Driftmoon
Driftmoon is a 2013 adventure roleplaying video game developed by Instant Kingdom. The game also contains a built-in mod editor.
Driftmoon | |
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Official logo for video game Driftmoon | |
Developer(s) | Instant Kingdom |
Designer(s) |
Game and Level Design
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Programmer(s) | Ville Mönkkönen |
Artist(s) |
Graphics
Portraits
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Writer(s) |
Ville Mönkkönen Anne Mönkkönen |
Composer(s) |
Sound Effects
Music
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Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release date(s) |
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Genre(s) |
adventure roleplaying |
Mode(s) | single-player |
Plot
The beautiful, enchanted world of Driftmoon trembles in the shadow of a forgotten evil, for the dark King Ixal is again gathering his forces.
Hope lies in an unlikely alliance—the player's character joins forces with a little firefly dreaming of stardom, a panther queen with the ego of a moon whale, and a very determined fellow who has lost everything except his bones. This group embarks on a journey to defeat King Ixal.
Gameplay
When Driftmoon first starts, it automatically installs any new updates. The player can turn off this feature on the "Settings" menu.
The "Settings" menu also permits the player to select whether the game runs in "fullscreen" or "windowed" mode.
At the start of a new game, the player selects a "difficulty level":
- Adventurer (least difficult)
- Champion
- Warlord
- Guardian (most difficult)
The difficulty level can be changed during gameplay via the "Options" menu.
Driftmoon's rudimentary set of key bindings can also be changed via the "Options" menu. Notable key commands include "pause combat", "toggle item highlights" (to indicate items on the ground and objects in the environment for user interaction), "show map" (to display the current area's local map), and tilt camera up / down (the default view of the game's 2D graphics is a top-down perspective).
A game can be saved / loaded at any point during gameplay; Driftmoon provides eight "Save" slots. In addition, the game generates autosaves (for example, upon entering an area).
The adventure game aspect of Driftmoon is evident in its various puzzles, which are not too difficult to solve.
The game has various bosses.
Features relatively unique to Driftmoon include"
- Good game balance—the player does not need to constantly pick up drops from killed enemies and run to a merchant to sell useless items
- Waypoints—As the player explores an area, the game automatically sets waypoints
- Player feedback—Throughout the game, the player can press the "f" key to display a feedback form. The completed form is automatically sent to the developer along with, if the player desires, an automatically generated screenshot.
Reception
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Driftmoon received average reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the PC game 76.25% and 73/100,[1][2] respectively.
GameSpot praised the game's writing and humor, but criticized the shallow combat. [4] Destructoid noted that Driftmoon "[seemed] . . . like the perfect introduction to RPGs for someone new to the genre. It's light-hearted, not too difficult on the lower settings, and doesn't overwhelm the player with options in combat or a complicated skill tree." They similarly enjoyed the writing. [5]
References
- 1 2 "Driftmoon for PC". GameRankings. Retrieved 2014-04-15.
- 1 2 "Driftmoon for PC Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 2014-04-15.
- ↑ "Driftmoon – Overview". allgame. Retrieved 2014-04-15.
- 1 2 Woolsey, Cameron (January 10, 2014). "Driftmoon Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2014-04-15.
- ↑ "Review: Driftmoon". Destructoid. Retrieved 2015-03-08.