The First Templar

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2011 video game
  • EU: May 6, 2011
  • NA: May 17, 2011
Genre(s)Action-adventure, hack and slashMode(s)Single-player
multiplayer

The First Templar is an action-adventure video game developed by Haemimont Games and published by Kalypso Media for the Xbox 360 and Microsoft Windows. It was released on both platforms in May 2011 in Europe and North America.[1][2][3][4]

The First Templar follows the story of two characters - French Templar Celian d'Arestide, and his companion, Marie d'Ibelin, a noble lady who has been proclaimed a heretic by the Dominican Inquisition. Taking control over these two unlikely allies, the player must uncover the mysteries behind the Templar Order, play a role in a grand conspiracy, and discover the secret of the Holy Grail. The First Templar features both single player and co-op modes. When playing solo, the player can switch between the two characters, leaving the control of the second hero to the game's AI. At any moment a second player can join in and take control of the AI controlled hero.

Gameplay

The game may be played solo or cooperatively. Either way, Celian is always present with its partner, being alternated between Roland and Marie. The three characters may be defined in a traditional action roleplaying game style as a Fighter (Roland), a Rogue/Assassin (Marie) and a Paladin (Celian).

The main action is about swordplay with attacks and shield or sword defenses being central. Minor skills are also in existence some being common to all characters and some being exclusive to one or another. Magic is an absent concept being Celian's prayer ability the only one resembling it. The enemies are also of an unmagic kind.

Plot

Characters

Story

In 1291, the Crusades, as well as the Kingdom of Jerusalem, are coming to an end. Acre, the last Christian city in the Holy Land, is under siege and about to fall into Mamluk hands.

Celian and Roland, two Templar knights, have just arrived in Cyprus in order to talk to the Templar Grandmaster, seeking advice in their quest for the Holy Grail. Upon their arrival, they find that the island is being attacked by Muslim warriors, and they hurry to protect it. In doing so, they encounter a kidnapped messenger from Guy d'Ibelin, who tells them that the Grandmaster's daughter, Marie d'Ibelin, is being held prisoner by the Inquisition.

After consulting their Grandmaster, the two go to an undetermined location in Europe, where they discover that the Inquisition (led by a shadowy agent named Isaiah) is plotting something of monumental proportions. They release Marie, but Roland is left behind during their escape, presumably killed – thus, Marie becomes Celian's partner for most of the subsequent game.

Celian and Marie continue their quest for the Grail, fighting a great deal of Muslim enemies in the process and helping those in need – even though the idea of helping always comes from Celian and is criticized by Marie, who remarks that they are wasting time doing so. At some point, the pair discovers that Guy d'Ibelin is also dead, and that the Holy Land is lost for good. They finally find the Holy Grail Temple, but they learn that it was emptied long ago. Inside the temple, they find a dying Templar who mistakes Celian for the Grandmaster. Running out of options, they decide to go to France in order to get some advice from the Grandmaster and the main body of the Order.

They arrive in France in 1307, the year in which King Philip IV and Pope Clement V start their accusations against the Templar Order. Both heroes fall into the Inquisition's trap; but just when they are about to be imprisoned, they find Roland, who has not been killed but instead was tortured and then pledged his allegiance to the anti-Templar movement, therefore becoming its Black Knight.

However, Roland's friendship to Celian turns out to be much stronger than his newly found allegiance, so he helps his friend reach an escape port through the forest, where Celian is reunited with Marie. From that point on, Roland tells them they are on their own, and so they depart for a fortified Templar stronghold, where they intend to join forces with the Grandmaster to fight back against the French army.

The Grandmaster reveals that Celian is in fact Hugues de Payens, the founder of the Templar Order. His memory loss was a side effect due to an assassination attempt by the current Grandmaster himself, because he had hidden the Grail, which was responsible for prolonging the lives of the nine founders far beyond the natural lifespan of a normal human being. After three of the original nine died (probably due to internal power struggles), Hugues realized that the Grail was dangerous, and so he took it away and hid it. But the Grandmaster – who is himself one of the original nine – wanted the Grail back; he thus took advantage from Hugues' memory loss and gave him the task of finding the cup, in hopes that something inside him would lead him straight to it.

After the plot twist, the player realizes that the true enemy is actually the Templar Order, who becomes the main antagonist from now on. By remembering his true identity, Celian (aka Hugues) also concludes that his castle would be just the place where he would hide something he didn't want anyone to ever find.

In the end, the player defeats both the Grandmaster and Isaiah (the agent from the Inquisition), and he is given a choice to use the Grail or destroy it. This affects only the final narration, describing either immortal guardians or humanity free to make its own decisions.

Reception

The First Templar received "mixed or average reviews" according to review aggregator Metacritic.

While the combat system, visual style and story received some positive feedback, the dated design and lack of polish drew criticism.[5] Eurogamer described it as "..the good kind of 6/10, the sort of zero-expectation, low-budget game that approaches the score from below...a decent hack-and-slash brawler...Not a great one".[6] GameZone gave the game a 3.5 out of 10, stating "This is a game that you’re going to want to like. You’re going to want it to succeed, but it’ll only let you down. The entire time you’ll be thinking about what they could have done differently and better."[7]

References

  1. ^ The First Templar, IGN
  2. ^ "The First Templar announced with images". www.gamersyde.com. 2 June 2010.
  3. ^ Jim Sterling (24 March 2011). "The First Templar gets a trailer, release date". Destructoid.
  4. ^ "The First Templar Gamescon 2010 Trailer available". gamasutra.com. 27 August 2010. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  5. ^ "The First Templar for PC", www.metacritic.com, metacritic, retrieved 5 October 2011
  6. ^ Dan Whitehead (17 May 2011), "The First Templar - Review", www.eurogamer.net, Eurogamer, pp. 1–2
  7. ^ Lance Liebl (3 June 2011), "The First Templar - 360/PC", pc.gamezone.com, archived from the original on 31 August 2011, retrieved 23 June 2011

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