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Dragon Slayer (ドラゴンスレイヤー, Doragon Sureiyā) is a series of role-playing video games by Nihon Falcom. The first Dragon Slayer game is an early action role-playing game , released in 1984 for the NEC PC-8801 and ported by Square for the MSX . [ 1 ]
Clover Hill is a farmgirl living in Pendle Hill near Lancashire in England. Mathew, her older brother and a soldier in World War I, returns home in 1918 from the Battle of Amiens, inflicted with a debilitating fae curse, Clover discovers that during the battle, a mage summoned a faerie for help, and it killed hundreds of soldiers and cursed a number of others.
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Dragon Slayer is an early example of the action role-playing game genre, which it laid the foundations for. [2] Building on the prototypical action role-playing elements of Panorama Toh (1983), created by Yoshio Kiya and Nihon Falcom, [10] as well as Namco's The Tower of Druaga (1984), [11] Dragon Slayer is often considered the first Japanese action role-playing game.
Romancia (ロマンシア), also known as Dragon Slayer Jr., is an action-adventure game developed by Nihon Falcom. It is the third installment in the Dragon Slayer series, preceded by Xanadu and followed by Dragon Slayer IV. Romancia is a simpler and brightly colored game in comparison to the other Dragon Slayer titles, hence the name "Dragon ...
Dragon Slayer IV: Drasle Family, [a] released outside Japan as Legacy of the Wizard, is a 1987 action role-playing platform video game developed and published by Nihon Falcom for the MSX2. A port for the Nintendo Entertainment System was released in Japan in July 1987 by Namco and internationally in 1989 by Broderbund . [ 3 ]
The Legend of Heroes, known in Japan as Eiyū Densetsu, [a] is a series of role-playing video games developed by Nihon Falcom.First starting as a part of the Dragon Slayer series in the late 1980s, the series evolved into its own decade-spanning, interconnected series with seventeen entries, including several subseries.
Dragonslayer, a 1981 board game Dragon Slayer (series) , a series of video games published by Nihon Falcom Dragon Slayer (video game) , the first game in the series, 1984