60-year-old Heroes may be shriveled prunes, but they’re shriveled prunes who can still decapitate bandits with a single arrow. The Hero ages realistically throughout this adventure, but his age is merely a cosmetic device.
The story still follows the exploits of a young, unnamed - though not untitled - Hero as he seeks to unravel the mystery behind the harrowing events of his childhood. Lionhead tweaked the gameplay a little, but much of the actual experience will be similar, if not identical, to its earlier incarnation. Fable TLC features more quests, more weapons, and more choices, but veterans of the original will find the world of Albion to be much the same beyond these additions. It’s not so much an expansion pack or sequel as a director’s cut, much in the same vein as Skies of Arcadia Legends. The Paladin says to the Avatar, “Have ya heard the one about the Orchard farmer who forgot where he left all his cows in the frozen Northern Waste?” The Avatar says, “Yeah, the Bard won’t shut up about it: it’s the fable about the lost chapped herds.”įable: The Lost Chapters is an extended version of the 2004 Xbox release, Fable. Two Guild Heroes walk into the Bowerstone Bar.