Game - Prince Of Persia : The Forgotten Sands
Publisher - Ubisoft
Developer - Ubisoft Montreal
Engine - Anvil
Platform - PC, 360, PS3, Wii, PSP, DS
Release Date - PC : June 2010
360, PS3, Wii, PSP, DS : 18 May 2010
Chronicles Of The Prince - Water
Publisher - Ubisoft
Developer - Ubisoft Montreal
Engine - Anvil
Platform - PC, 360, PS3, Wii, PSP, DS
Release Date - PC : June 2010
360, PS3, Wii, PSP, DS : 18 May 2010
Chronicles Of The Prince - Water
From Community Developer of Prince Of Persia : The Forgotten Sands, Gabe :
"As you have probably noticed from the screenshots we’ve released, water is an incredibly important part of The Forgotten Sands… even more important than it was in Sands of Time, actually.
In Sands of Time, you used water to replenish your health at fountains or pools scattered around the environment. In The Forgotten Sands, water has actual gameplay applications as well as demonstrating how ostentatious Malik’s palace is. The water that flows from the myriad fountains and aqueducts in Malik’s palace indicate that he is a total show off… and this prodigious use of H2O has made him the target of nearby enemies.
As you have surely seen in our Gameplay First Look, water is also something the Prince can use to navigate through his environment. Slowing time shifts water into a solid state (like ice, but not actually cold), enabling the Prince to use large waterfalls as walls and fountains as columns."
In Sands of Time, you used water to replenish your health at fountains or pools scattered around the environment. In The Forgotten Sands, water has actual gameplay applications as well as demonstrating how ostentatious Malik’s palace is. The water that flows from the myriad fountains and aqueducts in Malik’s palace indicate that he is a total show off… and this prodigious use of H2O has made him the target of nearby enemies.
As you have surely seen in our Gameplay First Look, water is also something the Prince can use to navigate through his environment. Slowing time shifts water into a solid state (like ice, but not actually cold), enabling the Prince to use large waterfalls as walls and fountains as columns."
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