Tuesday, February 10, 2009

LORE

The LORE System is an important part of Herodom. It's essentially a means of collecting and tracking useful knowledge and lore about the world around you. It's divided into three main systems: The most basic is the Journal, which logs important factoids about, say, local kings and cities, important historical events, and so on. This has little effect on the game itself and is primarily a means of emphasizing the plot and setting without being intrusive.

Secondly, you have the bestiary. When you obtain the LORE for a given monster/enemy, you get an entry in your bestiary about it, which will give you a little image of them and tell you their name (which will from that point on show up when you fight them, a la Symphony of the Night). Further, you'll get a brief flavor descrpition of the creature, as well as a list of items that can be looted from the creature. Finally, you'll see the stats for the monster (not pictured here) including health, experience, and basic power/defense. This is useful not only in that it's easier to appraise enemy risk and reward, but also because having the lore entry for an enemy will make item drops from that enemy more common. Some rarer drops can't even be scavenged until you have the lore entry (for example, a giant spider's poison gland), simply because without the bestiary entry you'd lack the knowledge of how to retrieve it.
Unlike most games with bestiaries, you don't get the entry just from defeating one of these monsters. You have to learn about them. As such, you'll often get lore entries as quest rewards or through conversation. For example, in one early quest, you find a grimy old monument in a graveyard, too encrusted with dirt to read. All you need is some water to wash it off and you can read about the history of the graveyard's guardians, which gives you the lore entry for the local shambling skeletons.

The third major facet of the Lore system is the recipe book. Like bestiary lore, recipes can be obtained as quest rewards, through conversation, or in any number of other forms. In one of the first quests in the game, a grateful housewife gives you the basics to make flour which becomes a staple ingredient in more complex recipes later on. Used in conjunction with the bestiary, it's easy to find what items you need, where to buy them (or what monsters need to be slaughtered to obtain them), and then put them all together in a nice finished product. Consumable items, weapons, armor, equipment, and even trade goods can be made in this fashion. Recipes are an integral part of the game and are often the only way to get certain items, especially of higher quality. In a pinch, it's good to be able to make some health-recovering items or prepared food when you're stranded in the hostile wilderness, miles from the nearest town.