Fable download
Video loading, please wait.
Quite bad and unintentionally funny adventure game
This game will present you with a very interesting challenge from the get go: can you take the audio assault of the spoken dialogue in, or will it prove an insurmountable obstacle? The unfortunate thing is that the story of this game is a relatively good, laughs inducing, chunk of coming of age type of fable that works. But most of the dialogue is spoken by voice actors that are just horrendous. I don't even know if they are aware of their level of awfulness, but I'm pretty sure that only the most eager of double standard hipsters would appreciate it, from a very cynical, ironic point of view. Leaving this quandary aside, Fable is a point and click adventure game in which you play as Quickthorpe, a young man who has to prove that he's a man. This puts him on a quest that will guide his feet towards all sort of trope encounters: the guarded bridge, the evil wizard that proves to actually be good, using smarts instead of force and so on. There will be puzzles to solve, there will be dialogue to take part into and for the most part the graphics will be very ok, within a clean cartoonish style. The game, unfortunately just seem to want to make you laugh too hard, and it will happen that you will get stuck on a puzzle, having to listen to the same jokes again and again. And that's where most players will probably draw the line. All in all, the game is not really worth its while – spoken dialogue is really bad, the story is full of tropes and clichés, and the puzzles frustrate more than offer a challenge.
(0 liked this review, 0 don't)
written by Emerich
Are you good or evil?
(1 liked this review, 1 don't)
written by HeatherMarie
Original cd/dvd version
If you did not find any online digital version to download or it's not working properly, you have the chance to buy Fable from Amazon store and play it again.
- Rate: (23 ratings)
- Genre: Adventure
- Software house: Telstar
- Year: 1996
- System: DOS/Win'98(or dosbox emulator)
- Tags: Third Person

Fable