Version: 2008
advertisement
Click Here

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings (PC)

Price:

$5.95

Compare prices:

eBay $5.95

Compare prices from 1 store

Add to my list Product summary

Asheron's Call 2 is a highly streamlined, highly accessible online RPG. Yet the world of Dereth seems bare for a number of reasons.

Read full review

GameSpot editors' review

So-called massively multiplayer online role-playing games have roots in text-based multiuser dungeon (or "MUD") games, but they've since evolved into one of the most prominent and most fiercely competitive PC game markets around. These games let players create characters to adventure in a huge online world with other players, and they get thousands of subscribers hooked on their addictive hack-and-slash combat and lengthy quests. And though these players always keep coming back for more, it seems like some of them are never happy--they constantly complain about how certain aspects of their favorite games are tiresome or even infuriating. Play Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings for a while, and you'll realize that developer Turbine Entertainment clearly wanted to avoid as many of these problems as possible. Such nettlesome issues--like losing items after your character dies, or being forced to run back to the nearest town to sell off burdensome loot and replenish supplies--simply aren't in the game. As a result, Asheron's Call 2 is a highly streamlined, highly accessible online RPG. Yet although the developer plans to add plenty of new content to the game in the coming months, the game's world of Dereth also seems bare for a number of reasons.

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kingsscreenshot
Asheron's Call 2 offers plenty of gorgeous vistas, like this.

Then again, when you first step into the world of Asheron's Call 2, you'll immediately find something that the game can't be faulted for: its superb graphics. Asheron's Call 2 makes excellent use of new DirectX graphical features to create spectacular effects like animated water, colorful magic spell effects, and gorgeous sunrises and sunsets. Asheron's Call 2's impressive graphics engine also allows for massive architecture in both indoor and outdoor areas, including gigantic statues, huge towers, and truly bizarre structures in the game's various dungeons. And the game has highly detailed, colorful character models and monsters that look considerably better than those of practically any other online RPG on the market today. Unlike most online RPGs, Asheron's Call 2 uses an offbeat, completely original fantasy setting (rather than a traditional medieval fantasy backdrop, the way games like Dark Age of Camelot and EverQuest do), and the game's powerful graphics engine has really let Turbine's team of artists articulate this unusual setting. These excellent graphics do come at a price: In order to fully appreciate the way Asheron's Call 2 looks, you'll need a good computer, preferably one equipped with at least 512MB of RAM and at least a decent midrange graphics card, like a GeForce3 Ti200 or higher.

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kingsscreenshot
Weary adventurers cool their heels at the forge with a little music.

Most online role-playing games tend to have rather sparse sound to help players really feel as though they're exploring a vast, open world, but Asheron's Call 2 has a subdued, ambient soundtrack that plays constantly in the background. It's not the least bit offensive, but it's indistinct enough that it can be easily ignored. Though the game has a dynamic music system that changes the music depending on various factors, it's really not noticeable except for when player characters get together and use instruments to play music. Players can use Asheron's Call 2's emote system to make their characters quietly laugh, wave at each other, or play up to 10 variations on the game's musical instrument melodies, which sound different depending what sort of instrument (such as a lute or a drum) each player is using. It's not uncommon to see players standing about a crafting forge--a special area that can enhance players' item-crafting skills--playing musical instruments in a group when they're not out hunting monsters.

Unfortunately, as things are right now, there isn't much to do other than fighting, crafting, and occasionally playing music. Though Asheron's Call 2 has a seemingly complex story that involves the destruction of Dereth (and the impending reconstruction of the world in the months to come), you'll uncover it only by clearing out the game's vaults--huge underground dungeons full of monsters presided over by an especially strong monster. For the most part, you can complete a vault by killing the vault's boss monster. Once you do so, you're rewarded with a brief cinematic sequence and quest points that will count toward something eventually, but currently have no in-game value. You can also try to complete a normal, non-vault dungeon, or an aboveground quest, which will usually require you to kill certain monsters to collect specific items off their bodies. Or, you can try to find a spot where monsters spawn aboveground and hunt them for experience and items. Either way, you'll be fighting monsters quite a bit--especially since fighting is the main way to gain experience points and pick up monster loot.

Loot is more important in Asheron's Call 2 than in other games, since it's the direct source of all your character's money and will likely be the direct source of all your character's weapons and armor. All loot items are composed of one of five basic raw materials (wood, stone, iron, crystal, or acid) and can be instantly changed into gold by dragging each item into a prompt in your character's inventory screen, much like in Gas Powered Games' action RPG Dungeon Siege. However, you're better off attempting to craft your loot into better items yourself, especially since crafted weapons are far more powerful than most any you'll find on the body of a slain monster. One one hand, this streamlined crafting system eliminates the "mule" problem of the original Asheron's Call. In that game, trade skills were best improved by spending experience points on them, so many players had a regular combat character, whose experience they spent normally on combat skills, and a "mule" character, whose experience they'd spend only on crafting skills. Then again, since monster loot is really the only source of crafting materials, you can't really lead the life of a peaceful artisan either--you've got to keep fighting and looting in order to improve your crafting skills.

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kingsscreenshot
Conquering vaults unlocks brief cinematic sequences.

At any rate, Asheron's Call 2's crafting system is highly streamlined and very easy to get into. Rather than developing a generic metal-smithing or wood-carving skill, you simply improve your skill making an individual item repeatedly, and with each success, you become better at crafting that item and can unlock more-advanced versions of that same item. While it's certainly a lot less complex than the crafting systems used in other games, it also seems more shallow. Rather than being renowned as an expert smith, your characters are "the guys who make good gloves"--or they would be, if so many other players weren't also crafting the exact same things you are. The ease of crafting shifts dramatically once you unlock your fourth-level recipe for just about any item, since crafting high-level magic bows, swords, and armor not only requires high-quality materials from high-level loot, but also insanely rare monster trophy items, such as wings from wasps and spikes from Dereth's spiny reedsharks, which are so difficult to obtain that their market value is overblown. At this point in time, the fourth tier of crafted items will generally bring the careers of all but the most dedicated artisans to a screeching halt.

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kingsscreenshot
Asheron's Call 2's vaults feature impressive architecture.
Continue reading

Most helpful user reviews

Submit your review

Log in or create an account to submit your review for:

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings (PC)

ORLog in with your Facebook account
1. Rate this product:
(Mouse over the stars to rate this product and click to set your rating.)
2. One-line summary:(Summarize your review in one line. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 55 characters
3. Pros:(Tell us what you like about this product. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 250 characters
4. Cons:(Tell us what you don't like about this product. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 250 characters
Bottom-line summary:(Explain to us in detail why you like or dislike the product, focusing your comments on the product's features and functionality, and your experience using the product. This field is optional.)
0 of 5000 characters

The posting of advertisements, profanity, or personal attacks are prohibited.
Click here to review our site terms of use.

Submit

Where to buy

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings (PC): $5.95
storepricein stock?rating
eBay
$5.95 Yes 5.0 star rating

see prices from 1 store

Compare prices for Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings

Price: $5.95
eBay $5.95
advertisement

Recent user reviews

Submit your review

Log in or create an account to submit your review for:

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings (PC)

ORLog in with your Facebook account
1. Rate this product:
(Mouse over the stars to rate this product and click to set your rating.)
2. One-line summary:(Summarize your review in one line. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 55 characters
3. Pros:(Tell us what you like about this product. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 250 characters
4. Cons:(Tell us what you don't like about this product. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 250 characters
Bottom-line summary:(Explain to us in detail why you like or dislike the product, focusing your comments on the product's features and functionality, and your experience using the product. This field is optional.)
0 of 5000 characters

The posting of advertisements, profanity, or personal attacks are prohibited.
Click here to review our site terms of use.

Submit
advertisement

Asheron's Call 2: Fallen Kings (PC)