Reviewed: December 23, 2001
Reviewed by: Mark Smith

Publisher
Digital Leisure

Developer
Don Bluth

Released: November, 2001
Genre: Action
Players: 1
ESRB: Everyone

4
9
9
4
4.5

Supported Features

  • DVD Playback Kit Required


  • Ah yes, 1983. I had just graduated high school and was hanging out at the local arcades full time. One day they wheeled this new game in through the door called Dragon's Lair, plugged it in, turned it on, and my life was forever changed. Quarters (or rather tokens) seemed to be magnetically drawn to this game. Within two days I had mastered Dirk the Daring and was saving the princess, not only with a single token, but often on a single life. I quickly became known as the "Dragon's Lair Guy" and people would actually give me tokens to watch me play the game. Yes, life was good.

    Dragon's Lair spawned a short lived era of laserdisc games including the now-famous Space Ace, and countless others. Even after arcades started to vanish from the local malls, these laserdisc games persisted in their popularity, spilling over into the PC world in the form of chopped up versions on floppy and eventually CD-ROM’s. Now that DVD-ROM’s have become the unspoken standard on most gaming PC’s is it really any surprise that Digital Leisure is once again trying to milk the genre one more time on this new format?

    Regardless of the sticker, this game works on any DVD player. I must mention that this game, along with the rest of the titles in the rapidly growing Digital Leisure library are not designed specifically for any gaming system. You may see stickers claiming they are compatible for the PS2 or the Xbox, but they are DVD video games, and as such will play on any DVD player whether it be a PS2, Xbox, PC, or a standalone component player in your home theater rig.

    None of these games have been endorsed by Sony or Microsoft - they just simply happen to work on these systems because they support the DVD format. Do NOT be fooled into thinking these are special versions or that they make use of any of your system-specific features.

    Dragon's Lair was a breath of fresh air back in 1983. While most people were playing Defender, Galaga, Q-Bert, etc, here comes this game with amazing graphics from Disney animator, Don Bluth (Land Before Time, American Tail, Titan A.E.). The game featured a trailer with a booming narrators voice and clips from the game that always caused a crowd to gather, first at the game then the token dispenser. The nature of the game was memorization. You only had five possible actions; up, down, left, right, and swing the sword.

    Even though the game prompted your next action with flashes of light overlaid on the animation, these visual cues only allowed for about one second of error and you could never win by reflexes alone. Timing was critical, and if you got too confident and started pressing the joystick or button too soon you would also die. Only after several dozen (or was it hundreds) of tokens did you finally master the timing and find your "zone". Then you were unstoppable...you were "Dirk the Daring".


    The gameplay is as simple (and boring) as it gets. You control Dirk, the hero, through dozens of animated action scenes. At critical points in the action you are given a small window of opportunity to interact with the game by moving the joystick or swinging your sword. Act too soon or react to late and you get to witness one of the dozens of horrible, yet humorous death scenes. The action scenes are randomized each time you start a new game, so you never know which one is coming next, and each scene is also duplicated with a mirror image of itself, thus doubling the game's length. If you manage to make it through all the various challenges you will reach the Dragon's Lair and the gorgeous Princess Daphne. You then get to take place in one of the most creative animated battle scenes in video game history.

    The only fault in the gameplay lies in the hardware we are forced to play it on. When Dragon's Lair debuted it was being played on a 12" laserdisc on an industrial laserdisc player with amazing seek and random access times. The way the game is laid out, based on your actions the game would skip to certain sections of the disc to play the appropriate scene. Back in 1983 this was seamless, but today, even after two decades of technological advancements, the typical home DVD player whether it be Xbox, PC, PS2 or home theater component, just doesn't have fast enough access. This results in large and very annoying pauses about every 10-15 seconds during the game as your hardware scans for the next scene. These pauses ruin an otherwise flawless game.


    The game looks stunning and is probably even better than the original laserdisc version from 1983. The video is crystal clear and looks just like any feature Disney animation then or now. Don Bluth is a masterful animator and you can really tell that a lot of time and care went into the creation of this game. The colors are rich and vibrant and the characters are delightful. Even the scarier creatures have a humorous side that makes this game great for kids of all ages.


    The sounds and music are excellent and presented in Dolby Digital. The booming voice of the narrator gets you pumped up during the opening movie. Dirk doesn't say much other than a few girlish shrieks during some encounters, and the shrill seductive voice of the princess is one you won't soon forget.


    As with all of these laserdisc games, it's all about memorization. Dragon's Lair mixes it up a bit by throwing in mirror images of the scenes, so you need to get your bearings before tapping into those memorized patterns. With unlimited continues you can easily finish this game in less than two hours, and the more you play the faster you can do it. Nothing really changes other than the order of the action scenes, so there is little motivation to replay the game other than to show off your skills to your friends.


    Dragon's Lair has made appearances on the PC in floppy, CD and DVD format. This is the first version to include all of the scenes the original laserdisc offered, as many of them were cut in previous versions to fit the game on the limited space of those formats. This version has also been remastered for DVD to offer the best visuals since the original. The DVD also includes interviews with Don Bluth and Rick Dyer, the co-creators of the game.

    Despite the great looks and sound and even the entertaining, albeit limited gameplay, this game fails simply because there isn't any hardware readily available to run it as fast as it needs to be run. Playing the Dragon's Lair DVD is like watching your favorite animated feature and hitting the PAUSE button every 15 seconds. It totally takes you out of the experience and ruins the game, which is a shame because this game is truly a classic and should be enjoyed by a new generation of gamers.