Everlight of Magic & Power Review

Review

Everlight
of Magic & Power


Silver
Style Entertainment
The
Adventure Company/JoWood
Genre: Adventure
October 2008
Platform:

PC


Review by Bobbi
Carlini
November 26, 2008

 


Based on my previous misfortune
to be assigned games to review that I found to be about as enthralling
– and challenging – as a debate with Sarah Palin (The Experiment,
Cleopatra),
Randy surely suppressed a smug chuckle or two upon being informed
of my initial impressions after playing through the first ten minutes
of Everlight of Magic & Power: there is a
goofy shopkeeper with over-exaggerated buck teeth and the main character
seems to be some smart-ass teen who will be guided through the game
by a Tinkerbell wannabe.

Everlight of Magic & Power screenshot - click to enlargeFurthermore,
this is one of those annoying games where, when you click on an object
for a description, you character will walk – slowly, mind you – all
the way across the screen before describing it. Look, if he can see
it from across the room, then he can describe it from across the room.
Who does this in real life? If you’re standing at the top of
the stairs and want your husband to bring up the comforter that is
at the bottom of the stairs, would you point at the comforter and
then walk down the stairs and say “please bring me the comforter
and then walk back up the stairs and wait for him to bring it?”
(Not that my husband would bring me anything anyhow).

Well, buckle your seat
belts fellow adventure gamers for after having completed Everlight
of Magic & Power
, the above paragraph is really
my only major complaint (well, maybe the lame title could use some
tweaking, but other than that…)! Now that you’ve picked
yourself up off the floor….

Everlight of Magic & Power screenshot - click to enlargeThe
‘smart-ass’ teen is named Melvin and he is actually just
a pretty normal kid who enters a shop to escape the rain and discovers
he may have latent magical powers. Despite the negative first impression,
he, thankfully, never veers into the smarmy territory occupied by
Simon the Sorcerer. He is, in fact, an interesting character in that
he must undertake a journey to conquer man’s most common fears
– Failure, Loneliness, Disappointment, Fear Itself & Death
– and unlike most games of this sort, he has somewhat matured by the
end of the game.

Fiona
is the Tinkerbell wannabe and while she is not as well-rounded a character
as Melvin, she does have her charms and faults, one of which is to
repeat nasty gossip. She basically though serves as an interactive
help feature throughout your journey. As for Mr. Teeth, the goofy
shopkeeper, well, maybe he’ll come off better in the sequel.

Everlight of Magic & Power screenshot - click to enlargeMelvin
is magically transported to the cursed village of Tallen. By day,
Tallen’s inhabitants go about their business and live their
lives. But by night, they become their polar opposite personality
– the mousey post office clerk becomes a serial killer scouring the
Town Square for victims, the soft spoken smithy morphs into a belligerent
town drunk and the richest man in town, a beggar. It’s an interesting
concept to be sure, but the game then takes it one step further by
providing the player with the ability to switch between daytime and
nighttime. So maybe information that couldn’t be pried from
the closed lip librarian during afternoon hours is easily obtained
from his braggadocio alter ego after closing time.

Everlight
is spread over five chapters and is played from the third person point-of-view.
The detailed 2D backgrounds and animation have a nice, fantasy feel
to them, but there were also moments when my computer seemed to kick
into slo-motion and characters crawled across the screen. Thankfully,
these moments are few and seemed to be limited to specific processor
hogging areas. The voice-acting is well-done. No one person stands
out as being exceptional, but neither are there any clunkers in the
lot which is a good thing as there is lots and lots of dialogue. Travel
between areas of the village is expedited by clicking on a most welcome
map

Everlight of Magic & Power screenshot - click to enlargeThe
puzzles are of the type where simple problems have very complicated
solutions that only become apparent after much conversation and skullduggery.
Sure, some of them may seem nonsensical, but that is a large part
of the fun in a game like Everlight. I will
say this though, even though some of the puzzle solutions may have
seemed absurd, they were always logical and clues were always available
somewhere in the game. Inventory items can also be combined to create
new items

Speaking of which, there
is a multi-level help system within the game that masquerades as Fiona’s
Notes. It is a magical book that not only provides a helpful list
of Unfinished and Completed Tasks, but also offers hints when you
are stuck on a puzzle or on how to next proceed. And in what may be
a first in any game, if you find a puzzle to be too difficult, the
difficulty level can be adjusted anytime during gameplay in the options
menu. You can also, as is typical in many of today’s games,
press the letter ‘H’ on your keyboard to highlight all
of the active objects in an area. If you don’t like this type
of feature, then don’t use it, but I often found it helpful
when I was deciding what to do next and wondered if maybe I had overlooked
an item.

Everlight of Magic & Power screenshot - click to enlargeAnother
plus is that it has a deliciously dry sense of humor. A list of banned
items confiscated by the town councilors includes a shelf of first-person-shooter
games. A magic closet is accorded the proper deference and a staid,
elderly woman becomes at night, what else, but an octogenarian dominatrix.
While some of the humor does at time veer towards lewd, it never really
crosses that boundary.

There are some minor, niggling
problems that are eating away at me. There is a lot of switching between
am/pm which can really play havoc with certain aspects of the game,
such as when you need to obtain some objects for a picnic later that
evening, but must perform multiple daytime/nighttime changes beforehand.
So if you have already changed the village to nighttime and back half
a dozen times before the evening picnic, then how is it still that
same evening? Well, the game is meant to be fun so unless you’re
Stephen Hawking, this is something you probably shouldn’t let
interfere with your enjoyment.

Everlight of Magic & Power screenshot - click to enlargeThere
is also at times a lack of continuity. Early in the game when Melvin
encounters a talking mouse, he never seems to give it a second thought,
but when he later encounters a talking stag, he is aghast, “What,
you can talk!” he exclaims. Now let me ask you, how is it that
someone can believe that a rodent can speak, but is shocked by a hoofed
mammal doing the same? This pales in comparison though to the ‘how
come Goofy can talk but Pluto can’t?’ heated discussion
that has plagued Disney scholars for decades.

Finally, the ending begs
some further resolution, but it could also be that the developers
wanted to save some storyline to carry over into a possible sequel.

But none of these problems
are deal breakers. So if you like a fanciful game, with meaty puzzles,
a fun cast of characters and a playing time that is easily 15+ hours
– if you don’t cheat and consult a walkthrough – then Everlight
of Magic and Power
should be just your cup of tea.


Final
Grade: B
(find
out more about our grading system
)

 

System Requirements:

  • OS: Windows® 2000/XP/Vista
  • CPU: 2.6 GHz Pentium
    4 or AMD Athlon
  • RAM: 1 GB
  • Disk Space: 4 GB Available
  • Video Card: DirectX®
    9.0 Compatible (Radeon x800, GeForce 6800)
  • Sound: DirectX®
    9.0 Compatible
  • DVD-ROM: 4x
  • DirectX: 9.0c
  • Input: Keyboard, Mouse
    and 5.1 Speakers

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