For years the great empires of Sadar and Vaalor have been at war for the control of the continent of Tartu. When a new threat of the ancient Dark Shaab Gods surface, and with it a spell of sinister blight curses all living things, the two empires have to form an alliance. Which empire of Dragon Eternity will you join, as one of their brave warriors against the affliction of the ancient Gods? Choose from three classes, experience a rich story and fight your way through countless corrupted enemies with the help of a Dragon!
Dragon Eternity is a cross platform MMORPG released for browsers and mobile devices, by Game Insight. The developer has also created such titles as The Tribez, Paradise Island 1 & 2, Enchanted Realm and 2020: My Country, among numerous others.
As for its ratings, Dragon Eternity has earned 4.3/5 stars on the Google Play Store, while gathering a 4.5/5 stars rating on the Apple App Store. As a combat and story oriented MMORPG, this game has a lot to prove, not only in the gameplay, but the storytelling aspects as well. Fortunately, we have a first hand experience with this title!
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Players new to the world of Dragon Eternity have to make a choice between joining the Sadarian or the Vaalorian empire. Depending on which one is chosen, starting location and quests might be somewhat different, although the gameplay is the same. Character creation is limited to only being able to choose between a male or female character, as there are no customization options. Once that’s finished, the world of Adan awaits!
The game is heavily story based, which means almost all the things you will have to do in the lands are reasoned with a story bit, as well as a quest. The story begins when a new threat appears in the continent of Tartu, in the form of a corruption spread by the spawns of the Dark Shaab Gods. You will have to take on arms and help out city guards and townsfolk in defeating undead and various monsters. As you progress in the storyline, you will meet friendly characters, Necromancers, fearsome dragons and uncalled monstrosities.
The story is a huge motivation to play Dragon Eternity, but the gameplay is just as big of a deal, really. When outside of combat, you get a whole set of menus all to yourself, free to customize your character, powerups, get new abilities and shop to your liking. You are also allowed to move freely around to any known locations on the world map, by going to the Transitions menu and choosing any of the interconnecting locations from your current one. This is the main way of transportation when going from quest to quest, but you can also teleport from one place to another, once you have a teleportation artifact, purchased with the premium currency of Reals.
Locations don’t only have quests though, but enemies in high numbers as well. Except for cities, which are safe zones, you will encounter a lot of different monsters, ranging from simple Feral Dogs to Abominations. As you look around the maps, you will notice the level of each of these enemies and can decide to attack them or not. Most of the time it’s smart to consider attacking enemies near your level and not higher leveled ones. If you choose to enter combat with a monster, your character and the enemy will be placed facing eachother, ready to battle.
Combat is turn based, with a timer placed on each turn, depending on the difficulty of the battle. Tougher battles can have longer turn limits, while easy ones have only half a minute or less. When it’s your turn to act, you can choose between using Attack stance, Defensive stance or Magic stance. All stances will perform a normal attack, but will change to the chosen stance from then on, although these can be swapped in each turn. Attack stance provides extra damage for your future attacks, while Defensive stance gives you damage reduction on damage taken. Magic stance is less about dealing more damage or resisting it, and it gives extra mana regeneration per turn.
Other than using basic attacks in the battles of Dragon Eternity, all players have magical powers as well. The available powers are based on the class chosen by each player, just as their playstyle is also determined by their class. Classes can only be chosen after completing a specific quest early in the game, so everyone starts out without a class at first.
The three classes available are the Paladin, the Witcher and the Berzerk. The Paladin is a defensive and tanky class, who use Air, Water and Order magic. The Witcher is an average damage dealer class, but can reduce damage taken as well. They use Earth, Water and Chaos magic. The third class is the Berzerk, who is an all out damage dealer with a high critical hit chance and Fire, Air and Chaos magic available to them. Classes can be changed by buying the amulet of the class, although class specific equipment and specializations will have to be reacquired if a player chooses to change class.
While magical powers and attacks are the main way to fight, bonuses from powerups and equipment are also a thing to keep in mind. Equipment such as weapons, armor, rings and amulets can be found in loot dropped by mobs, while some of it can be purchased in the ingame Shop. They only have to be equipped to provide their bonuses, while powerups on the other hand have to be activated and last for a certain time only. Powerups are bought in the powerups menu or gained by completing quests. Quest reward powerups are usually much more powerful than bought ones, so questing is worth it not only for the story, but also for the rewards.
Since Dragon Eternity is an MMORPG, that means there are other players in the same world as you, questing and battling just as you do. There are zones in the game where players can even attack other players, or aid them by joining an ongoing battle. Monsters can do the same thing and join eachother to attack you with bigger forces, swapping out when they are on low health and sending in their friends.
Don’t worry though, as once you progress further in the storyline, you will be able to complete Dragon Quests, which will let you train a personal dragon, who will aid you in all future battles from then on, so you won’t have to fight alone. Dragons can also be equipped with armor or special items to make them stronger and give them magical attacks. Until you get your dragon, you will only be able to summon monsters to aid you, or ask for player assistance.
As for other players you meet, you can chat with them using the map wide chat system, or privately message them. If you make friends with someone, you can even consider creating a Clan together, or join an existing one. Clans can be a good place to communicate with a number of people and plan events together.
Regarding player versus player endeavors, they don’t stop at random joinable battles, as there are the Battlegrounds, which is dedicated to scheduled PvP matches. The Battlegrounds has multiple types of battles, which all start in different intervals and will assign players to teams depending on which empire they belong to or depending on the number of participating players. Winning these battles rewards players with Valor, which can be traded in for ranks, experience and rare collection items. The best players will also be ranked on the leaderboards.
When you get tired of battling players and questing, you might consider gathering a team for one of the two instances available in Dragon Eternity: Skrag Caves or Razed Fort. These instances hold some of the rarest items in the game, but they are very tough to finish without a prepared team, so plan ahead!
The game also includes in-app purchases for Reals, the premium currency. They can be bought starting from 5 Reals for $4.99, going up to 90 Reals for $89.99. Reals can be spent to buy powerful equipment, items and teleportation stones, or it can be traded for ingame currency of coins.
As most MMORPGs, Dragon Eternity also frowns upon cheats and prefers their players following the exact instructions the developers want them to. But what if the game makes things unneccesarily hard at times, such as earning currency or items? Read on to find out about your options regarding cheats, and you might even find a few useful tips!
As a first general tip, you should certainly keep doing quests for as long as you can, before you decide to go on your own. Not only the story is progressed by the quests, but you get the best equipment and rewards for your level by doing so. The only better equipment are the ones that cost real money, so to keep up with other players you should never discard quests.
Another thing to consider is to avoid too tough battles early on, including PvP ones. Not only that you will waste time on them, if your character is not strong enough yet, but your equipment can even break after a lost battle, which costs coins to repair! Just battle enemies near your level and ones required to be defeated for a quest, until you have enough powerups and items to take on a bigger challenge.
To not get lost in the world of Dragon Eternity, another good thing to do is to find friends and join a Clan. People in the Clans will help you out and might even join battles with you, to defeat tougher foes and bosses. Don’t be afraid to ask for assistance in the Clan or map chat, as there are a lot of helpful people out there!
For a last tip, remember the usefulness of your powerups. They are mentioned heavily in the early quests, but can easily get forgotten as you progress in the story. They are extremely useful against the most powerful bosses, especially powerups that add passive damage to your hits, or heal you continously. Also don’t forget to claim your chest reward at the bottom right of the screen every 1 hour, as it gives out potions and powerups for free!
As a veteran of MMORPGs, on a first sight Dragon Eternity looked very similar to others I have played before, and unfortunately I was not wrong.
The game makes it clear from the start that it reuses ideas and utilizes countless fantasy tropes both in its story and gameplay. The story of a great evil appearing is not unique in any way and feels more like lazy design to me. Then I got to the questing part, which was a very long tutorial for the first few levels, showing off all the options the game presents, as well as making me try countless powerups that make combat tremendously easily.
Soon I got to the part where the story started progressing, so I had to question a captured Necromancer and destroy undead after undead, but there was no real challenge here, especially when I used powerups to countinously deal damage to my enemies. But even just drinking a health potion makes battles almost impossible to lose, as you gain enough health to last 6-7 more blows from a regular enemy, and you can drink a potion every turn.
Then I decided to try my luck at the PvP Battlegrounds, which turned out to be somewhat of a disappointment to me, as I got matched against players near my level, but they were way more powerful than me. I went and changed my equipment around and bought some new stuff with my coins, but people were still either too powerful, or in a rare case too weak.
After these disappointing experiences, I decided to check out the weapons and armor puchasable with real money, which turned out to be the culprit here. These items are 50x as powerful as the beginner items, essentially making the game pay to win in this aspect, which is just unacceptable in my opinion.
Overall, the game would be fine as a mediocre fantasy MMORPG, but the pay to win items really left a sour taste in my mouth. I honestly can’t really recommend Dragon Eternity in this state, even though it has some promising ideas under the overused fantasy style.
Ratings
Artwork: For its artwork, I give Dragon Eternity a 7/10. Although the graphics of the game is not really outstanding, it’s definitely a good looker for a mobile game. Most of the environments look somewhat uninspired though, just like the magic and combat effects. Most of the screen is covered by pop-up menus and statistics during gameplay, which hides some of this fact.
Music & SFX: The music and SFX of this title deserves a 6/10. The game’s music pretty much sounds the exact same as most fantasy themed games’ on the market, which can be positive or negative, depends on the person. The SFX on the other hand is satisfactory, although at seemingly random times it seems to be not playing the attack and spell sounds, which is weird.
Story & Originality: The story and originality gets a 5/10. The story seems to be as basic as it gets, while reusing a lot of fantasy tropes about a great evil appearing and enemies uniting against it. Most of the quests are also not too exciting, as you either have to go somewhere to kill something, find items or try a feature of the game. If you want an original fantasy MMORPG, this is not where you should look.
General Gameplay: I give the general gameplay of Dragon Eternity a 4/10. Most of the PvE gameplay is either spent tapping on thousands of menus to get from one place to another, while the transition speeds are also pretty slow, or spent battling with the same abilities and attacks over and over again. The multiplayer interactions are better executed, but sadly the pay to win items can turn the tides fairly easily and turn anyone off of the multiplayer.
Addictiveness: For its addictiveness level, the game gets a 5/10 from me. Joining a Clan might hold some people interested in the game for the long run, as they will have a community to go back to and plan events together. For players looking for something fresh, instead of fantasy themes reused for a thousand times, there are better alternatives out there.
Overall Score: 5/10.