Product Details
Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance (PS2)

Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance (PS2)
From Sierra

Price: £24.95

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by retro-games-centre

18 new or used available from £4.15

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Product Description

Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance combines fast-paced action and adventure in the popular world of Baldur's Gate. It features an epic tale of intrigue, alliances, explosive spell effects, and highly detailed creatures and environments, and allows for both single and two-player cooperative play. Characters are customisable, each with unique powers, appearance and abilities. This is the first console game to feature Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition rules in real time. With Dolby Digital sound, comprehensive voice acting and a completely original soundtrack.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8831 in Computer & Video Games
  • Brand: Sierra
  • Released on: 2003-03-28
  • Platform: PlayStation2

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
The Baldur's Gate series redefined and reinvigorated the PC role-playing scene, and now Interplay brings it to the Playstation 2. But don't be fooled; this isn't a traditional role-playing game, but rather a fun, wall-to-wall action hack-'n'-slash adventure in the mould carved by Gauntlet and the storied Diablo series--one that nonetheless conforms to the 3rd Edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons ruleset.

The game casts you as one of three basic characters: an elf sorceress, a human archer or a dwarf fighter. And from there you're set free inside a huge Dungeons & Dragons world replete with dungeons, forests, ice caves and much more. Naturally, it's all filled to the brim with horrible monsters, wicked traps, treasures and fabled magical weapons. As you go, you're constantly rewarded with new weaponry, new monsters to fight and experience points you can put into your character stats to get even more powerful. You can swap out equipment in an inventory "paper-doll" screen, and those changes are reflected in your onscreen character so you'll start with simple weapons and a drab look, and you'll look like a big, mean superhero by the end of the game.

The graphics are simply wonderful and the controls are accurate, responsive and fun to use--necessary for the constant hacking and slashing required. It gets all the more fun when you recruit a buddy and play the game in cooperative mode. --Bob Andrews

Manufacturer's Description
Baldur's Gate Dark Alliance is an action-adventure game for the Playstation2. It uses the amazing hardware available with the PlayStation 2 to bring the Dungeons & Dragons rule system to life in a game of action and intrigue. Set in the Forgotten Realms, the most popular of all D&D worlds, BG Dark Alliance blends action, adventure, and compelling story with incredible graphics and gameplay into a wild medieval foray.

But Baldur's Gate Dark Alliance is an action game as well a role-playing game. That means that as you advance through the game, you not only navigate past opponents, but also through an intriguing story. With each victory you gain power - hopefully enough power to overcome the next obstacle. You also get the opportunity to guide your character's fate by determining what skills and powers they will gain each time they reach a new level of achievment.


Customer Reviews

Awesome !5
All though its much different that the other baldurs gate games, it is a great game with improvements from the old. All of the people who said that this game was too much of a hack and slash mindless game have clearly never played it. The sound is perfectly fit to the environments and helps set the mood. It offers around 15-20 hours of gameplay. I almost finished it when I accidently deleted my save. For that I cant tell you about how it ends. The graphics are unbelievable. The spells, and character movement are some of the best I have ever seen. You can rotate the camera 360 degrees to give you a choice of camera angle, and to apreciate the detail. In my opinion, one of the absolute best features is the water. The ripples follow you and spread out to the walls, where it bounces back just like real water. If you throw something in the water, the rings go off around it. The gameplay is also impressive. You bacicaly run around and talk to people, solve puzzles and kill bad guys. If I were to have to name 1 bad feature, it would have to be its too short. Its longer than most games, but I just about beat it in a week. Other than that, this is easily one of the best ps2 games out there.

Good, but not like the PC Version4
Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance
When asked what the best RPG is, most console gamers would likely reply "Final Fantasy", or possibly "Zelda", or maybe even something like "Grandia". But ask most PC gamers and they would most likely utter two words which have become synonymous with PC RPG's - "Baldur's Gate". Based on the extremely popular Dungeons and Dragons game, the original PC games used the same set of comprehensive rules that the board game did, but with the benefit of not having to wade through rule books and roll twenty or so dice at a time. Baldur's Gate not only had the entire mythology and rule-set of D&D, but it also had amazing graphics and a story line that adapted depending on how you designed you character, and how you played the game.

Now fast forward a few years, and we have the first ever Baldur's Gate on a console: Baldur's Gate Dark Alliance. But as with so many PC conversions, almost all of the cerebral gameplay has been 'misplaced' along the way. It is a well know fact that there are two very different audiences for PC games, and console games, and it is also a fact that console gamers are, in general, attracted to more action packed instantly gratifying games. With this in mind, most developers making a PC conversion tend to modify, to a greater or lesser extent, the levels of action and brain work in a game.

Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance, is one such game. Gone are the extensive character creation options of the PC version, and in there place is the option to choose between three generic characters (an Elven Sorceress, a Human Archer, a Dwarf Fighter and a secret character who requires unlocking). As in the PC version these characters gain experience as you progress through the game, and you can customize the attributes (like Strength and Proficiency with different weapons). However, the most important difference between the two games is the story line. Every RPG lives or dies by its story line and frankly this is Dark Alliance's weak point. The fact is that the storyline is rather detached from the gameplay, the story is driven by the odd encounter with a certain Dwarf chieftain, or a maiden in distress. These characters then give you a task (which almost invariably involves finding and killing something). And this is pretty much how the story unfolds.

So, with a game now so reliant onit's gamplay, how does Dark Alliance fare? Thankfully, not too badly; gone are the quazi turn based encounters of the PC games, and in their place is a real time combat system. You now have a lot more control over you characters movement; controlling them directly instead of through a point and click interface. And the combats between you and the hoards of Orcs, Goblins and whole host of other such enemies, is defiantly an intense and challenging experience. The magic system is also very different, instead of selecting and memorizing thirty or so spells, your character has just a few spells that aid him or her in combat.

The most noticeable difference in this conversion is undoubtedly the graphics. This is where the game excels. Never before has the Forgotten Realms (the location within the Dungeons and Dragons game world in which Baldur's Gate is set) looked so beautiful. The now completely 3D world has a polish to it that few RPG's can match. In addition, the rousing sound track, and effects are well above average for an RPG, and every character with whom you interact now has very convincing voice acting.

In terms of longevity, this game can't hope to match the epic scale of its PC counterpart (which game on 4 CD's, and had to install a massive amount of data to a hard disk). However, this is not a short game, it contains at least thirty hours of gaming, and there are extra modes to be unlocked upon completion.

The final point, and possibly one of the best parts of this game is the two player option. Very few games allow two people to work together as a team, instead of against each other. Yet Dark Alliance allows two players to team up and take on the masses of nasties that await them. This is great fun, and means that you can plan fights more tactically, or just wade in with double the number of flailing sword arms.

In summery, if you are what the games developers see as a typical console gamer, i.e. someone who likes the instant gratification of a quick blast of arcade gamplay, but with a story along the way, then this game will be perfect. However, if you are looking for similar gameplay and strategy elements that were present in the PC versions of Baldur's Gate, this game may come as a bit of a disappointment.



Graphics 9
Sound 8
Gameplay 7
Lifespan 8

Overall 8
A fine fantasy adventure RPG set in the rich world of Baldur's Gate. Great for action fans, but may disappoint players of the PC games looking for strategy and depth

Addictive action RPG4
I'm fairly new to RPGs but for me, Baldurs Gate was a stunningly addictive game.

The first thing that strikes you are the graphics - they are amazing. Its extreamly hard to fault them, from the mesmerising magic effects and the heat haze rising above the torches, to the incredible water effects that ripple out and splash around when you walk through it. You can literally spend 10 minutes just playing around in the water levels. The character cut scenes are seamlessly blended in to the game too and are very well done (note the animation on the bar maids two best assets!!). The magic effects are mesmerising

The gameplay is everything you want from an RPG, but with a much more action feel to it. The usual weapon/gold collecting and skill enhancements are all there, but the focus is on hack and slash. Also, this is avery linear, game, something hardened RPG'ers may not like.

Overall this beats the likes of Summoner for looks and playability, it really is a joy to play, but there is one draw back..... its criminally short (for an RPG). Summoner may not look as nice but it does last around 45 hours, whereas this took me 15 hours to complete, and I wasn't racing through.

You can of course do the extra challenges (Gauntlet mode etc) and re-play the adventure as a different character (which suprisingly does change the gameplay significantly) but you can't help but feel a bit short-changed.

In conclusion, stunning it is. An Epic, it's not.