Dark Law: Meaning of Death

Dark Law: Meaning of Death

Cover art
Developer(s) SAS Sakata (Programming)
Target Laboratory (Sound)
Publisher(s) ASCII Corporation
Composer(s) Satoshi Nagano, Michihiko Shichi
Platform(s) Super Famicom
Release date(s)

‹See Tfd›

  • JP: March 28, 1997
Genre(s) Role-playing video game
Mode(s) Single-player

Dark Law: Meaning of Death (ダークロウ ミーニング・オブ・デス) is a 32-megabit, 1997 Super Famicom release—one of the last in the system's history. An ASCII Corporation production, it is a sequel to Wizap! (1994) and the final chapter in the Dark Lord trilogy.

Summary

This video game takes places during a period of uncertain prosperity returned after a tragic war first struck the world 300 years ago. A demon comes in to kidnap Refia. She must be rescued and King Daruk of Amugnon must be defeated in order for true prosperity to return. Towns are navigated through a menu system and up to four characters can form an adventurers' party. The battles in this video game are similar in form to Treasure Hunter G--they use a power bar that drains with movement and action, except that battles are not restricted to 16x16 squares.

Like a game that popularized the trend, Chrono Trigger, the game has multiple endings. The game is considered to be less linear than its Japanese role-playing game counterparts. An unofficial translation was made in 2007 in the form of an downloadable patch found on the Internet.

References

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