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Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame
Developer(s)Broderbund
Publisher(s)Broderbund
Ubisoft
Designer(s)Jordan Mechner
Composer(s)Tom Rettig
SeriesPrince of Persia
Platform(s)
  • Xbox(bonus)
Release1993: MS-DOS
1994: Mac, FM Towns
1996: SNES
Genre(s)Cinematic platformer
Mode(s)Single-player

Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame is a platform game released by Broderbund in 1993 as the sequel to 1989's Prince of Persia. Both games were designed by Jordan Mechner, but unlike the original, he did not program the sequel himself.

Prince of Persia 2 was published for MS-DOS and ported to Macintosh, Super NES, and FM Towns–a shorter list of platforms than the first game. An updated version for iOS and Android was released in 2013 without the '2' in the title.

Gameplay[edit]

Similar to the first Prince of Persia, the character explores various deadly areas by running, jumping, crawling, avoiding traps, solving puzzles and drinking magic potions. Prince of Persia 2 is more combat-heavy than its predecessor. In the first game, enemies appear only occasionally and are always alone, while in the sequel, up to four enemies may appear at once, sometimes flanking the player, and may even be instantly replaced by reinforcements when they are killed. As in Prince of Persia, the trick is to complete the game under a strict time limit from 75 minutes (which start after a certain point in game) that passes in real time. Lives are unlimited, but time cannot be regained (except by reverting to a previously saved game). In other areas, more significant improvements have been made. The graphics are far more complex than the simple look of the game's predecessor, the areas explored are larger, and the variety of backdrops is greater.

Plot[edit]

The game takes place eleven days after the events of the first game. During this period, the Prince was hailed as a hero who defeated the evil Jaffar. He turns down all riches and instead asks for the Princess' hand in marriage as his reward, to which the Sultan of Persia reluctantly agrees. The game begins as the Prince enters the royal courts of the palace. Before he enters, his appearance changes into that of a beggar. Nobody recognizes him and, when he attempts to speak with the Princess, a man who shares his appearance (Jaffar, who is magically disguised) emerges from the shadows, ordering him to be thrown out. With guards pursuing him, the Prince jumps through a window and flees the city by way of a ship.

Falling asleep on the ship, the Prince dreams of a mysterious woman who asks the Prince to come to her. At this time, the ship is struck by lightning, cast by Jaffar. When the Prince regains consciousness, he finds himself on the shore of a foreign island. He comes to a cave full of reanimated human skeletons that fight him. He finally escapes on a magic carpet. In the meantime, in Persia, Jaffar seizes the throne in the guise of the prince.[1] The Princess falls ill under Jaffar's spell of gradual death.[2]

The magic carpet takes the Prince to the ruins of an old city filled with screaming ghosts, snakes and traps. Arriving at what appears to have once been a throne room, the Prince loses consciousness and the mysterious woman, revealed to be his mother, appears again. She explains that the Prince is of a royal lineage and the only survivor of the massacre by 'armies of darkness'. She implores him to avenge the fallen.[3]

The Prince rides a magical horse to a red temple, inhabited by warrior monks wearing bird headdresses. There, he finds that the shadow, created in the events of the original game, can now leave his body at his will. He wields his shadow to obtain the magic flame of the temple, at which point the bird warriors kneel before him. He flies back to Persia on the magic horse and confronts Jaffar. With the shadow and the flame, the Prince burns Jaffar, killing him for good.

With Jaffar's spell broken, the Princess awakens. The Prince orders the former Vizier's ashes to be scattered. The game ends on a cliffhanger when an old witch is shown watching the happy couple through a crystal ball. According to Jordan Mechner, the plot of the old witch and the 'armies of darkness' were set to be resolved in a sequel, which never came.[4]

Ports[edit]

Titus Software ported the game to the Super NES and released it in 1996.[5] It has some missing features and lacks several levels, including the last one. On August 11, 2006, the Sega Genesis port was leaked. Ported by Microïds, this conversion was going to be published by Psygnosis, as depicted in the leaked version, but it was canceled in an almost complete state for unknown reasons.[6]

The game can also be unlocked in the XboxNTSC version of Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time by finding a secret area. The GameCube, PlayStation 2 and Xbox PAL versions feature the original Prince of Persia instead and the Windows version lacks the secret area entirely. The Macintosh version has high resolution graphics (640×480), the MS-DOS and SNES version only low resolution graphics (320×200) and (256×224) respectively.

On July 25, 2013 a remake of the game was made available for iOS and Android mobile devices which is developed by Ubisoft Pune. The game includes options for both virtual buttons and gesture-based controls.[7] Right now it is available on the Samsung Galaxy app store but removed from Google Play Store.

Reception[edit]

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According to Jordan Mechner, Prince of Persia 2 was a commercial success, with sales of 750,000 units by 2000.[8]

Prince Of Throne: Royal Battleground Mac OS

Charles Ardai wrote in Computer Gaming World that 'Prince of Persia 2 not only is in every dimension better than Prince of Persia, but ... is the cruelest, most infuriating, least merciful—in short, the best—game of its type I have ever played', with 'an appeal that is absolutely irresistible'. He criticized the imperfect savegame feature that forced him to replay areas dozens of times, and other aspects of gameplay, but concluded that the game 'merits nothing but salaam after salaam ... a virtuoso performance by Mechner, one of the field's most devious puzzle constructors'.[9]Power Play gave both the MS-DOS and Macintosh versions a 68% score.[10][11]

Prince of Persia 2 won Computer Gaming World's 'Action Game of the Year' award in June 1994. The editors wrote that it 'certainly surpasses its predecessor', and called it a 'smoothly animated horizontal scrolling thriller with cinematic scope, vivid action and daunting puzzles'.[12]

Coach Kyle of GamePro gave the Super NES version a mixed review. He criticized the black outlines on the characters and the weak sound effects, but praised the eerie music and the quality of the challenge, deeming it 'A tough thinking-gamer's game'.[13]

References[edit]

  1. ^Brøderbund (1993). Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame (PC). Scene: Level 3–4 cutscene. Princess: 'Dear Father: My heart is broken. The Prince has betrayed your trust. You must return with your army and take back your throne.'
  2. ^Brøderbund (1993). Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame (PC). Scene: Level 4–5 cutscene. Mysterious woman: 'Prince! Your bride is dying. Waste no more time. Come to me!'
  3. ^Brøderbund (1993). Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame (PC). Scene: Level 8–9 cutscene. Mysterious woman: 'Once, this was a great city, ruled by a son of kings. He was slain and his palace laid waste by the armies of darkness. I died at his side. You alone were spared, my son! I gave you up, that you might live. This was your father's sword. Avenge us! Avenge us!'
  4. ^Mechner, Jordan (April 11, 2013). 'Revisiting The Shadow and the Flame'. Jordan Mechner's blog. Archived from the original on January 23, 2014. Retrieved December 26, 2013.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  5. ^'16-Bit's Last Stand'. Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 89. Ziff Davis. December 1996. p. 193.
  6. ^Evilhamwizard (April 30, 2016). 'News/Prince of Persia 2 MD'. Hidden Palace. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  7. ^Sliwinski, Alexander (July 11, 2013). 'Prince of Persia: The Shadow and the Flame returns on July 25'. Joystiq. Archived from the original on July 9, 2013. Retrieved July 11, 2013.
  8. ^Saltzman, Marc (May 18, 2000). Game Design: Secrets of the Sages, Second Edition. Brady Games. p. 410, 411. ISBN1566869870.
  9. ^Ardai, Charles (September 1993). 'Broderbund's Prince of Persia 2'. Computer Gaming World. p. 14. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  10. ^Steffen, Sönke (July 1993). 'Prinzenrolle' [Prince Biscuits] (in German). Power Play. Archived from the original on May 1, 2015. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  11. ^Michael Hengst, Michael Hengst (August 1994). 'Prinzregent' [Prince Regent] (in German). Power Play. Archived from the original on May 1, 2015. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  12. ^'Announcing The New Premier Awards'. Computer Gaming World. June 1994. pp. 51–58.
  13. ^'Super NES ProReview: Prince of Persia 2'. GamePro. No. 101. IDG. February 1997. p. 86.

External links[edit]

  • Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame at MobyGames
  • Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow & The Flame at the Macintosh Garden
  • Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow & The Flame page at PoPUW.com
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