Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine for PC DOS

PC DOS

RPG fantasy 1st-person grid-based real-time
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Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine

Online version of Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine for PC DOS. Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine is the third and final entry in the fantasy RPG trilogy from the Texas-based family-run shareware studio SmithWare / SW Games, released in 1999 through the Australian publisher Spectrum Pacific Publishing. The game continues in the 1st-person grid-based dungeon crawler style established by the second instalment, but moves the action entirely away from the island of Yendor – the party of up to four characters, following the breaking of the seal that imprisoned the wizard Paltivar, finds itself in the land of Thaine, where it must prevent Paltivar's return to Yendor and definitively close the three-part narrative arc. The Tyrants of Thaine is the most polished and ambitious entry in the entire series, and at the same time the swan song of Rodney R. Smith – after its release SW Games quietly ceased operations. The game shipped exclusively for PC as shareware, with the full version unlocked through registration.

Game details

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Released in
1997
Publisher
Spectrum Pacific Publishing
Developer
SW Games
Platforms
PC DOS
Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine downloads & info

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Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine is currently playable only in version for PC DOS.
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IBM PC with MS-DOS

Online emulated version of Yendorian Tales: The Tyrants of Thaine was originally developed for the IBM PC and compatible computers, with MS DOS - Microsoft Disk Operating System. It is an OS for x86-based personal computers mostly developed by Microsoft and released in 1981 as PC DOS 1.0.
MS-DOS was targeted at Intel 8086 processors running on computer hardware using floppy disks to store and access not only the operating system, but application software and user data as well. Progressive version releases delivered support for other mass storage media in ever greater sizes and formats, along with added feature support for newer processors and rapidly evolving computer architectures. Ultimately, it was the key product in Microsoft's development from a programming language company to a diverse software development firm, providing the company with essential revenue and marketing resources. It was also the underlying basic operating system on which early versions of Windows ran as a GUI.

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online game added: 2026-05-17, by