“The game is a throwback to old adventure games, where you had a huge story unfolding, and it was your job to find the clues, items, and people to help you solve the mystery.” Alexander believes that staying true to the roots of adventure games will be one of Quest for Infamy’s main appeals. We also have danger, mythology, and nail-biting sequences to keep you on your toes.” With over 60 NPCs, all with dialogue guaranteed to make you chuckle.
“It’s full of old school logic and item puzzles – and it has a great supporting cast of characters. “Quest for Infamy is different because we made it we’re a pretty awesome bunch of people,” he says jokingly, before turning to what he thinks really makes the game special. Whichever path you choose, you’ll need to lie, cheat, and steal your way through the story to arrive at one of Quest for Infamy’s multiple endings.īut according to Alexander, the anti-hero stars aren’t the only thing that makes this game unique. The game has three character classes to choose from: the stealth-based Rogue, strength-based Brigand, and magic-based Sorcerer. If the game’s title didn’t tip you off, the protagonists of Quest for Infamy aren’t your traditional heroes.
“You’ve got a few days in town to unravel a mystery, deal with the local sheriff, make some loot, win some friends and fans with infamous deeds, and get home in time for supper.” So what exactly is Quest for Infamy? “This is the kind of game you always wanted to play as a kid, but your parents probably wouldn’t let you,” Alexander explains. Although it’s been a long road from idea to reality for Infamous Quests, the team is confident that their “retro role-playing adventure game with attitude” is well on its way. But despite the challenge of living up to those names, Infamous Quests’ writer, director, and co-producer Steven Alexander is pretty optimistic about the old-school inspired point-and-click adventure game’s prospects. My vote is six.When an indie developer called Infamous Quests sets out to make a game called Quest for Infamy, well…the bar is set pretty high.
Last but not the least, the movie is very cold, and with the exception of the footages of the concentration camps, it brings no emotion to the viewer.
Further, Alec Baldwyn has a weak performance in the role of a powerful authority.
However, in many moments the story recalls a soap-opera, changing the focus of the trial to melodramatic and shallow situations. Gustav Gilbert and the reconstitution of the destroyed German city. The movie has great moments, with footages from the concentration camps the strong performance of Brian Cox the dialog about racism and anti-Semitism between Goering and Capt. "Nuremberg" is an irregular movie about the trial of criminals of war in Nuremberg. The prisoners under the leadership of Hitler's second-in-command Marshall Hermann Goering (Brian Cox) dispute the control in a juridical battle in the courtroom. The defendants are accused crimes of war and against humanity, and the American Chief Prosecutor Robert Jackson (Alec Baldwyn) is assigned to organize an international tribunal at Nuremberg with representatives from France, Russia and England. In 1945, after the end of the World War II with the defeat of a ruined Germany, the Allies decide to give a fair trial to twenty-one Nazi leaders POW as an example of intolerance of the governments against hideous atrocities in war.