

it's not select, click location to go/attack. For example, you have no direct control over your minions. If you win, you get attacked some more.ĭon't get me wrong, Dungeon Keeper is a truly excellent game. If the heroes win, they go on to destroy your dungeon heart (no boss creature).

When they get close enough, you drop every creature at you disposal on them, creating one big ugly melee you can't see through. Wave after wave of heroes attack your dungeon. In Dungeon Keeper you build a little village for your minions, with a hatchery, lair, training room, library, treasure room, ect. In the average RPG you would gather a party, go into the dungeon, kill monsters scattered along the way, eventually reach some horrible boss creature, kill it, and fight your way out. That's right, the heroes build there own dungeon. You build up your dungeon, usually fortify it so no hero could access it at all, train you minions to become master fighters, and then go forth to destroy a rival keeper, or the heroes dungeon. Unfortunately, it didn't turn out quite right.

Your goal is to build up your dungeon, populate it with monsters and traps, and protect it from the heroes.

The concept was pure genius, Instead of the Avatar and his party romping through a dungeon, slaughtering all sorts of horrible beasts, you play the Dungeon Keeper. You would play the dungeons Keeper as opposed to the Hero. => The fixed levels requires the official SCCT v1.Published by Bullfrog and designed by Peter Molyneux, Dungeon Keeper was supposed to the reverse of an RPG. If needed, you can restore them at any time. The patcher automatically backups all of your pre-existing levels files into "/Data/Maps/SCCTPatch_Backup" located in the game main folder. This patcher allows you to simply replace all your broken levels files by the fixed ones of the Steam version without spending $9,99, as you already bought the game. The fixed files comes directly from the Steam version of the game. Some levels on the retail version of SCCT are known to be glitched and makes the game literally unplayable. Fan-made patcher which fixes the glitched levels on the retails copies of Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory (2005)
