Gayblade game


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Gayblade

Platforms:Macintosh, Windows 3.x   Developer:RJ Best, Inc.   Publisher:RJ Top, Inc.     Tags:Casual, Contemporary, Fantasy, Single Character, Turn-based combat  

This Wizardry-style first-person dungeon crawler has the player controlling a team of LGBT heroes as they aim to rescue the Empress Nelda from Lord Nanahcub and his evil forces. The character classes and items are all affectionate parodies of early 90s gay stereotypes, while the villains are parodies of the early 90s anti-LGBT political movement.


When the author went unpaid for developing Citadel of the Dead for another publisher, he developed this using its source code as a basis.





The recently released video game documentary Adj Score includes a sequence in the third episode about a game called GayBlade. GayBlade is one of the first commercially-sold LGTBQ-themed video games, a role-playing romp for Windows and Macintosh occasionally referred to as &#;Dungeons and Drag Queens&#;. Once thought to include been lost, the game’s software was recently discovered and preserved—and is now available in the Internet Archive!

Although LGTBQ people have been creating video games since the earliest days of the industry, there were very few games before the 21st century that explicitly had LGTBQ themes. Game creator Ryan Best hoped to change that with GayBlade, remarking, &#;This game gives lesbians and gays—and straight people—a chance to strike back at homophobia from behind our computer screen.&#;

The game is definitely political, racy and unafraid to construct waves, as it definitely did in when it was released. Players are tasked with exploring a deep dungeon filled with homophobic enemies, trying to rescue the Empress Nelda and give back her to Castle GayKeep. Best

An awful lot of administrative function and emulator-fighting went into tracking down, sorting out, and running the three variants of this exceptionally mediocre game. This was not time well spent. When Dragon magazine, home of the modal five-star review, gives your game no stars and calls it the "worst dungeon-crawl, you-do-the-mapping, oops-you're-in-a-trap-and-your-torch-went-out, mindless click-the-'attack'-button game I've seen in a decade," you know you have a difficulty. This is an account of why I didn't fetch very far with these games and why, at least for now, I'm not interested in trying harder.
   
To judge by the manual and character creation process (the only part of the game I could really experience), DragonBlade offers essentially nothing that Wizardry () doesn't except for color graphics. But even worse is the re-skinned GayBlade, which bills itself as the first gay-and-lesbian-themed CRPG, which it probably was, but only in the most superficial way. If I were a gay CRPG Addict, neither game would satisfy my gayness nor my CRPG addiction. That GayBl