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With nothing but a handful of coins in your pocket and a heart full of courage (or possibly stupidity), you have decided to embark on the life of an adventurer. You are determined to fill your world with danger, daring, death, rewards and riches untold in your hunt to find Medusa's Gold.
With four distinct journeys, each split into several unique paths, and with 750¹ different locations, Medusa's Gold is the first in the Rumors² From The Role-Inn range of whimsical “choose your own path” style adventures that are so full of whimsy and adventure, and on such an epic scale that we’re pretty sure that nearly every whimsical adventurer will feel well and truly stuffed³ by the time they reach the end.
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¹We counted them... TWICE!
²That’s “Rumours” for anyone based outside of the United States of America, and, whilst we happen to agree with you, we know our market! Blame Noah Webster! If he only knew the fights that his decisions would cause centuries later on social media, he would find great humour in the colourful debates that travelled around the globe as his countrymen jumped to his defence...
³With a satisfying combination of whimsy and adventure, no doubt.
Obviously, we're biased (we wrote it, after all), but we think Medusa's Gold is a great introductory IF book.
Let's be clear—This game is extremely merciful indeed. In fact, if Merciful was a person, it would most likely be voted Mayor of IFington-on-Sea.¹ Sure, failures may push you back a few locations, but you cannot die, there are no complicated combat mechanics,² no dice rolling, and no character sheets or inventories to maintain.
All that said, Medusa's Gold is still a detailed, 750 location/110,000 word³ romp with four distinct paths (and numerous sub-paths within those) that has its tongue planted firmly in its cheek. So expect copious footnotes, fourth wall breaking, and a plethora of (subjectively) hilarious escapades that combine the simpler style of CYOA, FF, and other early IF games with the delightful absurdity of a carefully crafted Monty Python sketch.⁴
¹ Or possibly Deputy Mayor, depending on the recount—it was a close contest.
² It uses a simple 'learn the sequence' system that is so simple, even the author could use it.
³ ...ish.
⁴ Definitely one of their less well-known sketches, written on a wet Tuesday, around 4:39pm, where John and Eric have failed to turn up, Michael has a bad cold, and both Terrys are distracted by a small halibut that they recently discovered has been living in the kettle.⁵
⁵ Nobody knows where Graham got to that day.