Icewind Dale 2

Icewind Dale 2

Our Price - $9.99

14 Used - from $18.49

4 New - from $38.57

1 Collectible - from $34.99

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Icewind Dale 2

Return to the frigid north of the Forgotten Realms in the sequel to the critically acclaimed Icewind Dale. Will you heed the call to arms and face the greatest threat to the Spine of the World?

 

Return to the Spine of the World, that famous mountain range deep within Dungeons & Dragon's official world, the Forgotten Realms, for party-based adventure par excellence. Icewind Dale II is a throwback to an earlier time when D&D simulation meant six party members, 2-D graphics, and a heavy focus on story and real-time strategy game tactics.

Icewind Dale II plays like Baldur's Gate with one major difference: you create and control your entire party, which leaves you free to experiment with the huge array of options D&D 3rd Edition makes possible. Halfling paladins, wizards with thieving skills, it's all possible because Black Isle dutifully added all the new skills, rules, options, and feats given to D&D characters in the tabletop game.

The story line is long and epic and maybe too focused for its own good. You can experiment with any character combination you want, but you can't really range far and wide, adventuring as you wish. The story concerns a goblin army that is threatening human settlements far to the north. Infernal implications quickly surface as you learn that the goblins' masters might not be of this prime-material plane. The combat is fast, furious, constant, and extremely challenging. One of the reasons Baldur's Gate II worked so well was that your priest always had enough healing powers and Raise Dead spells handy. In Icewind Dale II, you begin at first level, so for half the game you must trudge homeward whenever somebody dies, which is frequent. The enemy appears in large numbers, usually with a spell caster in tow--and just beyond one group of enemies is another one. It's relentless and strategically satisfying, if more than a little frustrating too.

Fans of the earlier games who were perhaps a bit unsatisfied with the single-PC focus of Neverwinter Nights will delight in another chance to play party-based D&D. --Bob Andrews

Pros:

  • Full implementation of D&D 3rd Edition rules
  • Same old glorious tactical gameplay as the Baldur's Gate series
Cons:
  • Retro looking in this 3-D age of Neverwinter Nights
  • Often too difficult for its own good

 

Icewind Dale 2 Accessories

Baldur's Gate 2: Ultimate Collection (Shadows of Amn and Throne of Bhaal)
Icewind Dale
Icewind Dale: Heart of Winter
Neverwinter Nights: Diamond Compilation Pack (DVD-ROM)
Icewind Dale Ultimate Collection
Neverwinter Nights 2
Icewind Dale 2 (Prima's Official Strategy Guide)
Dragonshard
Temple of Elemental Evil: A Greyhawk Adventure (Jewel Case)
Baldur's Gate 2 Expansion: Throne of Bhaal

 

Icewind Dale 2 Reviews

I just finished the Icewind Dale trilogy book and had to pick this up. Old school ad&d with a deeper story than Iwd. It is good and if you loved Baldur's Gate 2 this is up your alley.

 

Interesting NPCs, stunning graphics, rich character system. What keeps it from getting the full 5 stars is certain sections of the plot and quest can get somewhat tedious and slow. Tons of abilities for your characters to learn. Other than that, this game is a good balance of battle strategy, monster bashing, and story line. This game is definitely worth getting (especially now since the price is low), the game is very immersive. Some interesting and complex labrynths.

 

A pretty good rpg game Not as good as Baldurs Gate 2 But still a good game Considering it's age and that it can be purchased rather cheaply It is well worth 10 bucks :)

 

I like the fact you get to choose your own people to play. I am having a great time playing this game. I play it almost all day. I get to arrange the different people to my best estimate of a challenging game.

 

I would just go with Baldur's Gate II or Icewind Dale I instead of this game. Though many of the novels were very well written, they never seemed to suck me in and continue reading the book. All in all, I do not think that this is a good game. Icewind Dale II is like that. I installed a bunch of unofficial patches, but those did not solve the problems with the terrible puzzles and whatever else. If you do not know how to use rogues or are unfamiliar with feats and the like, this game will pose a very high learning curve that you may not want to climb.

Here you had to accomplish everything in a linear order and could never diverge from the path. Well, at the end of the day, it seems as if Icewind Dale II is hurt by a extremely corny story; it is bogged down in numerous irrelevent puzzles involving you running around constantly; it is just not as fun as its predescessor. The overload of puzzles and corniness would be ok if you could diverge from the one path as you could in Baldur's Gate II, where you could accomplish quests at the order that you wanted to.

It looks nice, it supposedly improves gameplay, and it gives the player more character creation options, but I just don't really want to play it. I bought this game for one reason and that reason was that I was addicted to Baldur's Gate II and needed to expand my party based rpg addiction to another realm. I tried to play it again, but again I was plagued with the same problems. In fact, the design of the game seemed to paralell it completely. Playing Icewind Dale II reminds me of all of those novels written by American authors in the late 19th century. I was confronted with battles so easy that I was soon bored. I was mostly familiar with the rules, but it was easy to see that someone who did not know them as well could easily make mistakes or be unfamiliar with the use of certain classes (even though the rule book was pretty exhaustive).

I was immediately confronted with a story so corny that it is almost embarassing to take part in. I was confronted with gameplay that caused me to run back and forth from one place to another constantly. Why. Furthermore, the story seemed to be a retread of the story from the original Icewind Dale. Icewind Dale II seemed to be the logical option. I was wrong. The final problem with this game concerns the fact that it is difficult to play if you have no knowledge of dungeons and dragons rules.

 
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