 spells), or Sorceror (22 spells). And the Bard, a wandering minstrel. Though each hero is strong in battle, the Bard's special weapon is his magical music which has devastating effects on your fearsome foes. Hone your combat skills through 16 complex maze levels as you face dragons, trolls, nomads, and other hideous creatures.

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Comments for The Bard's Tale - Tales of the Unknown

thing1 05-11-13 - 06:04 AM
 still playing this, warmaker?

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