It’s hard to believe, but up until now there has never been a real-time
strategy game set in the Dungeons & Dragons universe. D&D has spawned countless
RPGs and many and RTS has been set in a fantasy world filled with magic users
and orcs, but the two worlds have never met before. This glaring oversight has
finally been rectified with the release of Dragonshard, a game that not only
brings D&D into the RTS realm, but does so while still remaining true to D&D’s
RPG roots.
The storyline in Dragonshard is set in D&D’s Eberron world and pits three
factions against each other in a battle to possess the Heart of Siberys, a
particularly powerful Dragonshard artifact. The first is the Order of the Flame
which is the “good” faction made up of an alliance of dwarves, humans, and
elves. Next we have the Lizardfolk, a race of lizards created by the power of
the Heart of Siberys. Finally there is the Umbragen, a faction made up of dark
races from the underworld. Dragonshard departs from the usual RTS model in that
there are only two faction-based campaigns, with the Umbragen being the odd race
out.
From the very start of the campaign you’ll see what a good job Dragonshard
does of bringing RPG and RTS games together into one. This is partially
accomplished by dividing the maps into two levels, one above ground and on
below. Above ground the action is more RTS-focused, as it is home to the game’s
base-building and unit recruitment activities. Below ground the gameplay is more
akin to that of an action-RPG, often involving some good old fashioned dungeon
crawling. Side-by-side mini maps help you keep track of the action on both
levels, but the missions are usually designed so that your focus will primarily
be on one level at a time.
Dragonshard does not simply follow a boilerplate RTS design for its strategy
elements. Bases can only be built on special map locations, and the bases
themselves are limited in size as you can only create structures in one of a
base’s designated slots. The first consequence of this is that you’ll have to
make strategic decisions as to which types of units you will want in your army
as often there will not be enough available slots for you to create every
possible structure. Furthermore, your units will be faced with a level cap
unless you build more of the same structure. For example, a single tavern will
produce thieves that can be upgraded to level 2, but to upgrade your thieves to
level 3 you’ll need to build an additional tavern. Of course this will use up
one of your precious building slots and perhaps force you to go without a
certain unit type.
Another interesting aspect of unit management is that you are actually
building captains at your structures and not individual units. These captains
will accrue followers based on their level and this is how you’ll actually fill
out your army. When you go underground, though, your captains will have to leave
their followers behind. This keeps the dungeon aspect of the game more on the
scale of a raiding party than an invading army and is more in the spirit of D&D
games.
There are two types of resources in the game, gold and dragonshard crystals.
Gold is steadily produced on its own as a kind of tax revenue stream, but to
really accumulate the gold you need to run your army you’ll need to collect
treasure on your forays underground. Crystals are gathered above ground although
they can occasionally be found underground as well. The crystals are left behind
by periodic meteor showers, so it’s effectively a renewable resource. Any unit
can gather gold or crystals, so there’s no peasant style unit in the game.
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