Prince of Persia is not a sequel to what is now called the Sands of Time trilogy. It can be likened to the recent superhero reboot of Batman - it wipes the slate clean and starts anew while keeping the franchise's better core elements. This is entirely a good thing as the trilogy took a dark turn which did no good to embody what people loved so much about the original Sands of Time. This new Prince of Persia looks set to recapture the fun adventuring spirit of Sands of Time and deliver it in a sweet current generation package.
Development of the new Prince began almost immediately after The Two Thrones was completed, but strangely, it was only officially announced earlier this year in May. With the announcement came a few welcome details - there would be a balance between combat, platforming and puzzle solving and the Prince's trademark acrobatics would be back like we've never seen them before.
This Prince of Persia tells of a vagabond thief who, upon returning home with the spoils of his latest adventure, finds himself caught in a sandstorm. As the sandstorms subsides he finds himself in a beautiful and heavenly garden whose centrepiece is the Tree of Life. In the garden, the Prince comes across a girl named Elika, whose coming to the garden was of a similar circumstance, and as such, they pair up and decide to make their way to the Tree of Life. As luck would have it, the ancient god of darkness, Ahriman, is set loose and destroys the Tree and begins to corrupt the land with his darkly power. Bearing witness to this, the Prince and Elika decide it is their duty to defeat Ahriman and cleanse the land of the darkness. Fairly standard stuff.
Both characters are somewhat refreshing for the series as this is the first Prince of Persia whose starring character isn't a prince. He's the sort of character as a kid we all wanted to be, the ruffian who lives each day as it comes and spends his money on enjoyable ventures such as women and liquor. Oh, and he's an expert swordsman. Inspiration for the character is said to be drawn from the likes of Han Solo, Aragorn and the original Arabian hero, Sinbad. My money is on him becoming the Prince by the end of the game.
Elika too is largely original. Being infused with magical abilities, she allows the Prince to perform some incredible acrobatic manoeuvres. As in this Prince of Persia we won't have the ability to use the Sands of Time, her powers are said to be just as innovative, meaning you will find it hard to miss the Sands. She is also the first “goodie" character with magical abilities. Developer inspiration for Elika comes from Elizabeth Swan, Arwen and Padme, which explains why she looks exactly like Natalie Portman.

ReplyPosted by Ruptunex on 8 September 2008, 01:55PM
Prince of Persia
Publisher: Ubisoft
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