Poll

Master Race

Humans
1 (33.3%)
Elves
0 (0%)
Dwarves
0 (0%)
Goblins
0 (0%)
Kobolds
0 (0%)
Cave Swallowmen
2 (66.7%)

Total Members Voted: 3

Author Topic: Legends Mode ► Adventure Based on Dwarf Fortress  (Read 1942 times)

you should have grinded sneaking XP on sneaking up on wild animals first :C

hopefully your novice skill won't get you noticed

you should actually do DF adventure mode screenies -_-

I would but hand drawn scenes are cooler imo.

Go behind the bowman and slit his neck
oh wait I mean push him into the fire



You own both of the froobs, grab the carrycase, and head back to your hamlet.



You trade the carrycase to the dwarf in exchange for a longsword and backpack. After that you go home, put your father's shortsword away, and sleep through the night.

What shall we do in the morning? Explore or ask someone around town for a quest?

Find a grindstone to sharpen that sword on

Go back to that camp for the loot you missed

Explore! Also I enjoy the simplistic drawing style, shouldn't keep you from making updates at all~

Explore!



You explore for a while in the forest and stumble upon a tower. You open your Legends Book and go to the "Locations" section, then begin looking for records on towers in the area.

At last you find an entry describing the tower. It is called Inglo Tower, and was claimed in the year 32 by a kobold named Itar Inglo. The story behind the tower is that Itar was a young kobold interested by life magics, such as necromancy and immortality. Itar's village was not pleased by this and kicked Itar out at age nineteen, so she began to use this tower as a hub for her magic.

Then in the year 40 Itar crafted a stone golemn in the tower, which promptly killed Itar and went on to wander the wilds. There still remains a number of troglodyte zombies in the tower's small dungeon. Should we go into the tower and look for gear which can help us learn magic, or keep exploring?

Also I enjoy the simplistic drawing style, shouldn't keep you from making updates at all~

Thank you! Yeah each picture takes ten to twenty minutes depending on how much stuff I draw, so they aren't very time consuming at all.