19.08.2019
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If you’ve ever played The Binding of Isaac or Enter The Gungeon, then Monolith is immediately familiar stuff. A comforting blend of twin-stick shooter and dungeon-crawl wherein you navigate mazes, hoard loot, upgrade your character (cute little spaceship-people in Pop n’ Twinbee fashion), fight menacing-looking bosses, and then do it all again with even more stuff unlocked in the dungeon generator. What sets Monolith apart from its peers, and what has earned it a near-perfect user review score on Steam, is just how little all of that progression means.

Weapons are ammo-limited and ephemeral, upgrades tend not to be especially dramatic, and progression is rewarded by an ever-increasing difficulty level. In Monolith, the most important weapon you’ll ever use is the starting pea-shooter. Your default, unlimited-ammo machine-gun may not spit out quite as much damage as the fancier weapons, but it’ll still do the job if you’re able to dodge bullets for just a couple seconds longer. There is nothing in Monolith that you cannot defeat with raw reflexes and knowledge of enemy patterns alone, and knowing that makes every victory sweeter, and every defeat sting just that little bit more.

Black Rock Shooter: The Game is an RPG, realeased in March 9, 2011 for the PlayStation Portable, featuring animated cut-scenes by Ufotable. It's based on the popular Japanese original video animation produced by Ordet.

The focus on raw skill and bullet-evasion only increases over time, contrary to the creeping chaos of Isaac’s expanding and increasingly unhinged dungeons. While you may unlock a steady stream of new weapons to find and use over multiple playthroughs, they tend to be geared towards individual styles of play, rather than being objectively better or worse, and their ammo-limited nature means that there’s always a chance you’ll run dry at a critical moment anyway.

Powerups, while useful in Monolith, are not the means by which you’ll master the game. They’re a safety margin; a buffer between you and the swarms of bullets, designed to mitigate the inevitable human errors that you will make, and that will hurt so very badly. Extra health and screen-clearing smartbombs will let you push forward just that little bit further at the expense of your final completion score, but when push comes to shove all that matters is how good you are at not getting shot.

The ultimate culmination of this trend within the game is Hard Mode. An extended, more challenging dungeon unlocked after completion of the base game with new boss attack phases, more aggressive enemies, and a True Final Boss that should be experienced first-hand, not spoiled. Without giving too much away, I will say that when you go into the last fight of the game Monolith visibly sheds the last of its dungeon-crawling pretense, plunging the player into a battle worthy of any Dodonpachi’s final act.

Monolith is available for £5.59/$8 on Steam, and comes with my highest recommendation.

The London Dungeon
Location within Central London
Established15 September 1974; 44 years ago
LocationCounty Hall,
Westminster Bridge Road,
South Bank, London, SE1
United Kingdom
Coordinates51°30′10″N0°07′10″W / 51.502685°N 0.119433°WCoordinates: 51°30′10″N0°07′10″W / 51.502685°N 0.119433°W
Public transit accessWaterloo
Waterloo
Websitethedungeons.com/london

The London Dungeon is a tourist attraction[1] along London's South Bank, England, which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a gallows humour style. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.

  • 4Related attractions

History[edit]

Entrance to the old London Dungeon building.

The London Dungeon was opened in 1976 by Annabel Geddes. The attraction was originally a wax exhibition of gory and macabre history, comprising themed tableaux under the Tooley Street arches. Early characters included Boudica, Mary Tudor and Thomas Becket and had scenes from the Norman Conquest.

From the late 1980s to mid 90s, it evolved to feature walkthrough theatrical shows, such as the Great Fire of London and Jack The Ripper, during which time it was owned by the Kunick Leisure Group. It was acquired by Vardon Attractions in 1992, which later became Merlin Entertainments through a management buy out, led by Nick Varney. Merlin rebranded the Dungeon more as an interactive horror attraction, less historically-accurate and based around bad taste humour.

In 2013, the London Dungeon moved from its premises of 39 years in Tooley Street, to County Hall, South Bank, to be grouped with other Merlin-owned attractions such as the London Eye.

Format[edit]

Undoomed Dongeon Shooter

The London Dungeon features 19 shows, 20 actors and 2 rides. Visitors are taken on a journey through 1000 years of London’s history where they meet actors performing as some of London’s most infamous characters, including Jack the Ripper and Sweeney Todd. The Dungeon’s shows are staged on theatrical sets with special effects. The show incorporates events such as the Black Death and the Gunpowder Plot, and includes characters such as 'The Torturer', 'The Plague Doctor', and 'The Judge'. Sat pha lang 2 download free. Guests are encouraged to participate in the shows. The experience also includes a 'drop ride to doom', a free-fall ride staged as a public hanging.

Dongeon

Undoomed Dongeon Shooter Games

Tooley Street tour[edit]

The original London Dungeon opened in 1974 as a gory horror exhibition through dark British history, operating as a free-flow walkthrough attraction, themed to torture and sin. It was expanded in the 1980s and 90s with several elaborate animated walkthrough attractions, such as the Great Fire of London and Jack The Ripper. The Great Fire segment was later replaced by the Theatre of the Guillotine after several years.

In 1997, by which time the Dungeon was managed by Vardon Attractions, the majority of the attraction was completely redesigned as a batched walkthrough rather than free-flow exhibit. This saw the arrival of Judgment Day, a water dark ride that began with visitors entering a mock trial to be sentenced to death, then boarding a boat through Traitor's Gate to their execution. The boat ride included a vertical lift and a backwards drop. Many of the original horror tableaux were also refurbished as part of a new ransacked village scene, at the start of the attraction. 2000 saw the re-introduction of the Fire of London segment, which simulated the burning streets of 17th Century London and featured a spinning trommel with smoke effects.

Under Merlin Entertainments, increasingly actor-led segments were added during the 2000s, such as the 'Labyrinth of the Lost' mirror maze and the 'Great Plague'. In 2004, the Judgement Day boat ride was altered into Traitor - Boat Ride to Hell, removing the original effects and scenes to become a simple boat ride largely through darkness.

2006 saw the arrival of a Sweeney Todd segment. The attraction used surround sound and sensory effects to simulate an encounter with the titular character, before visitors' chairs were suddenly tilted backwards as a shock effect. Another ride segment was added in 2007, Extremis - Drop ride to Doom, based on the hangings at Newgate gallows. Guests were raised 20 feet to meet an animatronic judge, priest and hangman before a free fall drop into darkness. The new ride replaced the Blood and Guts cafè.

In 2008, there were changes to the Jack the Ripper segment, which included a new ending scene in the 'Ten Bells' pub. In 2009 came 'Surgery - Blood and Guts', which focused on gore and anatomy and used audience interaction. 'Bloody Mary: Killer Queen' opened in 2010, in place of the 'Fire of London' segment and selected a random audience member to be publicly burned as a 'heretic' using smoke effects.

Vengeance 5D opened in 2011, an interactive seated shooter ride, themed to a sèance. The ride was constructed in areas of the original Jack the Ripper attraction, which was significantly shortened to accommodate the new ride. Vengeance lasted only one season.

The last Tooley Street tour took place on 31 January 2013 and contained the following sections:The Labyrinth of the Lost;The Great Plague;Surgery: Blood and Guts;The Torture Chamber;The Courtroom;Bedlam;Traitor: Boat Ride to Hell;Sweeney Todd;Vengeance 5D;Jack the Ripper;Bloody Mary: Killer Queen;Extremis: Drop Ride to Doom

Bloody Mary and Vengeance 5D were not relocated to County Hall. The new County Hall Dungeon features some of the attractions repurposed from the Tooley Street Dungeon. The remainder of the Tooley Street interior was auctioned off to the public. The original venue will be developed by Network Rail.

Related attractions[edit]

The London Dungeon is one of six Dungeons in the UK. There are also a number of related attractions around the world.

United Kingdom[edit]

The Blackpool Tower Dungeon, The Castle Dungeon at Warwick Castle, The Edinburgh Dungeon, The London Dungeon, The York Dungeon and the Alton Towers Dungeon.

Mainland Europe[edit]

Amsterdam Dungeon, Berlin Dungeon and the Hamburg Dungeon

Asia[edit]

Undoomed Dongeon Shooter 3

Shanghai Dungeon

United States[edit]

San Francisco Dungeon

Critical response[edit]

In its changing years, the London Dungeon has been the subject of mixed response by visitors and leisure critics. In 1988, the attraction received much publicised appraisal from the then Lord Mayor of London Sir Greville Spratt for its dramatic depiction of the Great Fire of London. The original Great Fire attraction doubled attendance to the Dungeon upon opening.

By contrast, in 2009, Rick Steves described the London Dungeon as 'just a highly advertised, overpriced haunted house' and an 'amateurish attraction' in his book on the city.[2] The 'Rough Guide to Britain' describes it as best enjoyed by 'young teenagers and the credulous'.[3]

Use in popular culture[edit]

'The Horrors of Saint-Petersburg' in Russia is a familiar attraction which uses spectacular show installations and special effects for telling thirteen mystic stories and dark legends of the city in thirteen rooms. Located in the centre of the city, in 2017 the attraction was moved to the Nevsky Prospect and changed its name to 'Secrets of Saint-Petersburg.'

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Johnstone, Sarah; Masters, Tom (2004). London. Lonely Planet. p. 164. ISBN1-74104-091-4.
  2. ^Steves, Rick; Openshaw, Gene (2008). Rick Steve's London 2009. Avalon Travel. p. 78. ISBN1-59880-117-1.
  3. ^Andrews, Robert; Teller, Matthew (2004). The Rough Guide to Britain. Rough Guides. p. 134. ISBN1-84353-301-4.
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