Tavernking
Don't believe his lies
CYOA = Choose Your Own Adventure
This is all assuming the story isn't shit of course.
This is all assuming the story isn't shit of course.
I've played one actually, it's called "Choices that matter" on mobile.Generally, Choice of Games puts the price-point for these at $5. It looks like there are some priced around $10. So I'm sure that if you can deliver, you can find some people to buy it, though perhaps not on the Codex.
Doing it without attributes is silly, though. (Leveling up is a different question.) I'm unaware of any commercial pure CYOA without stat tracking.
I once bought Choice of the Vampire, but never finished it after realizing the outcome of any decision is impossible to guess, rendering any decision making irrelevant.
Are there any CYOA that aren't like that?
I won't spend a dime on any game that doesn't have some multiplayer component I'm interested in.
I won't spend a dime on any game that doesn't have some multiplayer component I'm interested in.
How have you survived on the codex this long?
Generally, Choice of Games puts the price-point for these at $5. It looks like there are some priced around $10.
I won't spend a dime on any game that doesn't have some multiplayer component I'm interested in.
How have you survived on the codex this long?
He probably means he can pirate any SP game he wants, and MP being something you might have to pay for.
Generally, Choice of Games puts the price-point for these at $5. It looks like there are some priced around $10.
http://store.steampowered.com/app/375130/Tin_Star/ - $5
http://store.steampowered.com/app/339350/Choice_of_Robots/ - $10
BTW, MRY if you like Lone Wolf, you'll probably like this version of it. It has 'alternate rules' and extra items properties in combat so it's not always a no-brainer to use the sword.Yes, Choice of Robots was the $10 I was thinking of.
As far as I know, that's not a discrete genre, it was just a staple in early adventure games, but was eventually replaced by mouse/interface options, and later with contextual interaction, almost universally.While this thread is alive I'm going to ask a similar question. Does anyone know what the genre is where you can type what you want to do? And any modern games like this? For example, you see a box. You think of what you want to do (no prompts) and manually type 'open box' or 'destroy box'.