Wizardry II: The Knight of Diamonds | |
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Developer(s) | Sir-Tech |
Publisher(s) | Sir-Tech |
Year released | 1982 |
System(s) | Apple II, Commodore 64/128, DOS, Fujitsu FM-7, Game Boy Color, Mac OS, MSX2, NES, NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-9801, Sharp X1 |
Preceded by | Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord |
Followed by | Wizardry III: Legacy of Llylgamyn |
Series | Wizardry |
Genre(s) | RPG |
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Modes | Single player |
Wizardry II: The Knight of Diamonds (originally known as Wizardry: Knight of Diamonds - The Second Scenario) is the second game in the Wizardry series of role-playing video games. It was published in 1982 by Sir-Tech.
Story[edit | edit source]
The game begins with the city of Llylgamyn under siege. Llylgamyn's rulers have been killed, and the city's only hope is for the recovery of the staff of Gnilda, only obtainable from trading the mystic "Knight of Diamonds" armor from the legendary Knight of Diamonds to fend off the invaders.
Gameplay[edit | edit source]
The game functions virtually identically to the first scenario, Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord, with the player guiding a party of up to six adventurers into a 6 level dungeon. The original version required players to import characters from the first game, whilst later versions include a pregenerated party and the ability to create new characters. As the game is intended to be played by those who have successfully completed the first game, the difficulty level is intended for characters of at least level 13, and no training area means that lower level characters will go through a "baptism by fire". Mechanical differences include the ability to save the game in the dungeon rather than forcing the characters to exit the dungeon and return to the training grounds, and some of the spells increasing in power(as noted by a message in the dungeon).
Unlike the first scenario, where half of the levels had no purpose plot-wise and could be skipped if the player wished, exploration all of the levels in Knight of Diamonds is necessary to complete the game. Each of the six levels has a piece of the Knight's armor somewhere in the level, and all of the pieces must be collected in order to finish the game. Furthermore, unlike in the first scenario, there are no elevators that can be used to skip levels, and teleportation spells will fail if the party attempts to use them to teleport to a level that has not yet been reached via stairs.