Cave Noire
Cave Noire (カーブノア) is a Roguelike developed and published by Konami released on April 19, 1991 for Game Boy.[1]
Cave Noire | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Konami |
Publisher(s) |
|
Platform(s) | Game Boy |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Roguelike |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Gameplay
The game revolves around four quests (killing monsters, freeing fairies or collecting gold/orbs with ten difficulties each. The difficulty determines how big the target number is, the stats the player starts with and what monsters are encountered. Starting a quest creates a randomly generated dungeon where the player has one chance to reach the goal - death means a new dungeon has to be created. Beating a difficulty level unlocks the next; this is also the one thing the game saves.
The dungeons itself are shown from a top-down perspective and feature the hero, walls, floor tiles, monsters and items to collect. Movement is turn-based and each turn is divided into four phases (player movement, player attack, monster attack and finally monster movement). Attacks are only possible when the two participants stand beside each other and the computer simply calculates the result from the statistics (attack, defence, luck and a random component) which then lowers the health points of the attacked hero/monster. Of course, reaching a health of zero means defeat. The mentioned statistics can be improved by finding and using certain items like weapons or armour. Potions, spells and rings which have additional effects when used/equipped, e.g. health refreshments, healing poison, dealing much damage or invisibility.
The environment also plays a part in the quest. The walls and tiles may have special effects when touched, examples are pits (the player/monster falls to the next level of the dungeon and takes damage), breakable walls, lava or teleporters. Some rooms may be covered in fog which obscures the floor tiles until the hero walks onto it (monsters still can be made out). There is a specific kind of monster which clears the whole room when killed - but at the same time, another one has the exact opposite effect.