Apr 21, 2019 10:39 pm
Hello everyone,
Today, I’m reviewing Undiscovered the quest for adventure by Eilfing Publishing. I remember when I first heard of this game. It was the very early 2000s, I had borrowed my friend’s Dragon Magazine, and I came upon an ad for this game. The ad boasted several things; a classless system with no level caps, characters can keep on gaining levels for adventuring, every attributes is Important and a fighter-type character with high intelligence, Spirit, Charm, or Luck would still be a successful fighter. Add to this that the game was made by a Canadian company and I was really curious to see what Canada could contribute to the world of tabletop roleplaying games, I soon bought the book. Did it stood up to expectations? Well, let’s find out, shall we?
The book I’m currently reviewing was printed in October 2001 and is the first printing of the game. I am currently unaware if there were any other printing of this book before the company went under somewhere around 2013. The book is hard cover and clocks in at 368 pages. It has a stitched spine which makes for a solid binding, though my copy seems to have a small binding weakness between pages 14 and 15, but that’s probably just my copy. The interior pages are white mat paper and the printing is in black and white, with the layout obviously done in Microsoft Word. There are several black and white illustrations by artist Robert Carlos. His art Quality is pretty good, though it gets weird sometimes with the sample character Meredith the burglar looking really weird in each of her illustration (basically being this book’s Mialee…). The book is divided into three parts, and each of them is introduced by one of Carlos’ full-page illustrations. While the book is by no mean anemic when it comes to the amount of illustrations, they feel few and far between at times. An oddity worth noting about this book is, despite being Canadian, and using the British spelling of words (defense spelled with a "c", a "u" added in "colour" and "armour", etc.), the book still makes use of the imperial system instead of the metric which is what is used in Canada…
Last edited April 21, 2019 10:48 pm