![]() Although Dreamcatcher was the US publisher of the first two Dracula games, Dracula: Origin had nothing to do with the now owned by Microids series. Insert sad face here.Ī few months later, Dreamcatcher published Dracula: Origin. ![]() Of course, this is the same team that Microids picked to make Dracula 3. It was a truly awful panoramic point and click which was also made by the creators of the mediocre Safecracker and Return to Mysterious Island. First comes Riddle of the Tomb, which is a game I unfortunately had to review for DHGF in March. ![]() Alas this was to be Canal+ Multimedia’s (Also known as France Telecom Multimedia) last game as it was broken down and the company’s titles were picked up by Microids.įast forward to 2008. It had some great visuals and a nice plot, but the puzzles and gameplay were a huge step down in quality. ![]() The sequel Dracula: The Final Sanctuary was a disappointment. Just looking at the screenshots I took for that Nyogtha column makes me love the game even more as it’s easily OS3/360 quality and it’s EIGHT YEARS OLD. I had such a great experience with it, that Dracula: Resurrection made #19 on my Top 30 Spooky Games Countdown. Dracula: Resurrection was by far the most visually stunning game I had ever seen up to that point, and the puzzles, characters, and plot were amongst the best I encountered in gaming that year. It was the first game in this series, Dracula: Resurrection that reintroduced me to Adventure gaming back in the summer of 2000. We have a lot of history together, especially with gaming.
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