Descent to Undermountain

Descent to Undermountain (also known simply as Undermountain) is a role-playing game created and distributed by Interplay in 1997. It was developed by Chris Avellone, Scott Bennie, John Deiley, Robert Holloway, Steve Perrin.

""The stone belly of Undermountain below Waterdeep plays home to horrific monsters, dark magics, and unspeakable evils in DESCENT TO UNDERMOUNTAIN.

In this spell-ridden maze of dungeons and rips in the very fabric of reality lies the ultimate prize: The Sword of the Spider Queen, the Goddess Lolth. Stolen from her long ago, in a time when gods wrestled with the primal energies of creation, those who dared possess it were destroyed.

Based on an enhanced, SVGA version of the 3D engine from the immensely successful Descent game, all the horrors of the Abyss come to life with superior graphics that pay frightening homage to stunning detail. 360 direction movement makes no apologies for shameless attacks from behind. True to the AD&D system, you can develop your character from 6 different races, and create single as well as multi-class characters. Gain experience and discover magic items you'll need just to survive. In the end you'll trust no one but yourself. May the gods be with you.""

Story
A hero was summoned by Khelben Arunsun on the behest of the Lords of Waterdeep. The Lords of the city were worried by a recent drastic increase in kobold activities and thefts across Waterdeep. Khelben determined that something or someone was driving the creatures away from their habitats deep in Undermountain and forcing them to venture out into the city streets. The Lords increased the presence of the City Watch and tasked the hero with stopping the kobolds from growing bold and harming the City of Splendors. Khelben gave the hero two gold coins to pay for their entrance and exit from Undermountain through the Yawning Portal and send them on their way.

The hero uncovered the reason behind the kobolds' attacks. A drow High Priestess of Lolth, Azurna was threatening the kobold "king" to steal from the Lords of Waterdeep. The hero confronted the kobolds and their leader, putting an end to their thievery. A relatively simple but dangerous task earned the lone hero a reward from the Lords and gratitude of the Blackstaff. This was not the end of the expedition to Undermountain, though. Khelben had another mission for the adventurer. A skeleton adorned with the noble family of Cassalanter was seen attacking several citizens of Waterdeep. The Blackstaff theorized that the undead likely came from the ancient family tomb with several family members interred. The tomb one the Dungeon Level of Undermountain. The hero was tasked with the investigation. The family crypt along with the Shrine of Myrkul that it was a part of was corrupted by an undead necromancer Ghoulmaster.

Cleansing the Cassalanter crypt, the lone hero discovered a shrine to Lolth with a curious piece of a spider-shaped artifact. Khelben was able to determine the item's origins that laid beyond the Prime Material plane. The next mission for the adventurer led into a recently uncovered part of the Undermountain that served as the base for the Shadow Thieves' operations in Waterdeep. With the guild's colorful history and hate for the Lords, the newly discovered pretense was troubling and dangerous.

The hero managed to discover the Shadow Thieves' hidden stronghold and cull their numbers by confronting the Guild Master Georges. With the cruel guild leader's departure, the lone hero recovered scrolls that collected detailed information on the city, patrols, defenses, and schedules of the City Watch and high-ranking officials. Khelben realized the Shadow Thieves were collecting data for some mysterious party in the depths of Undermountain.

Following the dire revelation, the Blackstaff was on full alert but still did not know what dark power plotted against Waterdeep. In the meantime, he had another missing foot, the lone hero. This time, sending him deeper into Undermountain in search of Maskar Wands's delinquent grandchild and the wizard's stolen heirloom, the golden scarab beetle. Marcus Wands, the grandson in question, lost the family artifact to a "three-headed-troll" and the lone hero was to retrieve it.

The hero descended into the Tomb of Ankh-Kephra and survived the traps hidden within, retrieving the missing item. Upon the next conversation with Khelben Arunsun, the Blackstaff informed the adventurer that something was amiss and sent the hero back into the depths of Undermountain with a vague request to find more clues on the deviant plot against Waterdeep, and maybe more pieces of the spider-shaped artifact. The search led to the old dwarven prison complex within the dungeon, overtaken by a marauding tribe of humanoids, led by an orc of demonic blood, Horazak.

Gameplay
The game partially derives its title from the use of the Descent 3D graphical engine. Undermountain allowed the player to interact with NPCs, monsters, and the general environment from a first-person perspective. The quest took place within the environs of the infamous super-dungeon of the Undermountain. Real-time combat would mix with puzzles to provide a variety of challenges throughout the vast dungeon.

The game was not the first to bring PC role-playing into a 3D environment, having been preceded by several titles such as Bethesda Softworks' Elder Scrolls Arena and Elder Scrolls Daggerfall along with Origin's Ultima Underworld series. It was, however, noted for being the first RPG to use a dedicated 3D engine such as that behind Descent to create a 3D world based on the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons license.

As the back of the box stated, the game included six different races that could take on single or multi-class professions with a variety of unique abilities such as thieves being able to climb walls. Over fifty different 3D monsters were in the game along with 160 magical items and forty different spells.

Reception
Players and critics alike have noted the unfinished feel of the game upon release. Cooperative multiplayer support, previously promised as a part of the title, was cut late in development because of severe technical issues to focus on the single player campaign. The decision to use the Descent 1 engine was also cited as a design issue, as it required heavy rewrites to the code in order to support an RPG setting such as Undermountain. Bugs, embarrassingly weak AI, the unappealing and shoddy nature of the graphics, and several other issues have attributed to a general consensus of the game as an example of a title that was pushed to release before it was ready.

Characters

 * Protagonist
 * The Khelbenite


 * Others:
 * Aleena Paladinstar • Ankh-Kephra • Blog • Braakus Sinjen • Devana Melshimber • Devlin Patchwerk • Durnan • Georges • Ghoulmaster • Grotchek • Horazak • Jaffu • Kalmog • Khelben Arunsun • Maskar Wands • Marcus Wands • Milo • Mirt • Mishad Patchwerk • Nalbas • Nephryt • Rivven Melshimber • Sabrae Tellendon • Sangalor • Tia • Tolem Grandelwood • Tryola Parrantine • Urkantor • Zariel


 * Azetlin • Azurna • Colvin Rowander • Halaster • Hines • Kiyanda • Kolrathanin • Meryth Phaulkon • Nizella • Volothamp Geddarm • Xabash

Creatures

 * Playable Races: drow • dwarf • elf • half-elf • halfling • human
 * Other: baneguard • beholder • dragon • gargoyle • ghast • ghoul • giant bat • giant beetle (giant scarab) • giant spider • goblin • guardian skeleton • kobold • lich • mephit (fire, ice, lightning) • mind flayer • mummy • ogre • orc (gray) • rat (giant) • shadow fiend • spectator • troll • zombie


 * scarab

Items

 * Amulets: amulet of protection • amulet of shield
 * Armor Types: chainmail • leather armor • plate mail
 * Magic Miscellany: bag of holding • bracers of defense • cloak of protection • gem of curing • golden scarab beetle
 * Magic Weapons: Flame Tongue • mace of disruption • shortbow of speed • short sword of quickness • dagger of impaling • rod of lightning • wand of fireballs • wand of magic missiles
 * Potions: potion of agility • potion of flying • potion of freedom • potion of healing • potion of infravision • potion of speed • potion of toughening
 * Rings: ring of feather falling • ring of flying • ring of health • ring of jumping • ring of magic detection • ring of protection • ring of strength •  ring of wizardry
 * Weapon Types: bastard sword • broadsword • club • crossbow • dagger • dart • handaxe • longbow • longsword • mace • scimitar • shield • shortbow • short sword • throwing axe • throwing dagger • throwing hammer • warhammer
 * Other: diamond • lockpicks • mushrooms • perfume • ruby


 * melon • tea

Locations

 * Buildings & Sites: Blackstaff Tower
 * Inns & Taverns: Yawning Portal Inn
 * Dungeons: Garden of the Drow • Tomb of Ankh-Kephra • Undermountain
 * Settlements: Waterdeep
 * Regions: Sword Coast North


 * Baldur's Gate • Mermaid's Arms • Mulhorand • Murghôm • Skullport • Tilverton

Spells

 * Arcane
 * 1 Level: armor • burning hands • chill touch • color spray • detect magic • feather fall • jump • light • magic missile • protection from evil • shield • sleep • spider climb
 * 2 Level: continual light • invisibility • knock • levitate • Melf's acid arrow • scare • strength
 * 3 Level: dispel magic • fireball • flame arrow • fly • haste • hold person • hold undead • infravision • lightning bolt • Melf's minute meteors • slow
 * 4 Level: confusion • 'fear • improved invisibility • Rary's mnemonic enhancer • stoneskin


 * Divine
 * 1 Level: bless • cure light wounds • detect magic • light • magical stone • protection from evil
 * 2 Level: aid • hold person • resist cold • resist fire
 * 3 Level: continual light • dispel magic • flame walk • magical vestment • prayer • protection from fire •
 * 4 Level: abjure • cure serious wounds • free action

Organizations

 * Cassalanter • Melshimber • Phaulkon • Shadow Thieves


 * City Watch (Waterdeep) • Clangeddin's Hearth • Lords of Waterdeep • Thieves Guild of Waterdeep • Zhentarim

Religions

 * Eilistraee • Hathor • Horus-Re • Lolth • Mask • Myrkul • Ptah • Set • Thoth • Tymora


 * Bane • Clangeddin Silverbeard • Cyric • Gruumsh • Kurtulmak • Moradin • Mystra • Osiris • Torm

Other

 * Book of the Dead &bull; Time of Troubles

Credits

 * Vp Of Development: Trish Wright
 * Division Director: Feargus Urquhart
 * Producers: Reginald J. Arnedo
 * Line Producers: Michael Motoda, Christopher M. Benson, Jason G. Suinn
 * Art Director: Robert Nesler
 * Lead Artist: Kevin Beardslee
 * 2D Artists: Tramell Ray Isaac, Aaron Brown, Stephen Beam, John Mueller, Justin Sweet, Vance Kovacs, Spencer Kipe
 * 3D Animators: Tramell Ray Isaac, Kevin Beardslee, Aaron Brown, Eddie Rainwater, Eduardo Trillo, E. B. Sarver
 * Lead Programmer: Andrew Pal
 * Programmers: Jim Gardner, Robert Holloway, Chris Faranetta
 * Lead Technical Designer: Robert Hanz
 * Lead Creative Designer: Chris Avellone
 * Designers: Scott Bennie, Steve Perrin, John Deiley, Robert Holloway
 * Level Design: John Deiley, Chris Avellone, Robert Hanz, Steve Perrin, Scott Bennie, Aaron Brown, Kenneth Lee, Reginald J. Arnedo, Mineh Ishida, Larry Lesser, Michael Motoda
 * Design Contributions: Aaron Brown, Matthew J. Norton, Jason G. Suinn, Jim Gardner
 * Assistant Designer: Michael Motoda
 * Audio Director: Charles Deenen
 * Vo and SFX Mastering: Craig Duman
 * Voice Recording Supervisor: Chris Borders
 * Dialogue Editor: Sergio A. Bustamante II, Douglas Rappaport
 * Vo Director: Michael McConnohie
 * Vo Talent: Jim Cummings, Frank Welker, Jennifer Hale, Kath E. Soucie
 * Vo Recording Engineer: Paul Hurtubise
 * Music: Richard Band
 * Ambient Music: Rick Jackson, Ronald Valdez
 * Music Mastering (at Futuredisk): Tom Baker
 * Music Supervision: Brian Luzietti
 * TSR Logo Sound: Charles Deenen
 * Game Sound Design: Ann Scibelli, David Farmer, Larry Peacock, Gregory R. Allen, Charles Deenen, Elisabeth Flaum, Ricardo Broadus, Jeffrey R. Whitcher
 * Sfx Assistance/Librarian: Craig Duman
 * Cinematics Sound Design: Larry Peacock, Charles Deenen, Gregory R. Allen
 * Re-Recording Mixer: Charles Deenen
 * Audio Administrative Assistant: Brandy Young, Gloria Soto
 * Traffic Managers: Bill Hamelin, Thom Dohner
 * Graphic Designers: Larry Fukuoka, Tracie D. Martin
 * Manual Design And Layout: Craig Owens
 * Descent Engine: Parallax
 * Installer: Parallax
 * Video Processing: Stephen Miller, Bill Stoudt, Dan L. Williams
 * Communications Manager: Genevieve Waldman, Courtney Thompson
 * Marketing Manager: Craig Owens, Mike Markin
 * Director of Quality Assurance: Chad Allison
 * QA Manager: Colin Totman
 * Lead Testers: Jeremy Ray, Douglas W. Avery, Darrell Jones
 * Testers: Lawrence Smith, Louie Iturzaeta, Tim Vince, Dan Forsyth, Dennis Whitlow, Austin Coulson, Kaycee Vardeman, Erick Lujan, Greg Baumeister, Tony Martin, Charles Crail, Evan Chantland, James Dunn, Bill Field, Timothy Anderson
 * QA IS Manager: Frank Pimentel
 * QA IS Technicians: Bill Delk, Christian D. Peak
 * Director of Compatibility: Phuong Nguyen
 * Compatibility Technicians: Dan Forsyth, Derek Gibbs, Aaron Olaiz, Marc Duran, Jonathan Darke
 * Customer Service Manager: Hilleri Abel
 * Customer Service: Kori Rosencranz, Erin Smith, Cheryl Raymond, Becky Bryan, Yasmin Vazquez
 * Technical Support: Hilleri Abel, Matthew Byrne, Mark Linn, Rafael López, Richard Sanford, Paul Dew, Alton Tuttle, Rusty Treadway, Brian Quilter, Brennan Easlick, Tom Gardner, Gunnar Christensen, Jennifer Purcaro
 * TSR Development: www.tsr.com, Jim Butler, Julia Martin, Steven Schend, David Wise, Mendy Lowe
 * Special Voice Work: Max the Dog
 * Cover artwork: Clyde Caldwell