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Updated: Jul 6, 2018





Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery is a role-playing video game based on J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. The game was developed and published by Jam City, under licence from Portkey Games, and released on 25 April 2018 for Android and iOS devices. The game is set in Hogwarts before the events of the novels, featuring a customisable protagonist. The game received mixed reviews; it was praised for its use of the Harry Potter licence but criticised for its energy


 

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About the game

The player character meets Rowan Khanna in Diagon Alley, a young witch or wizard who teaches the player about the wizarding world. At Diagon Alley, a conversation with Ollivander discusses that the player character's brother, Jacob, was expelled from Hogwarts for attempting to open the "Cursed Vaults", a hidden vault rumoured to have existed at the school.

Upon visiting Hogwarts, Albus Dumbledore announces that Harry Potter (character) is safe and that the events of the game are set in the year of his escape from Voldemort as a child. After being sorted into a house,[a]daily life in Hogwarts starts. During a Potions lesson with Professor Snape, the player character is docked house points, after a Slytherin called Merula sabotaged the character's cauldron. A fake letter is sent to the House, supposedly by Snape that an errand run would win the player back their house points; however, it is in fact written by Merula and leads the player into a room with a Devil's Snare, forcing them to escape from the snare. Following this, the player character attempts to learn how to duel by searching for a book on duelling and hears voices, and premonitions of the Cursed Vaults. Later on, the player character confronts Merula when she starts to harass Ben, a first-year Muggle-born Gryffindor boy, and challenges them to a wizard's duel. The duel ends with Snape and Professor Flitwick finding them fighting.

The player, along with Merula, overhears Argus Filch and Snape discussing the Cursed Vaults. The player attempts to investigate but is caught by Mrs. Norris, Filch’s cat. This prompts the player to hatch a plan to slip Mrs. Norris a "sleeping draught" potion in order to further investigate the vaults. To do this the player enlists the help of Penny Haywood, a Hufflepuff first year who specialises in potions making. The trio gain entry to the corridor, but are bested by Merula, who proceeds through the door first, but is trapped by enchanted ice, which the player destroys and helps everyone escape. Later, the player is summoned to meet Professor Dumbledore. Dumbledore reprimands the player for breaking school rules, but congratulates them on their bravery. The player then ends their first year, and promise Rowan to do further research on the Cursed Vaults over the summer.

Second year begins with the mysterious disappearance of Ben Copper. The player is tasked with asking students and faculty for details on his whereabouts. After finding out that the disappearance is connected to the Cursed Vaults, the player enters the vault with Rowan Khanna where Khanna is attacked by the ice. Rowan Khanna ends up in Hogwarts Infirmary. Another duel against Merula and the player occurs when again she is defeated. After Rowan Khanna recovers, he/she tells the player to enter the vault accompanied by Bill Weasley, a fourth year with some polished skills, with Bill Weasley also being affected by the ice.

The player again tries to open the vault along with Bill Weasley and successfully opens it after a duel with an ice knight. The player finds out about the presence of other vaults through the voice of the player's brother. A broken wand and a book is also discovered in the vault which belongs to Jacob. When Professor McGonagall finds out about the player's entry in the vault, the player is sent to Professor Dumbledore's office but is once again commended for bravery.

Professor Dumbledore announces that he forbids the students to open the Cursed Vaults during the third year welcome speech. A boggart attacks Penny in the Herbology class. Merula lures two Slytherin students to accompany her in the search of the other vaults. To find more about the disguised quills, the player tries to contact Madam Rosemerta in the Three Broomstick and finds another clue through the quill. The player finds out about a corridor where Jacob used to hide some secrets and tries to open but finds it locked with a name, Tulip Karasu upon the lock.

After befriending her, the player comes to know that Merula also tried to lure Tulip into the secret of Cursed Vaults and possesses another key into one of them. The player tries to get the key from Merula with the help of Tulip. Merula again gets defeated in another duel by the player and gives the key to the player. The second cursed vault is located within in Restricted section of the library, and with the help of Merula's ex-bodyguard Barnaby, the player duels against Boggarts within the vault that have taken the form of Lord Voldemort, defeating them with the riddikulus jinx. Using the broken wand found in the first vault to open,[b] the player finds a broken arrow, and a map of the Forbidden Forest. After this, the player is sent to the Headmaster's Office to meet with Dumbledore.

Dumbledore introduces Patricia Rakepick, a famed Cursebreaker,[c] who is brought in to find the next Cursed Vault on behalf of the faculty. Tulip and other students are later discovered sleepwalking towards the Forbidden Forest, which appears to be the location of the third cursed vault. Asking Professor Silvanus Kettleburn for access to the Forbidden Forrest, only to be attacked by a cloaked-figure, who claims to be a messenger.

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About gamer

A gamer is a person who plays interactive games, either video games, skill-based card games and plays for usually long periods of time. (In some countries, such as the UK, the term "gaming" can also refer to legalized gambling, which can take both traditional tabletop and digital forms.) There are many different gamer communities around the world. Since the advent of the internet, many communities take the form of Internet forums or YouTube/Twitch virtual communities, as well as in-person social clubs.

"Hardcore gamer" redirects here. For the online gaming magazine, see Hardcore Gamer.

 

Two men playing a video game

It is common for games media, games industry analysts, and academics to divide gamers into broad behavioral categories. These categories are sometimes separated by level of dedication to gaming, sometimes by primary type of game played, and sometimes by a combination of those and other factors. There is no general consensus on the definitions or names of these categories, though many attempts have been made to formalize them. An overview of these attempts and their common elements follows.

  • Newbie: Newbie, (commonly shortened to "noob", "n00b", or "newb") is a slang term for a novice or newcomer to a certain game, or to gaming in general.[14][15]

  • Casual gamer: The term casual gamer is often used for gamers who primarily play casual games, but can also refer to gamers who play less frequently than other gamers.[16]Casual gamers may play games designed for ease of gameplay, or play more involved games in short sessions, or at a slower pace than hardcore gamers.[4] The types of game that casual gamers play vary, and they are less likely to own a dedicated video game console.[17][18] Notable examples of casual games include The Sims and Nintendogs.[19]Casual gamer demographics vary greatly from those of other video gamers, as the typical casual gamer is older and more predominantly female.[20] "Fitness gamer"s, who play motion-based exercise games, are also seen as casual gamers.[21]

  • Core gamer: A core or mid-core gamer is a player with a wider range of interests than a casual gamer and is more likely to enthusiastically play different types of games,[22] but without the amount of time spent and sense of competition of a hardcore gamer. The mid-core gamer enjoys games but may not finish every game they buy, doesn't have time for long MMO quests,[23] and is a target consumer.[24] Nintendo president Satoru Iwata stated that they designed the Wii U to cater to core gamers who are in between the casual and hardcore categories.[25] A number of theories have been presented regarding the rise in popularity of mid-core games. James Hursthouse, the founder of Roadhouse Interactive, credits the evolution of devices towards tablets and touch-screen interfaces, whereas Jon Radoff of Disruptor Beam compares the emergence of mid-core games to similar increases in media sophistication that have occurred in media such as television.[26]

  • Hardcore gamer: Ernest Adams and Scott Kim have proposed classification metrics to distinguish "hardcore gamers" from casual gamers,[27] emphasizing action, competition, complexity, gaming communities, and staying abreast of developments in hardware and software. Others have attempted to draw the distinction based primarily on which platforms a gamer prefers,[28] or to decry the entire concept of delineating casual from hardcore as divisive and vague.[29]

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Professional gamers generally play video games for prize money or salaries. Such individuals usually deeply study the game to master it and usually to play in competitions.[30] A pro gamer may also be another type of gamer, such as a hardcore gamer, if he or she meets the additional criteria for that gamer type. In countries of Asia, particularly South Korea and China, professional gamers and teams are sponsored by large companies and can earn more than US$100,000 a year.[31] In 2006 Major League Gaming contracted several Halo 2 players including Tom "Tsquared" Taylor and members of Team Final Boss with $250,000 USD yearly deals.[32]

An avatar, username, game name, alias, gamer tag, screen name, or handle is a name (usually a pseudonym) adopted by a video gamer, used as a main preferred identification to the gaming community. Usage of user names is most prevalent in games with online multiplayer support, or at electronic sport conventions.[citation needed]

Similarly, a clan tag is a prefix or suffix added to a name to identify that the gamer is in a clan. Clans are generally a group of gamers who play together as a team against other clans. They are most commonly found in online multi-player games in which one team can face off against another. Clans can also be formed to create loosely based affiliations perhaps by all being fans of the same game or merely gamers who have close personal ties to each other. A team tag is a prefix or suffix added to a name to identify that the gamer is in a team. Teams are generally sub-divisions within the same clan and are regarded within gaming circuits as being a purely competitive affiliation. These gamers are usually in an online league such as the Cyberathlete Amateur League (C.A.L.) and their parent company the Cyberathlete Professional League (C.P.L.) where all grouped players were labeled as teams and not clans.

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