Throne of Darkness

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Seven Samurai against evil

Jidai Geki themed Action RPG developed by Sierra in 2001. Slightly reminiscent of Diablo. The story follows the samurai serving one of four (historical) clans, as they battle the Dark Warlord Zanshin and his army of undead.

As the story goes, the decadent shogun, Tsunayoshi, bartered his soul to a mad priest, for a potion that could allow him to avoid his impeding death. As a result, he became the Dark Warlord, turned his loyal followers into undead, and declared war on the four lords governing the lands around his mountain stronghold.

The player starts the game as the leader of the armies of one of the four lords, tasked to rally the samurai scattered in the castle, drive out the invaders, and bring home the people who were driven away from their home. After this is done, the seven samurai are sent to undertake a series of tasks, as part of their mission to clear the wilderness from Zanshin's forces. These include requesting assistance from the second clan, conquering the third clan who defected to Zanshin's side, rescuing the lord of the fourth clan, recapturing the eight portal gates scattered around the wilderness, and finally, conquering the Dark Warlord's citadel.

The game map is divided into several major regions including the four castles and their respective territories arranged in a ring, with a path in each one leading up to one of the four mountain slopes, that lead to the Meifumado citadel. Whichever clan the player chooses to serve, he must travel through the wilderness clockwise, and clear all eight areas before climbing the mountain. Depending on which clan the player chooses, he may encounter side quests that provide some backstory and development for certain characters.

During the game, the player can command up to four of the seven characters. Injured or fallen samurai can be teleported back into the player's shrine room, and fresh troops can be called instantly to the field, as long as there's at least one character in the active party. If all characters in the active party are defeated, the game ends, even if all other characters are fully rested and waiting deployment in the Shrine room. The active party itself can return to the Shrine room either by foot, or through the portal gates found in the wilderness. Besides the shrine room, there is no town for the player to rest in and buy equipment. Once found, the blacksmith and the priest can always be accessed through their respective menus. The blacksmith will make you new equipment out of low quality items you give him, or use special 'components' you find to improve the capabilities of your equipment. The priest will give you spell points in exchange for high quality items, sell you potions as well as identify items and remove curses. You can NOT sell any items.

The game is very similar to Diablo and it's sequel, but carries several distinctive features, including a complex item creation system, and the commanding of four member teams, alongside the far eastern atmosphere.


Tropes used in Throne of Darkness include:
  • Adam Smith Hates Your Guts: Item crafting costs a lot of money. Ridiculously so. Made worse by the fact that you cannot sell items for cash (just give them away for materials or spell points) and must rely exclusively on the gold that you find.
  • Alternate Reality: The characters are named after historical or mythical Japanese figures, but the story isn't even close to anything that happened in historical Japan.
  • And Then John Was a Zombie: Things don't end very well four our heroes after witnessing the ascension of the new Zanshin, who proceeds to erase their minds and turn them into mindless servants.
  • Beef Gate: A walk towards the wrong path may be suddenly interrupted by the furious assault of extremely powerful mobs, forcing you to retreat to safety.
  • BFS: The Zanbato and Nagamaki, which are polearm class weapons. The patch also includes the Chiljido, as the strongest melee weapon in the game.
  • Blade on a Stick: Several polearm class weapons are these. Most of them are yari of different kinds, but the class also includes scythes, axes and the kanabo. Due to graphic limitations, all the classes but the Brick will show a spear when wielding a polearm.
  • Carry a Big Stick: The game features the kanabo as a late polearm weapon. The Brick class will always appear as wielding a kanabo when given a polearm.
  • Color-Coded Elements: Fire uses red runes, Water uses pale blue runes, Earth uses yellow runes, Thunder uses purple runes.
  • Color-Coded for Your Convenience: You can tell apart the factions of the four clans by the color of their clothes: Oda has red garments, Toyotomi has yellow, Tokugawa has blue and Mori has green.
  • Downer Ending: With Due Respect, my lord. You never told us anything about taking Zanshin's place and turning us into zombies.
  • Dual-Wielding: Swordsmen and Berserkers can use two swords at once.
  • Elemental Powers: The main four elements are fire, 'water' (but actually ice), earth and thunder.
  • Every Japanese Sword Is a Katana: Zigzagged: the only sword which is openly referred to as a "katana" is the worthless starting sword, but most of the other stronger blades you get to wield are pretty much katana blades with fancier names. As the power tier proceeds you get to wield other traditional swords such as the tachi and the nodachi.
  • Final Boss: The Zanshin, formerly Tsunayoshi, is the final enemy that must be vanquished to restore peace to the land.
  • Four Man Band: The Leader is the hero. The other six characters share the other functions with the Swordsman and the Archer being The Lancer, the Brick and Berserker as The Big Guy and the Wizzard and the Ninja as The Smart Guy.
  • Flaming Sword: The Hwa-Rang Chiljido. Arguably the best (unique) sword in the game. Among the spells there's one from the Fire school and one from the Earth school which engulf your weapon in either red or bright yellow flames.
  • Gratuitous Japanese: Dear God, where to start.
  • Gorn: The castle halls are filled with corpses and sprays of blood caking every surface, while the villages are even worse, some of them featuring huge millstones where corpses are ground into paste to create more fodder for the Zanshin army.
  • Historical Domain Character: Almost every playable character and lord. But considering the HUGE difference between their roles in the story and their roles in history, they may as well be different people who happen to have the same name.
  • Historical In-Joke: If you serve the Tokugawa Clan, your leader is called Date Masamune. If you serve the Mori clan (who must defeat the Tokugawa at one point) your leader is called Takeda Shingen, who did indeed defeat Tokugawa at one point.
  • Inexplicable Treasure Chest: Pray that they contains gold and not some more useless items. It's one of the only three ways to get money in the game.
  • Item Crafting: half of the items you find are 'components' ranging from gemstones to animal parts. The blacksmith can use them to improve your gear. The best equipment can only be created using this method. It's best to combine this with the occasional unique items the player finds for maximum effect.
  • Money for Nothing: Completely averted. The amount of money you acquire throughout the game is just enough to craft decent equipment for every character, for the decisive battle.
  • Money Spider: One of the only few ways to get money in the game.
  • Night of the Living Mooks: The most common enemies in the first part of the games are reanimated skeletons, corpses and damned souls forming the basic troops of the Zanshin army. As you proceed they slowly get replaced by monsters, beastmen and fallen samurai.
  • Ninja: One of the characters. Ninjas have a good offensive power and can make use of powerful spells, but are pretty weak in melee and can't use polearms.
  • Oddly-Shaped Sword: The Chiljido is a large, usable version of the Seven-Branched Sword, a ceremonial tool.
  • Rewarding Vandalism: Breaking barrels and (while in caves) various formations, or raiding some poor slob's stash is your only hope of finding more gold, if there are no more enemies left in the vicinity.
  • Samurai: All of the playable characters.
  • Shout-Out: To The Seven Samurai. Even the character portraits are designed to look like the actors. The Koga Clan sidequest, is a reference to Ninja Scroll. One of their leaders is called Kagero and the door to their hideout is opened using an item called 'Ninja Scroll'.
  • Sinister Scythe: The kama (normally a small, hand-held sickle to harvest rice) is featured as a low-level polearm. The Zanshin wields a massive curved scythe as his weapon of choice.
  • Storming the Castle: After visiting all four the besieged castles you have to climb the main mountain in the middle, cross the caves and breach into the Meifu Mado, Zanshin's fortress.
  • The Magnificent Seven Samurai: Where the inspiration came from.
  • Too Awesome to Use: Item Crafting. You could easily find yourself piling up all those components and collecting several thousand gold pieces of gold waiting for awesome unique items like the Sarutobi, The Ryushi, The Yuzan or the Hwa-Rang Chiljido to drop, so you can improve those and make the ultimate gear. Immagine the pain of wasting all the best components and combinations on an ordinary bow and suddenly finding the Ryushi just before the Boss Fight. Your chance of crafting the ultimate bow is lost forever.
  • Underground Monkey: Since the number of enemy sprites is limited, you often end up fighting stronger counterparts of commonly seen enemies, usually the fallen samurai troops.
  • Wooden Katanas Are Even Better: One of the best base swords in the game is the Iaito
  • Youkai: The game features a massive use of Youkai as enemies, including Kappa, Oni, Jorogumo, Yurei and Inugami.