

Whether you've played the original Broken Sword on PC or not, this Director's Cut version for DS is well worth picking up. Fortunately, the script is good enough to stand on its own. The only downside is that the DS version lacks the excellent voice acting of Rolf Saxon. To draw in those who had already played the game, though, the Director's Cut added new puzzles specifically suited to the DS touchscreen, animated facial expressions, and a brand new complementary storyline which follows George's fellow adventurer Nico Collard to new locations and adds more depth to the original story. Importantly, random freezing with the OpenGL display driver, mostly when using fast forward, which had only partially been fixed in 0.9.2, should now be properly fixed. This version is a bugfix release, which contains many important fixes. The GB Vault is now crowdsourced and contains 1792 of 1792 known GB games, catalogued by No-Intro on. To play them you'll need an emulator from the Emulation Lair.

The game follows the original story of George Stobbart as he travels across the world to unravel the Templar conspiracy. A new release of mGBA, version 0.9.3 is available. This Vault contains a perfect copy of every Game Boy game ever released, scanned nightly by No-Intro.
:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/69802631/ana_diaz_210831_ecl1072_game_boy_0001.0.jpg)
The dual-screen touch elements of the Nintendo DS work extremely well with the point-and-click style of play and Broken Sword is one of the best games in the genre to show this.
GAMEBOY DS EMULATOR REDDIT PORTABLE
It's a PC point-and-click classic, but bringing a new and improved version of the original Broken Sword title to the portable Nintendo DS was a stroke of genius on the part of Nintendo and Revolution software. (Image credit: Ubisoft) Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars Director's Cut
