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You're a halfling of respectable means, living a peaceful, happy life in the Dale. That is, until tragedy strikes! Your brother has burgled a precious heirloom, and run off with a dwarf, leaving your family name in tatters.
This is only the beginning of your year in the Dale. Will you try to regain your respectability? Become an infamous mischief maker? Or decide you don't care one jot for other folk's opinions?
WHAT SORT OF HALFLING ARE YOU?
Perhaps you're a hard-working and honest type, or a jolly mischief maker. You might be a gentlehalfling of superior tastes, though some are more a bumbling, good-natured sort. Live out your cozy halfling fantasy with a variety of professions, hobbies, and attitudes to choose from.
BUILD RELATIONSHIPS
Perhaps you'll find friendship with the Mayor's daughter, the lovely Lily Goldworthy, who is of the opinion that one can never have too many parties. Or maybe the trouble-loving Benny Brownfoot will rub along with you better? Explore social life in the Dale, and build unique relationships with your fellow halflings. Find friendship, or love, or something else entirely.
TACKLE HALFLING DILEMMAS
Halfling life is full of important choices. Deal with your underhanded cousin when she steals your pie contest idea. Decide how far you're willing to go to get mushrooms for your dinner table. Save the fireworks display when a hedgehog goes missing amongst the rockets. And, most importantly, decide if you're going to eat strawberries & cream - or rhubarb crumble.
MEMORABLE CHARACTER RECORDS
Never forget a story. Each finished playthrough creates a character record to immortalise your character, and all of their achievements.
CONTENT
-10 Routes which include themes of family, community, aspiration, friendship, love, and even secret adventure.
-180,000 words
- 5 romanceable characters (plus a secret one).
- 28 endings.
- First act free.
- Available for download on iOS and Android devices.
| Average Rating: based on 2 ratings Number of Reviews Written by IFDB Members: 4 |
This game is a long choice-based game where you build a character who is a hobbit and live through a year or so of local hobbit life.
It seems built on the same general model as Choicescript games, where your choices influence your stats and relationships with delayed effects in later chapters.
However, the effects of your choices are pretty opaque. Unlike Choicescript games, there is no stats page that I could find, and many of the options you can pick from are very similar. On top of that, several chapters are built up as a 'win/loss' scenario where you either make the right choices and get a good result or just fail. When I played every commercial Choicescript game a few years ago, those were all common things that made games more frustrating.
On the other hand, the characters and setting here are fun. A lot is taken directly from Lord of the Rings, but the individual characters are all new. There is also a lot of branching, especially with romances. I did two playthroughs, one pursuing Patty the 'witch' and one pursuing Lily the mayor's daughter. The last 3 of the 7 chapters in these playthroughs were very different from each other.
Everything is pretty low-stakes. Someone steals a sword and runs away with it, but not you. The most stress you have to deal with is social judgment and a pie contest.
So, I'd recommend this to fans of 'coffee shop AU' or Stardew Valley. I liked it enough to play it twice, and the price I paid (I think $3.99?) was definitely appropriate for the size (a lot of such games are $10 to $20 now).
Okay, I LOVE choice story games like this, I've never particularly enjoyed games like Episode, or of that format, but this is nothing like those which I highly enjoy.
It's cheap, fun, and never gets old. I've played multiple times and when going through the possible endings list, was surprised to see an Ultán ending (which I've spent the better part of nearly three hours trying and failing to achieve), instead though, I've gotten many other endings that were fun and occasionally exciting,though, I can't remember how I ended with Patty that one playthrough... anyway, great game, and I definitely need more like this.
(No rating entered since I only played the free Chapter One)
Look, I get it: if you asked me what fictional world I’d want to live in, the Shire would definitely come to mind. Sure, it’s parochial and insular and state capacity is sufficiently low that per the book one point five sufficiently-motivated randos came close to knocking the whole thing over, but the flood of tourism New Zealand saw after the release of the films testifies to the impression those rolling hills, those lush gardens, those curly-headed children made on the broader public. As idylls go, the hobbit life seems hard to beat, and I say that as someone who’s never smoked pot, er, Longbottom Leaf – so a cozy game offering the opportunity to live life as a humble homebody who doesn’t go following wizards off on adventures has immediate appeal.
On the evidence of the one chapter provided as a free demo, Halfling Dale seems well-positioned to satisfy the fantasy. The model here is very clearly Choice of Games, down to the main audience being phone-users (in fact there’s no PC option so far as I can tell) – the blurb highlights character customization options, romanceable characters, and the number of words, so really, based on what I know about the CoG house style, this is a close match. There doesn’t appear to be a stats page where you can track the effect your decisions are having on your character, but there are an opening set of choices where you can establish some of your hobbit halfling’s traits so I suspect there’s a similar system running under the hood – though of course rather than being strong, tough, or social, here you can opt to be imaginative, mischievous, or have a good sense of humor, and you’re your job options include apiarist or cheesemonger, which make for a nice fit for this pastoral subgenre.
Of course, the game isn’t set in the Shire, but in its non-union Mexican equivalent, and here’s where some problems start to crop up. The Scylla and Charybdis of the pastiche are either hewing so closely to the source material that you wind up in an uncanny valley, or making so many intentional departures that things start feeling incongruous. Halfling Dale definitely errs on the side of the former rather than the latter (though the fact that the halflings all love to play Go did tweak my what-the-heck-is-a-Chinese-game-doing-in-Hobbiton sensibilities). The game starts with a birthday party that involves a long speech, okay. You’ve got a family member who’s got a disreputable-by-halfling-standards association with dwarves, sure. And then there’s a wilderness-dwelling protector who frowns a lot, and you learn some backstory which has to do with well-meaning free folks needing to find a long-lost artifact to keep an ancient evil at bay, and the list of default options for your character’s name includes “Fredegar” and “Lotho”, and come on now, you don’t need to have the literal plot of Lord of the Rings playing out in the background to make this setup work.
In fairness, so far when it sticks to its knitting the game seems to work well. Your mom vents her frustration at your brother’s iffy friend by calling him a “confustable dwarf”, and the intimation that the fair that appears to make up Chapter Two involves a Naughtiest Parsnip contest is certainly intriguing (this thing’s rated G, right?) And the intro does efficiently set the table, establishing the world, your character, your family situation, and the ominous backstory, while still having time to offer each of the romance options a bit of spotlight time. If you’re not overly fussed about the degree to which pastiches cleave to their source material, and the CoG model is one that appeals, I suspect you’ll be in good hands with Halfling Dale; to be honest, though it’s not my usual cup of tea, I definitely experienced some of the draw myself.
2024 Review-a-thon - games seeking reviews (authors only) by Tabitha
EDIT 2: I've locked this poll, but have started a new one here for next year's Review-a-thon! EDIT: The inaugural IF Review-a-thon is now underway! Full information here. Are you an IF author who would like more reviews of your work?...