Thread:Deathstalker666/@comment-1915529-20120712125232/@comment-1496755-20120725084928

Wow, that Bormo guy is stubborn. But I don't blame him - many people have made the same mistake... even I have, many years ago :P

Anyway, my earliest gaming memories are about Indiana Jones and The Fate of Atlantis - probably the first PC game I ever played. Also, I learned my first English words from it (you can see them on the fifth screenshot). Conversations were the hardest thing - I didn't understand anything so I just clicked random responses until I got it right :P

The coolest thing of this game is that at one point there are three paths you can choose - one with more fights and violence, one with more puzzles and thinking, or one with more conversation and teamwork. While the three paths often intersect and go through the same places, each of them also has a few unique areas that can't be visited with the other paths. The best example for this is a room with three locked doors - all paths lead to that room (in different ways), but the fighting path only opens the left door, teamwork opens the middle door and thinking - the right door. Thus, the game urges you to play all three paths so that you can see everything ;)

And the even funnier thinmg is that the game advises you to choose a path based on how you solve the first puzzle of the game. If you convinced the guard to let you in - the game recommends teamwork. If you beat him up, the game will suggest you go for violence. And if you avoided the guard and found an alternative way in, the game will point you towards the puzzly path. Of course, you can choose any of the three you prefer.

Of course, I still keep that game. And I play it from time to time, to remember the good old times.