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The original material is Agon episodes one through three. These games have already been reviewed individually in JustAdventure. How good are they? Well, I spent my $10 on the first and after playing it went right out and paid $10 for the second. And then again for the third. I am anxiously waiting for the opportunity to spend money on the fourth. They are worth opening your wallet for.
The disk autoboots to the wonderful trailer for the game. The folks at Private Moon Studios are talented artists and the trailer is sure to hook you. In fact, they are so good that the fourth episode has been delayed which they create a video trailer for their city to help attract the tourists. It is one thing to be a talented artist. It is another to be able to sell your work.
The first episode acts as an introduction. No surprise there. Our night-own professor has just received a mysterious letter from a “W.K.” It encourages him to solve the mystery which has been placed in the lap of the British Museum. The letter also contains a page form an ancient manuscript – medieval in style and possibly illuminated. This codex tells of a demonic influence called the Black King which takes the hearts of men and stirs them to a passion for war. To counter this influence, twelve board games were created to take the competitive nature of man and channel it into peaceful pursuits.
It is now several hundred years later and the British Museum has just come into possession of a large granite statue of a Black King. This statue contains the clue we need to find the first family. The game is well made and ends with the professor off to find the first board game in Lapland. We see the professor board the train, fade and cut. That was when we had to stop and order the next game. But now the first three episodes all come together and instead of Windows, we are taken to the Professor's desk, sometime in the distant future.
At the end of the second episode, we return to the desk again for more letters and another chapter in the biography. Then on to Madagascar. At the very end it looks as if we are finally going to exit the game and wait for episode four, when a surprise letter arrives from Smythe telling us... So what do you get with the Agon Codex? Three delightful adventure games nicely packaged together with several layers of plots to keep you intrigued. I would encourage you to go back and read the individual reviews of each game and then go out and buy this disk. It's a keeper. Reviews: Agon 1 | Agon 2 | Agon 3 System Requirements:
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