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Wizard and the Princess Apple II disk image
Contains wizard​_and​_the​_princess.dsk
Apple II Application (Compressed with gzip. Free unpacking tools are available for most systems.)
serenia.td0
self-booting disk image in TELEDISK format
MS-DOS Application
Swalks.zip *
solution and map in GUEmap format
Sols2.zip *
solution
Sols3.zip *
solution
teled212.zip *
TELEDISK, the disk-archive program needed to unpack the PC version
Original Game Manual
To view this file, you need an Acrobat Reader for your system.
* Compressed with ZIP. Free Unzip tools are available for most systems at www.info-zip.org.

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The Wizard and the Princess

by Roberta Williams and Ken Williams

Episode 2 of Hi-Res Adventure
Fantasy
1980

(based on 6 ratings)
1 review

About the Story

"Only ON-LINE SYSTEMS could deliver a HI-RES ADVENTURE game on such an epic scale. In this adventure you find you must do battle against an evil wizard in order to save the life of the princess. To find the wizard and his castle, you must first cross deserts, oceans, mountains, travel to an island and encounter many strange beasts. You will be forced to learn magic, navigate at sea, and dig for treasure. This game should provide months of adventure."

--Original On-Line Systems catalog description


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
Ambitious, but Dated, June 8, 2011
by GDL (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)

The Wizard and the Princess was Roberta and Ken Williams's second adventure, following on the heels of Mystery House's success. The game's appeal at time of release is easy to understand. This was the second graphical text-adventure ever, and the big, colorful graphics are a huge improvement over Mystery House's unappealing line drawings, helping to build a story-book atmosphere with a certain charm to it. This is also clearly a much larger and more ambitious game, one that sets the tone for the grander scope of the graphical adventures that were to build on its model. However, attempting to play it today is likely to only lead to disappointment.

The simple act of navigation is troublesome: the game begins with a highly frustrating desert maze(Spoiler - click to show) (good luck guessing which of the identical rocks in a series of nearly-identical desert areas doesn't have a deadly scorpion under it!) and is loaded from beginning to end with similarly confusing wilderness areas, with an actual brick-and-mortar maze at the end. Even in non-maze areas, it is frequently unclear what directions are valid exits, and which will go where.

The puzzles are the typical mixed bag of obvious actions and apparently unguessable ones familiar from later King's Quest games (this is officially counted as the beginning of that series). The original method for obtaining hints--other than frantic experimentation--reminds us that this is a game from a slightly different era: the manual includes the actual home address and telephone number for Ken and Roberta Williams, which you are encouraged to use if you find yourself stuck! These days, a quick play with walkthrough in hand may be the best idea for those who want to see the earliest incarnation of the King's Quest series's particular sort of whimsy without tackling the endless mazes and arbitrary puzzles head-on.

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This is version 5 of this page, edited by Jimmy Maher on 28 August 2012 at 10:52am. - View Update History - Edit This Page - Add a News Item - Delete This Page