ADOM
ADOM | |
---|---|
Major Roguelike | |
Developer | Thomas Biskup |
Theme | Fantasy |
Influences | Hack |
Released | 1994 |
Updated | August 23 2015 (R60, version 1.15.2 for the general public); November 16 2015 (R61, version 2.0.0 for Steam and prerelease testers) |
Licensing | freeware (postcardware), Closed Source, Steam |
P. Language | C |
Platforms | Amiga, Linux, Mac, Msdos, OS/2, Windows, Raspberry Pi, Steam |
Interface | ASCII, Keyboard, Graphical tiles |
Game Length | Long to very long |
Official site of ADOM |
ADOM (which is short for Ancient Domains of Mystery) was released by Thomas Biskup in 1994. Its main features are its detailed storyline and its undisclosed source code, both of which are unusual in the roguelike world.
ADOM on Steam
Starting November 16 2015 8pm GMT+1 ADOM has been available on Steam.
ADOM on Steam Greenlight
On May, 16th, 2014, ADOM entered the Steam Greenlight process. On the 11th of June, 2014, ADOM was greenlit! Additionally now there is a Steam group for ADOM discussions.
Crowd funding ADOM: The Resurrection
During 60 magical days from the 2nd of July to the 30th of August 2012 ADOM was resurrected from its hibernation by the amazing success of an Indiegogo crowd funding campaign. $90,169 were collected over the course of 60 days, making ADOM the most successful crowd funded game ever on Indiegogo and the most successfully crowd funded roguelike game ever (if you count Dwarf Fortress as being crowd funded ADOM is only 2nd, yes ;-) ). As a consequence a series of major new releases of ADOM is being implemented while you are reading this and there will be tons of new items, artifacts, quests, classes, races, maps and even such things like graphical tile support, sound, a Steam integration and an achievement system. So the future once more looks very bright for ADOM!
Description
Storyline
The game is set in the world of Ancardia, an original creation by Thomas Biskup. The objective is to find the source of chaos and disorder that is arising in the world, and stop it if you can. The game is much more plot driven than many other roguelike games, with many beings in the game assigning you quests, giving you advice and helping you on your way. There are a few compulsory quests, but the majority of quests and tasks in the game are optional. There are also multiple possible endings to the game.
The character starts at the top right corner of the wilderness map, and encounters the village of Terinyo as the first stopping point (if he follows the road). One can get food, quests and shelter here before proceeding to the dungeons of the game.
Dungeons
ADOM is classed as a 'hack game rather than a 'band game, mainly due to the semi-persistent levels present in most of the dungeons. When the player enters a new level, the layout for that level is then used for the rest of the game. If the player leaves a level, and then returns, he/she will find the level exactly as it was left. There is one exception to this - the Infinite Dungeon, which generates a new level every time stairs are used. However, many of the more interesting game features, such as altars, vaults and shops are never generated in the Infinite Dungeon.
All dungeon levels are either the same size as the screen or smaller, so no scrolling is required.
The main dungeon of the game is the Caverns of Chaos, a 50-level deep dungeon, with a few key special levels located there, including the main town of the game - Dwarftown. There are several smaller dungeons too, most of them being part of a quest in some way.
Classes and races
ADOM has ten playable races, and twenty playable classes. Any combination of the two is possible, though some combinations are not recommended.
Races - Humans, Trolls, High Elves, Gray Elves, Dark Elves, Dwarves, Gnomes, Hurthlings, Orcs, Mist Elves, Ratlings and Drakelings.
Classes - Fighter, Paladin, Ranger, Thief, Assassin, Wizard, Priest, Bard, Monk, Healer, Weaponsmith, Archer, Merchant, Farmer, Mindcrafter, Barbarian, Druid, Necromancer, Elementalist, Beastfighter, Chaos Knight, Duelist.
All classes are able to use magic and all classes are able to use any item they should choose, but will receive appropriate bonuses/penalties to their abilities. Wizards and Priests will obviously learn magic far more easily than the fighting classes. However, the fighting classes will gain weapon skills far more easily. Races and classes may also have their own special abilities.
In the most recent version, players receive one or more talents at birth (depending on race, class, horoscope, mana and luck), and have to choose a further talent every three levels. These talents give pluses to stats, skills and grant other abilities.
Spells
ADOM features a large number of spells ranging from useful Light to mighty Wish. Spells can belong to arcane or clerical schools or both. Casters have a harder time learning and improving the effectiveness of magic from the other school.
ADOM treats most ball spells in a unique way. Each ball is centered on the player character but does not harm him.
Corruption
During course of game character gets more and more corrupted until final challenge is defeated. Corruption builds up slowly until it is strong enough to manifest in body. Few of effects are beneficial, most are mixed blessing and some are outright harmful. When a PC gets extremely corrupted he turns into a writhing mass of primal chaos leaving his former existence behind to become a lowly minion of Chaos.
Other notable features
- Separated weapon skills for different kinds of weapons with diverse gains
- Disease as long-term condition
- Deities
Versions and platforms
ADOM Classic (the public release) currently is at version R60 (version 1.15.2) and freely available for Windows, DOS, Linux, OSX, NetBSD, FreeBSD and Amiga. As a result of the crowd funding campaign prerelease versions of ADOM have been released, the latest publicly available version being ADOM R60 (version 1.15.2). New prereleases are constantly released for donors only.
ADOM Deluxe (the Steam release) currently is at version R61 (version 2.0.0) and available for Windows, Mac and Linux/SteamOS.
Source code
Unlike most roguelike games, the source code of ADOM is not freely available, though many guesses, deductions and experiments have allowed the players to deduce the majority of the game's workings.
In the past a couple of folks were very insensitive about my notions regarding ADOM variants and argued "If the game is available without costs I can do with the sources whatever I like". Those folks are... well... socially retarded would be too nice as a description. Let's just assume that those people really made me wonder about what I'm doing here. They really should try to create something in the scope of ADOM only once in their lives and then they might understand. Anyways, those folks annoyed the hell out of me and I've decided that I'm not going to release the sources for ADOM. - Thomas Biskup, taken from ADOM's readme
Resources
There are several sites dealing with ADOM information:
- The official website can be found at ADOM. Also contains official forums and Thomas Biskup's blog.
- ADOM @ Steam, the Steam store page
- The Official ADOM Blog
- Andy William's Guidebook (containing spoilers, detailed information, and much more, but no longer updated and only contains information up through version 1.1.1) is located at The ADOM guidebook.
- ADOM Wiki, hosted by Wikia, contains fan-created articles about ADOM, including documentation of the changes in the latest line of releases
- The ADOM newsgroup is another great source for information or getting a question answered. It is recommended you use a better news client, but you can access the newsgroup through Google Groups.
- www.ancardia.com - The Download Site