![]() ![]() ![]() Nuri, who is essentially a Cloudcuckoolander, is so naïve, innocent, and endearing that you will feel Geron’s plight as he tries to protect her from those that would do her harm. It’s a wonderful story, and the slower pace of a point-and-click adventure game gives the melancholy Geron plenty of time to grow and consider his actions. He rescues Nuri from an angry mob and sets out to find the Fairy Scholar, the only one who may know enough about magic to break the curse without murder. Being a young man of honor, Geron won’t stand for this. See, Gwinnling neglected to tell Geron that the way she could halt the curse is by… well, not being alive anymore. When he returns with the fairy, Nuri, however, she is greeted less than openly. They soon infect the land by the thousands and, convinced the Seer has returned, Geron’s teacher, Gwinnling, sends him to fetch a fairy from the forest who is the key to undoing the curse. However, it soon becomes clear that these ravens are not what they appear, with their mere presence enough to make a man go mad. The game begins innocently enough, when Geron, being a bird-catcher and having won an audience with the king in a contest, is instructed by the king to clear some ravens out of his guest bedroom so that a visit with a Nostrian monarch can run smoothly. After that, the only thing worrying the Kingdom of Andergast was its ongoing war against its neighbor, Nostria. ![]() Thirteen years ago, an evil Seer prophesied that Geron would bring about the end of the world. It’s a question that haunts young Geron throughout The Dark Eye: Chains of Satinav. Would you sacrifice one life to save millions? By Daniel Share-Strom, posted on 06 July 2012 / 517,901 Views ![]()
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