![]() ![]() The two started off coolly: George’s initial sense of righteous anger in finding the madman who tried to blow him up was already starting to fade when he met Nicole taking pictures outside the razed café. In between the murder, the deception and George’s ham-fisted approach to amateur detective work was a clumsy blossoming romance with French photo-journalist, Nicole Collard. Seconds after leering at his waitress and popping a passing clown’s balloon with a toothpick out of sheer spite, the café he lounges outside explodes, throwing him from his comfy perch, showering him in glass fragments and leaving him justifiably shaken and agitated.īack then, the charming hand-painted visuals and the perfect voice acting that’s still now waiting to be surpassed culminated into a personable mystery filled with paranoia and historic conspiracy. It deserved its acclaim hitting PCs late 1996, it told the tale of George Stobbart: arrogant American tourist visiting Paris. When the lists were tallied into something the publication hoped would make a stab at validity, Broken Sword sat proudly at number seven. Several lists were configured by several different critics, but Revolution’s lauded graphic adventure featured numerously. My list featured several surprises, but, to the shock of no one, Broken Sword: Shadow of the Templars ranked highly. "It’s almost like Revolution have silently admitted the world is getting dumber, and wanted to baby a new generation along whilst they used to be content with challenging them."Ī few years ago, I was contracted by a magazine specialising in electronic entertainment to pen a top ten list of video games you should play before you die. ![]()
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