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Xbox : Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance Reviews

Gas Gauge: 83
Gas Gauge 83
Below are user reviews of Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.

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ReviewsScore
Game Spot 85
Game FAQs
IGN 85
GameSpy 80
GameZone 89
Game Revolution 80
1UP 80






User Reviews (1 - 11 of 37)

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Don't let the name fool you...

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 18 / 18
Date: May 08, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Despite the game's title, this game is not at all in the same vein as the wonderful Baldur's Gate PC RPGs. It's a hack-and-slash dungeon crawler, and in terms of gameplay it is nearly identical to Diablo II, but with better graphics. If this type of game appeals to you, great! If you're looking for your RPG fix though, you'll have to get it somewhere else.

Let's start with the good points. The game is pretty fun if you're into hack-and-slash types, especially with two players. Any game with a two-player cooperative mode always scores points with me. The graphics and sound are very good, and the game is easy to learn and easy to control.

There is some replay value to it, as there are some new modes you can unlock by finishing the game. Beat the game once and you'll be able to play a special game mode that puts you in a tough dungeon on a short time limit, playing as none other than Drizzt Do'Urden. Beat that mode, and you unlock Extreme difficulty in the normal game, which is several times more difficult than usual. If you manage to beat Extreme, you can play as Drizzt in the normal game.

There are some bad points to the game, however. It's extremely short; you can beat it in under 10 hours. It's really a shame that the game is not more extensive. Also, as with any game of this type, it can get quite repetitive after awhile. The game is very easy as well. The Gauntlet is really the only difficult part of it. Even on Extreme, I had no problems completing the game quickly.

And finally, although I knew this wasn't really an RPG when I bought it, I still couldn't help feeling disappointed at the great lack of depth compared to many other games that have been set in the Forgotten Realms. I would have liked to see a wider variety of D&D skills and spells brought in, as well. For instance, the Sorceress (and all spell-casting enemies) doesn't have any spell effects aside from direct damage. It would be cool to have things like Entangle and Charm Person available, to have a thief class with all their many skills, and so on. I realize why many of these things were left out, but a little more work on the design could have added a welcome element of strategy to what it is essentially little more than a slugfest.

My list of complaints may be long, but don't get me wrong; for what it is, this game was executed extremely well. If you're looking for a game like Diablo, you will enjoy this. If you want an RPG, you're better off with Morrowind, or waiting until Bioware rolls out their Star Wars RPG this summer. It's better with a friend, so BG:DA scores a few points there. Still, rent before you buy. You could easily beat this game in a weekend, and you might never play it again after that.

Great hack & slash fun

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 18 / 19
Date: December 02, 2002
Author: Amazon User

This is one rental that actually turned into a purchase. I'm usually not a fan of hack and slash type games, but this one has turned out to be quite entertaining.

Like other games in this genre, Dark Alliance is a third person perspective game (kinda 2.5D) in which you venture through cellars, mines, dungeons and even outdoor environments like mountain and villages. Levels typically end with a "boss" of varying difficulty and combat style. Gameplay is mixed with first person cut scenes in which you converse with other characters in a multi-choice format.

Interestingly, you can only save your game at certain points. At first this seems annoying, but there are enough save points around the game so it isn't too bad. Another big plus is that saving is really quick. If you've played games like Morrowind, where saving and loading are good opportunites to grab a drink, then you're in for a treat. Unfortunately you can only save about 25 games at once and there is no way to describe the saved game. A bit annoying, but oh well.

I'm not too much of a D&D fan, so I can't comment on how true this game is to the ruleset. However, as you move through the game you'll acquire better goods and have to manage your inventory and make decisions about how to develop your powers as you advance levels. Who knows if these mechanisms are authentic enough, but they are fun.. :)

Finally, one of the best aspects of the game (and why I ended up purchasing it) is the two player option. This put two players on the screen at the same time, working together to battle through the game. I find this style of multiplayer play to be much more enjoyable than split screen, and this is one of the few games that offers it.

A lot of fun...for Diablo fans

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 12 / 12
Date: December 09, 2002
Author: Amazon User

I bought this game because I was a big fan of the PC Baldur's Gate series, having played and finished both Baldur's Gate I and II and their respective expansion packs. And although Dark Alliance is fun, it is so similar to Diablo that it is almost misleading to put the Baldur's Gate name on it.

For instance, instead of starting the game creating a character from numerous races, classes, and alignments ala the originals, you are allowed to select from only three pre-defined characters: a male human archer, a male dwarven fighter, and a female elven sorceress (very much like Diablo). Additionally, if you are expecting to be able to control a full party of non-player characters (NPCs) as in the PC versions, you will be disappointed: you can only control one player at any time (although you can play two player co-op), and Dark Alliance does NOT support XBox Live multiplayer capabilities either.

Additional similarities to Diablo include a mana-based spellcasting system instead of a true AD&D one, identical gameplay (smashing barrels and opening chests), and some very interesting coincidences (the color of health and mana potions, for instance).

Outside of these similarities, one of the major disappointments with Dark Alliance is how much the expansive Baldur's Gate universe is simplified. The selection of only three characters eliminates some of the most popular character types, including thieves and clerics. Additionally, the variety of spells and monsters is very limited and you cannot interact with any NPCs or enter any building outside of the main storyline, eliminating one of the things that made the originals so compelling and re-playable - the sense of exploration.

That said, true to Baldur's Gate the graphics are outstanding and the music and dialog excellent (including some voices from the original series). The controls are easy and intuitive to learn, and the storyline engaging enough.

This game should be a lot of fun for Diablo fans or fans of the hack-and-slash genre, but if you are a hardcore Baldur's Gate fan, don't expect this game to match the breadth and depth of the original series or you will be sorely disappointed.

Campy Fun in a Starter RPG

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 15 / 17
Date: February 08, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Baldur's Gate is a hugely popular RPG series for the PC. With Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance, console gamers get a taste for what makes this game so much fun.

First, remember that this is a console port of a very rich PC game. That means that instead of having lots of choices of male/female or human/elf/dwarf or fighter/thief/mage/cleric, you have three. You can be a male archer, a dwarf fighter, or a female sorceress.

The graphics are really quite good. There are numerous pools of water for you to run around in, to watch the ripples and wakes shimmer and merge. The lighting is lovely, the detail in the buildings and towns and dungeons look great on even large TVs. The sound is good too, and sitting in your living room with friends while the stereo sound surrounds you is tons of fun.

You can play single player or two-person cooperative, which makes couch-play even more fun. With a large bowl of popcorn and your favorite drinks, you can hack and slash your way through numerous hours or a weekend of play.

Now, the down side. Again, console port. Really, you're playing Gauntlet. You run around hacking up barrels and crates in your friend's cellar. Is this exactly the nicest thing to do? You hack at rats and enemies, look for things in barrels. Yes, you get into lever-pulling and puzzles. But in the end the game is pretty linear and the monsters don't regenerate. So whatever level you're at when you get to a certain point, you can't build yourself up more strongly.

This can get to be a real pain when you hit a strong boss. You can't go buy more gear, because there's no way to make more money. You can't get stronger or more skillful, because there's nobody else to kill "behind you" and you can't go "ahead" until you kill the boss. So you're doomed to keep trying to hack at him until you get past him ... somehow.

Another big complaint I have is that the gamemakers seem obsessed with the female form. The guys in the game are all pudgy and uninteresting. But the girls! The first woman you meet, the bartender, has jiggly, wiggly breasts and she shakes them around non-stop during her long, long discussions with you. Everyone I showed the game to was mesmerized by them.

And playing the female sorceress character, I found that no matter how hard I tried, I could NOT get her clothed well. Every outfit involved a cut-off top, skimpy leather boots and not much else. Ahem, she's going into a deep, dark dungeon to face dire enemies? And she's doing this in beach-wear??

Still, the game was campy fun, and definitely draws you in. A fun weekend-play game for real RPGers, and an easy way for those new to the genre to learn what it's about and to get a taste for the fun.

it's a console game...

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 11 / 13
Date: December 23, 2002
Author: Amazon User

Having played Baldur's Gate for the PC, when I picked up this game, I was anticipating the D&D experience -- many character races, tons of spells, highly configurable, optional quests, that kind of thing. When I got into it, still anticipating this would come along even with the limited character choice, I got into the graphics and the easy controls, the interaction with the environment, the jaw-dropping water effects. Finally it dawned on me that this isn't supposed to be a hard-core-gaming RPG, it's a console game. I've had my xbox six months and played a lot of crap -- the xbox is starting to come into its own, but you're really kinda limited when it comes to pc-style games (as opposed to the sports/driving/1st person shooter/stupid game-show parody) that seem to dominate the console). This game is a spectacular, simple, rpg. It's a bit short, but the experience is different with the different characters you can play, so there's some replay value. That's an argument for buying it used, but don't miss one of the good ones for the xbox.

Fantastic D&D fun

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 12 / 15
Date: November 25, 2002
Author: Amazon User

I bought this game because I was looking for another two-player cooperative game after having played Halo for months, which is an amazing coop game as well as single player. This game allows you to play the entire adventure with two people. The graphics and music are superb. You are allowed to assign the controls any way you like which is a great feature not many games have.

Rebirth On The XBox

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 8 / 8
Date: October 30, 2003
Author: Amazon User

I saw Baldur's Gate for the PC but never liked the feel and control of the gate. I was a little hesitant to buy it for the Xbox but it was one of the few RPG games out for XBox and RPGs are my ideal type of game.

To my surprise I really enjoyed it.

The game is somewhat linear in the sense that you alway know what to do next as opposed to a open concept were there is no real order of objectives (such a Morrowind). Although this may not appeal to all players I prefer such games because I don't spend all my time gaming and in open concept games I tend to make a lot less progress.

Playing on the Normal difficulty setting the enemies present a challenger without being too extremely difficult to result in massive frustration.

The game is, for the most part, a hack and slash game but does have a small element of Roleplaying to it with interactive character dialogues.

There is a very limited selection of character classes (Fighter, Archer and Mage) but the classes are nicely worked out with ifferent benefits and abilities for each class.

The equipment available in the game is not as extensive as other games (such as Diablo II for the PC) but is still fairly extensive and the game provides good scaling of equipment availability making the characters progress from poor equipment to better equipment.

Best of all, for all you mage lovers, this is one of the first games that I have seen where the magic user can, for the most part, fight by using spells and rely on a weapon as a secondary backup. I love the mage class and in most games the mages are still too dependant on fighting with weapons and only using magic to supplement their attack. Well not in this game, sure you need weapons when you start out but with a little patience you can quickly make a mage that can predominantly fight with spells only.

In my opinion the only thing missing in this game is an way to swap cash between players and the ability to play the game over XBox Live.

All in all I really enjoyed this game and would recommend it to any who likes RPG games.

A great hack-n-slash dungeon crawl for the Xbox

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 6 / 6
Date: August 21, 2006
Author: Amazon User

Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance has already been released for the PS2 months earlier, but this doesn't mean that the newly, ported version to the Xbox video game console should be ignored. Developer Snowblind Studios has seemlessly ported the PS2 version over to the Xbox and, using the Xbox's higher graphical processing power, made the game look even better. But graphics alone doesn't make a great a fun and great time for a gamer. This Xbox port also includes the great gameplay of the original PS2 version. The intuitive and easy-to-use control scheme remains intact.

Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance still allows a player to choose between three different types of player characters. One can either choose to be a dwarf warrior, a human ranger, or an elfin sorceress. Each type of character has their own advantages and disadvantages and all three could be used to go through the game and finish it. Though I learned after doing so that the best class to pick would be the elfin sorceress. Her high level of magic spells available to her in addition to being able to have some success using a melee weapon makes her slightly better overall. And for the prurient minded gamers out there, the elfin sorceress could be seen in all her near-nakedness glory in the menu-system.

The 3/4 top down viewpoint of the fight makes it easy for th eplayer not to be surprised by enemies and traps as he goes from one dungeon, cave system and, at time, overland area to the next. Similar to Blizzard's Diablo, BG:DA is pretty much the same game as that hack and slash, but using the 3rd edition rules of Advanced Dungeons and Dragons and its world of the Forgotten Realms. The city of Baldur's Gate and the surrounding region of the Sword Coast are done beautifully by the Snowblind developers. From the deep, underground mine tunnel complexes of the dwarves to the festering, swamp area of Chelimber.

The enemies are designed well and pretty much follows the description of the creatures in the many Forgotten Realms game books and novels. Whether its Umber Hulks, beholders, giants, displacer beasts, etc...the developers did their job well in bringing these varied and dangerous creatures of Faerun to life in BG:DA. Even the many different races introduced and used in the game follows their description in the FR books and guides. The dwarves speak with a heavy Scottish brogue, while elves, both high and dark speak in a high and might English-manner. The voice-acting in this game is also top-notch and I would say some of the best video game VA ever. There's not a false note with any of the spoken dialogue and that just makes the game much more immersive.

Overall, Interplay and Snowblind Studios' Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance is a great looking and very fun game to play. It's not as deep and rich as the straight-up rpg that the PC games int he series were well-known for. What Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance does bring is the themes and storytelling of the PC games but in a much more simple, hack and slash dungeon-crawl a la Diablo and Dungeon Siege. For those with an Xbox, but not a PS2 then I suggest they go out and get this game. They won't be disappointed.

fun

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 3 / 4
Date: February 07, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Okay heres the deal.. if your looking for regular pc baldur gate type game.. then this might not be what your looking for. But its still tons and tons of fun. Just finished playing it 2 player style with my roomate, and with all the fighting over the gold and weapons that drop, and allies dying, I had never laughed so much in my life. You might think that the graphics are terrible, but that will suprise you, when you have a fire sword that mysteriously turns into fire whenever a monster appears, or many other items that are just cool. Give it a chance, you will like it. It might not be what you expect, but still loads of fun.

Awesome Gameplay

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 3 / 4
Date: March 07, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Okay, if you like RPG games you will probably like this one. I hated the PC version because there were too many keys to keep track of on the keyboard and managing the party was annoying. This is really slimmed down as far as party (group) management goes which makes it easier. The weapons are pretty cool and the levels are pretty nifty, and not everything is hack-and-slash. There are puzzles you have to figure out which makes it more interesting. Unfortunately you have only 3 characters to choose from and there is only 3 levels (worlds if you like), so once you get to the last boss, you've basically done it. Playing with another person co-op makes it worthwhile tho and sinc eyou can save your game and import your character into another game, it has quite a bit of replay value. After a bit though you come to realize that the story doesn't change, your quests are always the same, and the bad guys are always in the same place, albeit more of them on hard versus easy. Overall it's a fun game to play, but I'd suggest renting it rather than buying it. That's why I gave 4 stars instead of 5. My husband and I finished the game on easy in 2-3 nights so we started over on Med with imported characters. Even that was almost too easy.


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