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Dark Tower
by Roger Burten, Alan Coleman, Vincent A. A. J. Erato · Milton Bradley
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About the game
What is Dark Tower?
An epic fantasy quest to recover an ancient magic scepter from a tyrant king in his Dark Tower, brought to life in electronic form. To vanquish the usurper, players search the four realms of the circular game board for three keys to unlock the tower's gate. On this journey, there are battles to be fought against roving bands of brigands, dragons, plague and hunger. There are bazaars to visit to purchase supplies and assistants for the quest. There are uncharted territories to get lost in and tombs and ruins to plunder. And there is a mighty army to be raised before the player can lay siege to the tower and fight either to glorious victory or crushing defeat. Dark Tower was technologically impressive when it was released in 1981. Gameplay was facilitated by a small computer inside the black plastic shell of the tower itself. Players input their moves on a small membrane keypad each turn and the computer took over from there, doing everything from conducting the progress of battles to keeping track of how much (or little) food was left to feed the players' always hungry warriors. The computer would play brief musical serenades at significant points of the game.
How it plays
Mechanics
On the shelf
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Questions players ask
Questions to bring to BoardGameBrain
- How do setup and the first turn work in Dark Tower?
- When does scoring happen and what ends the game?
- How should the table resolve an unusual timing or rules interaction?