<rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">	<channel>		<title>All-Time Highest Rated Games Tagged 'dungeons' on The Great Games Experiment</title>		<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/games/ratings/alltime/dungeons/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>		<description>All-Time Highest Rated Games Tagged 'dungeons' on The Great Games Experiment</description>		<image>			<url>http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/css/logo.jpg</url>			<title>All-Time Highest Rated Games Tagged 'dungeons' on The Great Games Experiment</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/games/ratings/alltime/dungeons/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>		</image>		<language>en-us</language>		<item>			<title>Baldur's Gate II</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/bg2/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/1/19ef7d0623151af33eb346c4f1a0ad47_sq.jpg" title="Baldur's Gate II Image" /> <h2>Shadows of Amn</h2>
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Welcome to a world of intrigue, adventure and fierce combat.<br />
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Every world has conflict. Good and evil. Friend and foe. Safety and danger. In Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn, you'll find yourself between these factions. This epic sequel will immerse you in a world of intrigue, adventure and fierce combat where your ability to discern the difference between these sides - with the assistance of steel and spell - determines your fate.<br />
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In Baldur's Gate I, you defeated your evil half-brother Sarevok and prevented your father Bhaal, the dead Lord of Murder, from returning to the Forgotten Realms. Now, in Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn, the stakes have become much higher. Will you resist the evil within you, and forge a legend of heroic proportions? Or will you embrace your monstrous inner nature, and carve a swath of destruction across the Realms?<br />
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Your story begins anew in the exotic southern kingdom of Amn, amidst the opulence of the sinister capital city of Athkatla. Journey through the fierce, unforgiving wilderness of Amn, and through the treacherous caverns of the Underdark, in your quest for artifacts of awesome power and treasure of inestimable wealth.. even challenge dragons, if you dare. Such is the life of a legend.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>26 Nov 2006 06:24:56</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Stronghold (1993)</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/stronghold1993/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/8/8feedc1251ab6cf1b24115677a50699c_sq.png" title="Stronghold (1993) Image" /> Dungeons &amp; Dragons real-time strategy game from 1993 published by SSI and developed by Stormfront Studios. Designed by Don Daglow, Mark Buchignani and David Bunnett, the game was the first RTS to use a 3D perspective, although the visual effect was created in two dimensions by a carefully layered display system. Stronghold was the first Dungeons &amp; Dragons licensed RTS.<br />
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The game was often referred to as &quot;SimCity meets Dungeons &amp; Dragons.&quot; Players balanced resources to build a town with unique elven, dwarven, halfling and human neighborhoods, each with its own unique architecture. Residents and craftspeople of each neighborhood could be summoned to defend any part of the city that came under attack.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>17 Mar 2007 10:38:17</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Dungeons of Despair</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/dod/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/c/c1511fc36089ac6fc969355d6757b1d1_sq.png" title="Dungeons of Despair Image" /> Dungeons of Despair is an isometric RPG game where the player can explore a multitude of levels with many different types of monsters to face and slay, numerous quests that can be undertaken, and has an item generation system that allows for thousands of items with different magical attributes.<br />
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(more information available on the <a href="http://www.zoggles.co.uk/dod" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">DoD web site</a>)<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>04 Dec 2006 11:41:53</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Baldur's Gate</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/baldursgate/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/0/00a7fd13d0ff43be43b914ad78b2ca3f_sq.jpg" title="Baldur's Gate Image" /> Baldur's Gate was the first great daptation of the classic tabletop, role-playing game Dungeons &amp; Dragons that reinvigorated the hardcore role-playing genre for the PC. <br />
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It offers six separate races and eight core character classes, from which the player can create a completely original character. The game world is beautifully designed in the best 2d renders of its time, and players are free to explore this wonderful game environment in any way they see fit, all against the backdrop of a thoughtfully conceived and versatile plot written by the genre's finest at Bioware.<br />
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Your adventures begin as a young orphan living with your stepfather within the safe and scholarly confines of Candlekeep on the Sword Coast. It is an idyllic life until you are forced to leave the place in order to ensure the safety of everyone within. Your stepfather is killed on the night of your journey, and it becomes clear that you are intended to be next. You, as the young protagonist, then set out to discover your true identity, which your stepfather kept from you, and your ultimate destiny. <br />
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During the adventures, you recruit a number of personable allies, battle foes, delve into dungeons, trek across wilderness, solve mysteries, and complete a plethora of epic quests that are seamlessly sown into the fabric of the overall plot. The story line unfolds in response to your choices to reveal your character's true identity as well as the nature and motive of your enemies.<br />
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Baldur's Gate is the epitome of the classic role-playing experience. It won several awards in 1998 for being the Role-Playing Game of the Year, and as such, it sets itself as the standard by which all such games will be judged. Games like Planescape: Torment, Neverwinter Nights and Knights of the Old Republic all take inspiration from the masterpiece that is Baldur's Gate.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>25 Jan 2007 03:49:28</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Master of Magic</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/masterofmagic/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/9/9fdb0e54dabd7b45389e44e7729dce6b_sq.png" title="Master of Magic Image" /> Master of Magic (MoM) is a turn-based fantasy strategic computer game published by Microprose in 1994. The game has many similarities with Civilization, but is set in a fantasy world and includes tactical battles.<br />
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The player starts as a humble wizard ruling a small hamlet, and his goal is to defeat all other wizards, either directly by military operations or by casting the ultimate Spell of Mastery that will banish all other wizards from the mortal plane. There are many customizable starting options and a random map, making each game completely different.<br />
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<span style="font-size: 16px;clear: both;padding:5px;display: block;text-align: center;">For a complete overview of the gameplay, see the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_of_Magic" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Master of Magic Wikipedia article</a><div style="clear: both"></div></span><div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>25 Nov 2006 11:18:37</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Icewind Dale 2</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/iwd2/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/e/e685498a5bb85ad726833f6a7e82b4ae_sq.jpg" title="Icewind Dale 2 Image" /> Icewind Dale II is a computer role-playing game developed by Black Isle Studios, released in 2002. The game is set in the Forgotten Realms Icewind Dale region, and is the sequel to Icewind Dale and its two expansions.<br />
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Like its predecessor, Icewind Dale 2 takes place long before the events described in R.A. Salvatore's Icewind Dale Trilogy made the area a well-known part of Faer&Atilde;&fnof;&Acirc;&raquo;n. The plot itself is often influenced by or refers to events that happened in the original Icewind Dale.<br />
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Like the previous games in the series, Icewind Dale II is based on the BioWare Infinity Engine. The game incorporates nearly all of the changes and additions to the series made by the Heart of Winter and Trials of the Luremaster expansion packs.<br />
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Icewind Dale II was the final Infinity Engine game, and the last Black Isle Studios game released for PC. After their next game, Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance II, they were shut down by Interplay Entertainment, their parent company.<br />
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Unlike its predecessors, the game is based on the Dungeons &amp; Dragons 3rd edition ruleset, which brings such things to the series as feats, the ability for any race to be any class, and the ability for any class to use any weapon. As in Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn, the 3rd edition character classes of Barbarian, Sorcerer, and Monk are present in the game, but unlike that game there are also many sub-races, such as Drow, and Tieflings, which all have racial advantages and disadvantages.<br />
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The basic gameplay of Icewind Dale II is quite similar to that of its predecessors, as well as the other games developed on the Infinity engine. The combat system is a quasi-real-time adaptation of the normally turn-based Dungeons &amp; Dragons combat system used - dice rolling and the like are all done automatically, without requiring the player's participation, although it is possible to pause the game at any time to issue orders to the party.<br />
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Character generation is very different from the earlier Icewind Dale games, however. Instead of the usual virtual dice-rolling process to determine the amount of strength, dexterity, constitution, intelligence, wisdom, and charisma a character will have, the player is given a set amount of points to distribute amongst a character's various statistics. Also included are the D&amp;D 3rd edition components of Feats and character abilities. Among other things, these replace the simple &quot;weapon proficiencies&quot; of previous Icewind Dale games. This, combined with inclusion of more classes and sub-classes, as well as more races and sub-races (all with their own advantages and disadvantages), makes Icewind Dale II's character generation much different from its predecessors.<br />
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Another significant change is the once more increased bestiary, which now includes such creatures as bugbears, hook horrors, and driders, as well as many returning monsters from the previous Icewind Dale game and its expansion packs, the Baldur's Gate series, and Planescape: Torment. In addition, a much larger section of Icewind Dale is explorable than in the previous games, with the game's six chapters (each broken up into around 3 thematic sections of around 2-3 maps each) providing a large amount of play value.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>25 Jan 2007 05:39:05</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>Neverwinter Nights 2</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/nwn2/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/6/61e938663783d61c953271fec60af3ab_sq.jpg" title="Neverwinter Nights 2 Image" /> Neverwinter Nights 2 is a title by Obsidian using the Dungeon and Dragons 3.5E ruleset by Wizards of the Coast. It provides an epic role playing experience in the single player campaign as well as easy to use tools for the community to bring their visions alive. Multiplayer is a core aspect of the game and it allows for cooperative and competative play depending on the module, as well as a dungeon master client controlling the world and characters as the players play.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>27 Nov 2006 02:16:50</pubDate>		</item>		<item>			<title>The Broken Hourglass</title>			<link><![CDATA[ http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/game/brokenhourglass/?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss ]]></link>			<description><![CDATA[ <img style="float: left; clear: left;" src="http://static.greatgamesexperiment.com/userimages/b/b3b02b97ce33b6c03d4b8773ce2513b7_sq.jpg" title="The Broken Hourglass Image" /> The Broken Hourglass is a single-player CRPG set in the Byzantine realm of the Tolmiran Empire. Your character must join forces to thwart an apocalyptic plot being hatched in Mal Nassrin, fading jewel of Tolmira's Narimir province.<div style="clear:both;"></div> ]]></description>			<pubDate>05 Feb 2007 11:36:27</pubDate>		</item>	</channel></rss>