![]() ![]() Shortly after Simeon leaves, George and Nicole meet with an Interpol agent named Richard Langham, investigating the art theft, who warns them not to pursue Medovsky. ![]() Simeon reveals it to be linked to the Gnostics - a branch of Christianity persecuted in France by the Vatican Church in the 13th century - after noting a sketch George took from Hobbs bears the Gnostic symbol called the Ouroboros. Returning to Paris to attend a crime recreation by Navet, George speaks with a Dominican priest named Father Simeon, who claims that the painting is cursed. Visiting his London home on the pretense of processing his insurance claim, the pair discover Medovsky received an offer for the painting from someone named "Gehnen", that his driver Shears was the thief, and that an art restorer named Wilfred Hobbs is involved in the crime. When Nicole and George compare notes, they discover that the owner of Vera, Russian businessman Roman Medovsky, claims to own la Maledicció. Prior to his father being killed trying to prevent its theft, Tiago was given a medallion linked to the painting and which proves his ownership claim. ![]() Tiago reveals the painting belonged to his family, until it was stolen by fascists during the Spanish Civil War. Meanwhile, Nicole finds herself interviewing an elderly man named Tiago Marqués, who claims to be the rightful owner of the painting. He soon discovers that the theft was an inside job, and that the gallery's security company, called Vera, is linked to the theft. Discovering Inspector Auguste Navet, the police detective handling the case, is incompetent, George decides to investigate the crime himself. Moments after the reunion, a pizza courier arrives, steals a painting called "la Maledicció" from the exhibition, and kills Henri while leaving. Several months after the events of Broken Sword: The Angel of Death, George Stobbart, now working as an insurance assessor, reunites with Nicole Collard in Paris, while attending to the opening of an exhibition by gallery owner Henri Dubois. The player will also have the option of switching the hint system or hotspot highlights on or off. The player will have the option to choose between the classic and the modern inventory, the former being in the fashion of the first two Broken Sword games, and the latter in the fashion of their 20 Broken Sword remakes. While death scenes were removed from The Shadow of the Templars ' director's cut (2009), in The Serpent's Curse, the player character's death will be possible if the player makes a wrong decision or doesn't complete an action quickly enough however, unlike in the original two Broken Sword games, where the player then started off from the last save point, they will restart from right before the death scene, like in the 3D titles. One of the new gameplay elements explored in the game will be the manipulation and combining of knowledge, so the player will have to connect threads of knowledge in order to draw logical conclusions, allowing them to proceed. Via a point and click or touch user interface, the player will guide protagonists George Stobbart and Nicole "Nico" Collard. 3.5 Kickstarter expansion and other additionsīroken Sword: The Serpent's Curse is a 2D adventure game played from a third-person perspective.3.2 Announcement, fundraising and release. ![]() The majority of the funding for the game was raised through Kickstarter, more than $771,000 of the requested $400,000 were raised, and together with PayPal donations, over $823,000. The game is presented in HD and returns to the series' 2D roots, with 3D characters pre-rendered and saved in 2D frames. The Serpent's Curse was announced on 23 August 2012, along with a Kickstarter project it was launched for the development of the game, which had been self-funded until the launch, to be completed. The game was released in two episodes: the first was made available on 4 December 2013 the second was released on 17 April 2014 for Microsoft Windows, OS X and Linux. Broken Sword 5: The Serpent's Curse is the fifth title in the Broken Sword series of adventure video games, developed and published by Revolution Software, for Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, PlayStation Vita (via the PlayStation Network), Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, Android and iOS. ![]()
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