
Kingdom Tales 2’s story is basically far removed from the actually gameplay that it feels more like a tint the developers through over the product and said ‘Yeah, this will work!’ It does not. Honestly, there’s not enough substance for any player that is looking for a unique narrative or interesting plot points. If you’ve heard any prince or princess fairy tale before, then you’ve probably know how this game ends. The one who builds the most will win Dahla’s hand in marriage. However, their secret is thwarted and before the king banishes him entirely, his daughter proposes a quest to build further towns to support the kingdom. The king, Arnor, rules his kingdom with an iron fist, while his daughter, Dahla, falls in love with the local blacksmith, Finn.

The story takes place in a mystical and magical land you’ve all seen before in any Disney movie. If you look closely into their eyes, you can see the writing ‘Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.’ What’s the story about? How do I win?įor the sake of the review, I’m going to address the latter question further on, as its importance will affect the overall reason why the score is low. Why bring up a poet who you might have heard in an English lecture in high school? Only because any game that fails spectacularly should merit a small sense of what beautiful or creative ideas may have started off in the first place. Insert clever transition to this game review, where I have witnessed Cateia Games’ ‘ Kingdom Tales 2,’ which lacks any sense of design, originality, or excitement that any games should have. Upon a pedestal reads the lines of the forgotten ruler, who speaks, ‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kinks Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’ All that remains around the decaying landscape are the great ruins and the sensation of nothing. But for all Felicity’s warmth and laughter, even she could never look at Justin and like what she sees.Famous poet Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote about the ruins of a once ancient kingdom whose glamor and riches are now but grains in the desert sand. With time running out, not just for the castle’s inhabitants, but for the kingdom of Albury, they will need more than the help of a dragon to break the curse and prevent disaster before it’s too late. But as she begins to thaw the ice around his heart, he discovers her past is not what it seems.

Justin has to break his curse, and he needs someone like Felicity to do it. But even though she’s a prisoner, nothing seems to dampen the intruder’s maddening cheerfulness.

Between the inhuman coldness he learned from his father, the humiliation of his cursed form, and his powerlessness against his hidden enemies back in the capital, laughter is the last thing on his mind. Justin was born to be a king, not a beast. The prince’s monstrous form is the least of her concerns-the whole castle has been trapped by his pride, and his absence from the capital is driving the kingdom to ruin. But when protecting her father means falling afoul of the curse that has swallowed the Summer Castle, and Prince Justin along with it, her own safety is not all that’s at stake. Peasant girls don’t mingle with dragons, princes, and beastly curses…or so Felicity thoughtĪfter a lifetime with a grief-stricken father and a self-absorbed brother, Felicity isn’t daunted by sacrifice.
