Company: "Legend Entertainment"

System
All
Amiga
Atari 2600
Atari ST
C64
Game Boy
NES
PC
Plus/4
SNES
Vectrex
ZX Spectrum

Genre
All
Action
Adventure
Puzzle
RPG
Simulation
Sport
Strategy

Year
All
Pre-1982
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
Post-1996

Letter
All
#
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z

Rating
All
0
1
2
3
4
5
6

Reviewer
All
Mr Creosote
Tapuak
Jeff
dregenrocks
Johann67
Little Boy
Vohaul
Vemperor
Adhoc
PhotoTropic
Elwood
Gesh
Eff10
Hoffe
NetDanzr
Dizzy the Egg
Dr. Ramesch
Guzzardo
std
Incise-66
J. Durr
ardell
Wandrell
Looger
Pietoro
Smitle
Zork
Cypherswipe
fretz
sandy21
Jumpman Junior

Licence
All
Commercial
Shareware
Freeware

Company

Game Name

Main Page

Systeminfo

Apps

FAQ

Editorials

Crew

Help Us

Links

Forum


Support:

Abandoned Places
The highly unofficial Abandonware Ring
RSS-Feed
Mozilla Search Plugin

eXTReMe Tracker
6 Games found
 

Death Gate
Title Screen
Legend Entertainment 1994
Genre: Adventure
Rating: 6/6
Language: English
Licence: Commercial
System: PC
The Fantasy genre. Not exactly a haven for innovation. Ever since Tolkien's Lord of the Rings has been released in 1954, most authors have tried to imitate his style. Standards are set, the fans can't seem to get enough of these stereotype stories and characters.

Eric the Unready
Title Screen
Legend Entertainment 1991
Genre: Adventure
Rating: 5/6
Language: English
Licence: Commercial
System: PC
The story is not very original: As a idiotic knight on the king's court, you have to rescue the kidnapped princess. We had that several times before, as well as comedy.
Eric the Unready is more based on allusions to classics of film and gaming than on an intriguing plot. Serious things (Star Trek) are used as well as other satires are quoted (Monkey Island) or carried on (Monty Python and the Holy Grail) without envy. Of course, that is sometimes done better and sometimes worse. The recognition is high is any case. You will notice the most (and in my opinion best) humor only if you step aside from the normal solution. You can try every silly action you want, the game will recognize almost everything and comment it.

Frederik Pohl's Gateway
Title Screen
Legend Entertainment 1992
Genre: Adventure
Rating: 4/6
Language: English
Licence: Freeware
System: PC
Aeons ago, a technologically advanced alien race called the 'Heechee' had already mastered the secret of faster than light spacetravel. They explored several planets and constructed space stations. Then, they just disappeared.

Shannara
Title Screen
Legend Entertainment 1995
Genre: Adventure
Rating: 3/6
Language: English, Deutsch
Licence: Commercial
System: PC
Legend followed up their excellent Death Gate with a game which is quite similar on the surface. It uses the same game engine, graphics are similar and it is - again - based on a popular branch of fantasy novels: Shannara. The game isn't a direct 'port' of any book, but it takes place between the first two. Some evil warlock called Brona, whom the father of the game's protagonist Jak apparantely killed in the first book, is back. He can only be defeated with the 'Sword of Shannara' which in turn can only be used by offsprings of the Shannara family - namely you and your father.

Spellcasting 101: Sorcerers Get All the Girls
Title Screen
Legend Entertainment 1990
Genre: Adventure
Rating: 5/6
Language: English
Licence: Commercial
System: PC
Whenever Steve Meretzky is listed as designer of a game, you can be fairly sure it'll involve girls. In some cases more, in some cases less. In Spellcasting, it's definitely 'more'. Much more.

Timequest
Title Screen
Legend Entertainment 1991
Genre: Adventure
Rating: 6/6
Language: English
Licence: Commercial
System: PC
Time certainly flies by... when I first started this site in the last millenium, Legend's Adventure games were pretty common on sites like this one. Not as common as the ones by Sierra, of course, but they could easily be found. These days (2006), you'll probably find a few of the later point & click style ones (Death Gate, Shannara,...) and if you're very persistent, you might stumble across the odd site which mentions the Spellcasting games. I blame this lack on the lack of actual collectors among the webmasters. If the only source you have for games to put on your own site are other websites, it's an automatic downward spiral concerning diversity.