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Dragon Age: Origins

Dragon Age: Origins

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From: Electronic Arts
Category: Video Games

List Price: $49.99
Buy New: $34.80
as of 3/18/2010 14:43 EDT details
You Save: $15.19 (30%)



New (28) Used (9) from $26.99

Seller: WeSearchUSave
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 223 reviews
Sales Rank: 202

Format: CD-ROM
Platforms: Windows Vista, Windows XP
Genre: role_playing_games
ESRB: Mature
Media: DVD-ROM
Edition: Standard
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Age: 17 - 20 years
Operating System: Windows Vista
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.5
Legal Disclaimer: We do not in any way represent that any part we sell is legal to possess in your jurisdiction. Check with you local authorities to ensure it is legal for you to possess before buying!

MPN: 197183
Model: DragonOrigin-pc
UPC: 014633190946
EAN: 0014633190946
ASIN: B001IK1BWC

Release Date: November 3, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Scalable combat options that let you decide the level of control you have over your party, including NPCs. Issue orders, set your own tactical AI, or take control of any party member to lead the charge.
  • 6 possible playable preludes known as 'Origin Stories' which along with your play, define how your hero character will see the world, how it sees you and sets the tone for the entire story.
  • Travel across the vast and varied lands of Ferelden; from the conspiratorial halls of the last great dwarven city, Orzammar, to the untamed snarls of the Korcari Wilds.
  • Dragon Age: Origins will give you deep character customization options including: class, race, appearance, abilities, and equipment.
  • At the heart of the storm sweeping across Ferelden. Decide the fate of nations, people and, ultimately, yourself. Just remember: for every choice, there is a consequence.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Ferelden. A dark and foreboding place, where death and violence lurks in every shadow. A troubled world, where even the brightest light can often find itself extinguished by the ever encroaching darkness.
Civilization has fought for many centuries to hold the shadows at bay, but even now the mighty walls of Ostagar are beginning to crumble against the onslaught of an ancient threat. The darkspawn have returned again to bring their taint to the land, and this time, their ancient adversary, the Grey Wardens, have been left neglected by a complacent world that felt they no longer needed them. The fate of the world hangs in the balance, as these mighty warriors again take their place on the front lines against the Blight. But powerful as they are, their numbers have dwindled, and the time is near that a champion needs to step forward from their ranks and lead them to victory. But will the success of this Grey Warden ensure a new, brighter future for Ferelden, or be the first bloody step into a more perilous future?

Origin stories are a major feature of the Dragon Age experience. You choose your origin, and from that starting point, your story begins. You play through your character's early days, defining his or her background and motivation and begin to learn more about the world of Ferelden from your own distinct perspective. Your choice of origin defines how you will view the world and how it views you. Choose a sneaky, disrespected commoner and you will play a story that focuses around subtle skills and careful wordplay. Choose a noble origin and the world will be much more positive and helpful, but those jealous of your status will not be afraid to take what you have, violently if necessary. More will be revealed on these stories soon In Dragon Age, your choices change the world and affect the people around you. Certain situations, storylines, and conversation options will change drastically depending o


Amazon.com Product Description
From BioWare, the makers of Mass Effect, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, and Baldur's Gate comes Dragon Age: Origins. An epic tale of violence, lust, and betrayal, Dragon Age: Origins is a single player role-playing game (RPG) set in a fantasy game environment, and featuring three playable character classes, accessible in the form of three races. In addition, the game features extreme character customization, a new game engine, party-based gameplay utilizing non-player characters and a built-in personal history system for each hero character rooted in a variety of possible origin stories.

'Dragon Age: Origins' game logo
Six possible hero Origin stories available in 'Dragon Age: Origins'
6 possible hero Origin Stories.
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Three character classes and three races available in 'Dragon Age: Origins'
3 classes and 3 races to play as.
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Gritty, brutal action in 'Dragon Age: Origins'
Gritty, brutal action.
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Frightening enemies and bosses in 'Dragon Age: Origins'
Frightening enemies and bosses.
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Party-based combat in 'Dragon Age: Origins'
Party-based combat using NPCs.
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Dwarf city in 'Dragon Age: Origins'
Stunning 3D environments.
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Story
In Dragon Age: Origins the survival of humanity rests in the hands of those chosen by fate. You are a Grey Warden, one of the last of an ancient order of guardians who have defended the lands on the continent of Thedas throughout the centuries. Betrayed by a trusted general in a critical battle, you must hunt down the traitor and bring him to justice. As you fight your way towards the final confrontation with an evil nemesis, you will face monstrous foes and engage in epic quests to unite the disparate peoples of a world at war. A romance with a seductive shapeshifter may hold the key to victory, or she may be a dangerous diversion from the heart of your mission. To be a leader, you must make ruthless decisions and be willing to sacrifice your friends and loved ones for the greater good.

Gameplay
Dragon Age: Origins is a 3D oriented RPG based in a dark, heroic, fantasy realm where moral choices have a lasting impression on the people you meet, the members of your own party and the world around you. The inclusion of subtitle "Origins" in the game's title refers to the six unique origin stories available to new heroes as a new game begins. Each of these has an impact on the player's motivations and his or her experience, and renders a unique prelude, path, and possible ending(s) to the game. There are many different endings to the game based on the origin story of the character and the choices you make as you play through the game. The game features three character classes--warrior, mage, and rogue--and three races of being--Human, Elf or Dwarf--that can assume these classes. Although most game elements, such as weapons, magic, etc., are available to any character, each class and race has different strengths, abilities and affinities which lend themselves to better utilizing different elements.

Dragon Age: Origins is a single player game based on party-based gameplay and combat where the player can join, control and quest with up to three non-player characters (NPCs). Players can also quest alone if they so choose, but with the chance of survival are slim. Convincing NPCs to join you, and treating them well may be necessary depending on the varying sentiments between the player and the NPC, or between the NPC's in the party based on the chosen history written into the origin story accepted at the beginning of the game. This uncertainty allows for a variety of possible dynamics within the party ranging from open hostility, all the way to romance. The game progresses in real-time via a pause-and-play tactical combat system that allows the player to check inventory levels, equip a character, etc. in a slight vacuum. Additional features found in the game include: a combination of a standard loot system and a currency system based on gold silver and copper; advanced character customization functionality; the use of poison, traps and herbalism; dual-wielding skills; and "spell combos," which allow players to chain together different spells to create a unique effects.

Key Game Features

  • BioWare’s deepest universe to date with over 80 hours of gameplay and more than double the size and scope of Mass Effect.
    • Travel throughout dozens of environments and fully immerse yourself in a shattered world that is on the brink of utter annihilation.
    • An epic story that is completely shaped and reactive to your play style.
  • Complex moral dilemmas offering no easy choices.
    • Tailor your Dragon Age: Origins experience from the very beginning by choose from six different origin stories.
    • Decide how to handle complex issues like murder, genocide, betrayal, and the possession/sacrificing of children without the security of a good/bad slider to tell you what to do.
  • Full character customization allowing the player to sculpt a hero in your own image or fantasy.
    • Elaborate character creator allows you to create your own hero unique from anyone else.
    • Shape your character’s personality and morality based on the choices you make throughout the game.
  • Engage in bone-crushing, visceral combat engaging in battle against massive and terrifying creatures.
    • Unleash legendary powers and choose from over 100 different magical spells and skills.
    • Experience the adrenaline rush of brutal combat, beheading your foes or casting spells that make enemies explode from within.

System Requirements:

Minimum Recommended
OS: Windows XP with SP3 / Vista with SP1
CPU: XP: Intel Core 2(or equivalent) running at 1.4Ghz or greater AMD X2(or equivalent) running at 1.8Ghz or greater / Vista: Intel Core 2 (or equivalent) running at 1.6Ghz or greater Intel Core 2 Quad 2.4Ghz Processor or equivalent
RAM: XP: 1GB or more / 1.5GB or more 2 GB (XP) / 4 GB (Vista)
HDD: 20GB
Video: XP: ATI Radeon X850 128MB or greater, NVIDIA GeForce 6600 GT 128MB or greater / Vista: ATI Radeon X1550 256MB or greater, NVIDIA GeForce 7600 GT 256MB or greater ATI 3850 512 MB or greater, NVIDIA 8800GTS 512 MB or greater, AMD Phenom II X3 Triple-Core 2.8 GHz or greater
Other: DVD-ROM drive for physical disc play; Mouse/keyboard/gamepad for gameplay



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 223
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...45Next »



5 out of 5 stars BUY THIS GAME   March 18, 2010
J. Medley (Michigan)
Awesome game with an awesome replay value. A must have for any fan of RPGs.


4 out of 5 stars Better than i expected   March 11, 2010
baylor (Minneapolis, MN USA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

i like RPGs, especially the ones back in the old days when you get lots of classes, spells, party members, etc. As a result, i wasn't impressed with Dragon Age when i first started playing it. You have a total of three races to choose from and, worse, only three classes you can choose (fighter, wizard, thief). i also haven't been a huge fan of Bioware's recent RPGs where the amount of story and cut scenes goes up and the number of spells, enemies and options goes down. Plus Bioware's always been pretty bad at AI

So i wasn't really looking forward to this game but apparently my family thought i should have been, because i got this for Christmas. And, it turns out, i liked the game, much more so than many of the recent Bioware games

The things i worried about were still there. There are embarrassingly few spells which is made worse by the new cool down timers that haven't been present in earlier Bioware games. You can pick subclasses later but they're not easy to get (ex - becoming a healer requires finding the one shop keeper who sells an incredibly expensive book on how to be that class). You fight the same handful of enemies over and over. Dialog options and options in general are more limited than i expected. The pathfinding is much improved and combat behavior is much better than in KotOR but still flaky (especially at the start when your tanks always run away, letting the bad guys go straight for the mages) can be flaky and the paying for tactical slots to set your AI is unneccessary. Since switching to 3D, Bioware has been awful at making pretty levels, and while they aren't gorgeous here (and still painfully linear), they're much better than Mass Effect. Despite the problems, the game was still fun. It's an interesting enough story and the story lines (werewolf curses, marriages of convenience, angry ex-wives, gold digging sisters, etc.) are pretty good. i liked having a dog. In the end, i almost had as much fun playing this as i did The Witcher

There were a few things i didn't like. First, the documentation. It's a new system, not D&D rules, so it would be helpful if there were more explanation about defense vs. armor, what armor bypass does, how much damage spells do, what physical resistance does, whether dragons are resistant to fire or hurt more by cold, how the fatigue numbers are calculated and a dozen other things that were important but are impossible to tell from the game's feedback. Second, the difficulty was surprisingly difficult on normal level, and since almost every good spell kills your party, mages are fairly useless. Third, the inventory system wasn't much fun. Fourth, all the characters were a little too over the top extreme, with the dwarf especially painful to listen to. And there weren't enough of them - if you make the obnoxious stripper leave (which is easy to do), you'll play the entire game with no magic users (unless you count the elderly healer, which you shouldn't). Only a rogue can learn to pick a lock (no knock spells here) but rogues can't fight so you don't want to waste one of the 3 NPC slots on one

i still prefer the flexibility of Oblivion, spells in the original Baldur's Gate, design of Planescape and general fun of Fallout but once you get past how constrained and linear Dragon Age is, it's actually pretty fun



5 out of 5 stars It's the Age of Dragons!   March 11, 2010
Robert Blaser (St. Louis, MO)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Recently I had the opportunity to complete BioWare's new fantasy-RPG Dragon Age: Origins. What a fantastic game! I easily played more than 60+ hours of the game and I very much enjoyed it!

What hooked me? What kept bringing me back to the game?

First of all, the graphics are gorgeous! I love the recent innovation in computer games where you get to design and customize your character. I'm not just talking about the standard RPG fare of skills and abilities, I mean the look, facial characteristics, hair, eye color, etc. To me, this greatly adds to the player's level of connection, immersion into the game and attachment to your character.

The story was deep and engaging. Fereldin is a dark world and has a distinct George R.R. Martin Game of Thrones feel to it, but that is not necessarily a bad thing. The world is being overrun and you must gather an army to counter the threat. There are many TOUGH choices to make along the way, and seldom are they easy, black-or-white choices. In my opinion, that is terrific story-telling. BioWare spins a good yarn. They get extra credit in my book for not compromising on the topics addressed. This is an adult game, with adult themes. No whitewash, good-for-all-the-masses tripe here. During your adventure to save the world you boldly wade into topics of religion, racism, sexuality, homosexuality, blood & gore, murder, betrayal, religion and demons and BioWare doesn't compromise. As an adult gamer, I appreciate that.

The combat is visceral and looks good, the spell effects are spectacular and the sound effects are terrific. Personally I found the early game combat a little rough, as I did not have a healer and found my party getting wiped out every third battle. So, to avoid too much frustration, I turned the combat on easy. Later in the game, I better understood the Tactics settings and had developed a good healer. Then the game's combat became much more fun. As mentioned previously there are many options and abilities to customize. Therefore a player can approach combat the way that one wants to; again, a sign of a strong game.

For me however, the best aspect of the game were the characters. This is one of BioWare's true strengths and the hallmark of an excellent game. The characters were diverse and multifaceted. They had their own personalities, their own agendas and I found myself wanting to know all that I could learn about those characters that fought and traveled with me. That was one area that I felt the game excelled. For me it was a tough choice on which three characters to take with you as you journeyed along. I loved the banter and the dialogue between them - it often made me laugh out loud. The writing and the voice acting were extremely well done.

I felt like the pacing was good and not too rushed, but with a sense of urgency to move the story along.

Treasure and in-game items were diverse and good. The ability to find and buy "runes" to add to and modify your key magic items was very cool. I liked the fact that it allowed you to "plug & play" and keep using your best combat modifiers rather than forever locking them to a particular weapon.

The game itself was rock solid. It only crashed to the desktop on me twice. I had one bug and that was around new, downloadable content involving the Gray Warden's old keep. The keep was a welcome addition as a place to store some extra stuff, instead of forever having to lug it around, filling up your inventory. I wished that I would have been able to do more with the place and make it truly feel like a base of operations instead of a big trunk with two shops around it.

I don't know whom to credit the recent trend of unlocking "achievements" in a game, but I like it! It's like an addicting hobby collecting pins. I am motivated to unlock things and earn "badges" of honor. The fact that you can share these on-line is also pretty cool, although I doubt anyone but me ever looked at them.

The ability to quickly take screenshots in the game was VERY welcome. I found myself taking snapshots of then game and then using them as my computer's wallpaper. This kept me thinking about and interested in the game even when I wasn't playing. Often times others would happen by and remark on the picture and ask me about it. I would highly recommend this feature to other game makers.

Dragon Age Origins was one of the best fantasy RPGs that I have played in the past five years. While it was not as "wide-open" whole-world immersive as Oblivion, I felt like the quests, the plots, the characters, the voice acting and the story were better crafted.

I enjoyed the additional content, even though I had to pay for it. I look forward to the expansion, although not too soon as I have been hooked by BioWare's other classic: Mass Effect 2! Is Dragon Age perfect? No, but it's so close you can see it from there.

Enjoy!

Bob Blaser



5 out of 5 stars Oh yes, yes, yes!   March 10, 2010
Penny Gname
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I really love this game. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of it and start over with a fresh slate. I was so totally immersed in this fantasy world I could think of little else for days and days. It's exactly what I had always wanted in a RPG game.

I'm hoping the sequel will be as good. But I understand they've left out the romance stuff, which, IMHO was about the best part of it. But maybe that's a girl-thing.

The really great part of this game is the story. It's very cohesive and believable, or at least as much as a fantasy genre story can be! The motivations for the characters totally works for me.



5 out of 5 stars By far the best RPG for the PS3 to date.   March 10, 2010
Dharma (Westchester, NY USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This game is really amazing. Bioware has succeeded many times before in the RPG department, who could forget Never Winter Nights? Immediately, you will see a lot of NWN in Dragon Age, but they took all of the things that where bad about NWN and removed them, to create an amazing RPG with all the right elements.

The incredible broad open-endedness of the game is definitely a hallmark of Bioware. Wow did they get it right. You can do almost anything in this game, and your actions have consequences that ripple out. Because of this, and the different origin stories, this game has an insanely high level of replay-ability. The voice acting is top notch, and the story line is amazing. It doesn't leave any room for clear cut good vs evil, these are very difficult moral choices with consequences that could shift the entire story.

The games nonlinear nature makes for a really terrific environment to Role Play with a character of your chosing. Someone can be a sweet talker, and get themselves out of situations or even con people out of money, or you could take the vigilante aproach, you could be a saint, or violent insolent bastard haha. The possibilities are endless, and truely amazing.

The game forces you to role play by these grey area decisions, its not as easy as being "good" or "evil" like so many "open ended" RPGs offer you. There are consequences to actions, and most of the major choices in the game make you really reflect on what you should do, what your character would do. Its wonderful and delightful, and even people new to RPGs will enjoy how involved one gets in the story.

Pros:

Extreme Open-endedness makes the game the best RPG out for the PS3.

Story line is top notch and deeply involved, and large enough to accommodate several play throughs while still uncovering and learning more about the world your involved in.

Character Customization borders on ridiculous with the level of detail control.

Music is beautiful and consistent through the game

Character relationships make the story much more interesting, allowing the player to gain trust of different characters and learn more of their past.

D&D reminiscent character leveling

Voice Acting is really terrific, the best I've heard.

Combat is a bit clumsy, but it is basically very good, very much like NWN.



Cons:

Combat is a little clumsy, as stated, but it really isn't THAT bad, it takes some getting used to is all.

Graphics the game is older now, and it shows, but that being said the graphics still look very good.


The game is hands down the best RPG available for the PS3. Its a must own for any RPG fans, you will not regret this purchase :)


Showing reviews 1-5 of 223
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