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I really wanted to review Casanova: Duel of the Black Rose. Really. Being the libertine I am, I spent countless hours just staring at the CD case thinking, "Finally, a game where I can use my undeniable man-charm to woo the pants off the ladies!" I kid, of course, because my undeniable man-charm generally consists of, "So, is that a banana in your pants or are you just happy to see me?" at which time I usually realize that I'm talking to a woman (and if not, I usually get fisticuffs in my abdominal region.)
The story, while okay, can drag along at the pace of a snail weighted down with lead and towing a Ford Expedition through three-foot deep molasses in the peak of winter (that is, slowly). Basically, fierce Mongol pirates attack the handsome Giacomo Casanova's ship and kill his ma while severely injuring him. While he recuperates in the city of Venice, he discovers that plenty of women roam the streets, just waiting for him to charm their respective pants off of. Oh, and the said fierce Mongol pirates threaten the city and other such pointless miscellany (not much matters when there's pants-charming to be had.) And the graphics, while okay, can drag along at the pace of a snail weighted down with lead and towing a Ford Expedition through three-foot deep molasses in the peak of winter (that is, slowly). Even at the lowest detail level, the speed of the game made me feel sorry for my computer (and this is a machine to which I have intoned, "You worthless hunk of bovine fecal matter and silicone," "You hell-spawned machine," and, "I'd rather word process on Michael Jackson than on you!"). Once you start to add in the water, the sky, and crowd effects (I had to turn all of those off for halfway decent playing), you might as well read a good (and long) book while you play Casanova. The complete, untranslated works of Nietzsche, for example. Not to mention the clipping problem. The gondolas flew through the frickin' sky!
Don't get me started on the combat. Casanova can kill both fierce Mongol pirates and random robbers with either a rapier or a crossbow. That is, in theory he can. Considering the Suckiness Factor© of the combat system (a 9,984 out of 10,000), Casanova will die a tad bit more than he will kill. The crossbow is next to impossible to aim and the supposedly intuitive sword commands are best utilized by randomly ramming the keyboard with your open palm.
In short, Casanova isn't a bad game if you want some pants-charming-off-deformed-computer-generated-women action. But if you wanted a quality adventure game, I'd look somewhere else. Final Grade: D+ System Requirements:
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