Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts game banner

Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts

$5.99
Release Date:
Developer:
Choice of Games
Publisher:
Choice of Games
Platforms:
Windows Mac Linux
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About This Game

Cast spells, pass your exams, and save the world! Blackstone is more than a magic school: you’ll compete for glory in the sky sailing tourney, find love, and steer the fate of magic itself.

Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts is a fast-paced 188,000-word interactive YA fantasy novel by Alana Joli Abbott, where your choices control the story. It's entirely text-based, without graphics or sound effects, and fueled by the vast, unstoppable power of your imagination.

Blackstone Academy is a secretive magical high school for students with supernatural talents. When you discover you are a Sensor, someone who can feel the presence of magic, you learn that it’s exactly the type of place that will help you develop your ability. Your first year at Blackstone you’ll learn how to sky sail, practice your own magic spells, and discover the secrets the adults are hiding.

But as a magical crisis looms over campus, you must decide how you’ll get involved—and which factions you’ll support in guiding the future of the magical world. What will you prioritize: your academic career, your friends, or uncovering the magical threat? Will you keep the secrets of the magical world, or fight for a future without secrets, sharing magic with everyone?

  • Play as male, female, or non-binary; gay, straight, bisexual, pansexual, demisexual, asexual and/or aromantic.
  • Learn magic from your chosen mentor, and make friendships that will last forever.
  • Encounter and befriend—or annoy—powerful magical beings.
  • Compete in the sky sailing championships for the glory of your school!
  • Fight for the rights of supernaturals, or argue for tighter regulations of non-humans.
  • Earn the respect and admiration of your peers, or work to effect change from the shadows.
  • Face down a magical threat, and change the course of the magical world’s future.
The fate of magic is in your hands.

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User Reviews

Mixed
26 user reviews
65%
Positive
2 hrs at review
Not Recommended

In summary, It introduces you, then timeskips you to a point where your MC just knows everyone, and you don't. It forces politics you can't begin to understand from the amount of time you've actually been in this fictional world, and gives you no way to be neutral about them. Relationship system is based off of timeskip stats and not actually on meaningful scenes or decisions. You cannot choose to study a magic of your choice, You do not learn spells, Your MC magically knows spells though. (Was that a pun?) There are no consequences to decisions that would be seen as irresponsible, such as giving up a memory as a sacrifice to a higher power. Or jumping into a vampire ambush after being a student for like, what two months? Constantly having to call for help from teachers, and crashing your flying ship more then once. You'd think MC would at least break a bone in one of these scenarios. I'd say the intent was good, and the concept was great, But the execution failed miserably.

95 helpful 4 funny
1 hrs at review
Not Recommended

None of this felt magical. There was a lot of talk about pronouns, the mythology of ireland and Jungian psychology and I spent more time in this game arguing over "non-human" rights than I did casting spells. I got bored of reading pretty quickly and before I knew it I was just picking randomly so I could get to the ending. If you're looking for a game to scratch the Harry Potter itch don't bother.

76 helpful 1 funny
2 hrs at review
Not Recommended

The gamebook was an interesting anthropological experiment, but not in what a magical hogwarts style school would be, but in current American culture and issues... All the forced he/she/they, specieism, flak for thanksgiving and what not was overbearing and took away from what should have been a fun diversion. At the same time, despite all this talk of diversity, the game books allways assume the characters to be Americans, thinking like todays Americans, and there is no diversity at all in character creation regarding actual class, cultural, political, filosofical or religious options. There are some 7 gender options, but otherwise you're just assumed to be totally integrated in the current identity driven civil war going on in the US society. I wish the time and energy spent on all that had been used in developing the game world, the supposedly magical academy and the characters beyond some very basic token personalities. I've had fun with quite a lot of Choice of Games books, bu...

54 helpful
16 min at review
Not Recommended

Ugh. Where do I begin... It's very fast paced, but slow at the same time. The writing is - quite frankly - boring, and I wasn't able to connect to any of the characters. I'm aware that games like this is very hit/miss depending on what the individual is looking for, but to me it read more like a bad fan fiction on Wattpad than an actual Choice of Games-approved novel. This is why you should always release a demo, CoG.

22 helpful 1 funny
2 hrs at review
Recommended

Wholly enjoyable. The plot is roughly thus, without spoilers: One plays as a young student at a magical academy, as one might expect, and deals with all the adventures and mishaps within. It is quite like if J. K. Rowling had researched non-English traditions of belief, and was far better acquainted with the idea of internal consistency. (Indeed, it tackles Ireland far better than the Harry Potter series.) Despite generally despising sports, Sky Sailing was far more interesting than expected, and the cast of characters was interesting and diverse. In a list of very strong showings by the author (A. J. Abbot), including such classics as Choice of the Pirate, it is the strongest yet. In all, it deserves both praise, and a sequel.

22 helpful
6 hrs at review
Not Recommended

Out of all the choice of game games I've played this would be one of the least favourite ones. I was disappointed at how flat it sometimes felt, the rush in certain parts and lack of characters. I was hoping when I chose the opposite gender to play I'd get to have a different roommate instead of Jule's just gender swapping. I don't know, I perfered them as the girl. I get they can't make the roommate different, that'd just be a heck of a lot more work on them but still. We had an array of other character's that we didn't really get to see more of. I also felt like the romance was kind of lacking in the game, being a gamer girl, I really like to have my character's have some form of romance in games :P Good writing, just lack of anything.

19 helpful 1 funny
5 hrs at review
Not Recommended

Blackstone Academy I would say had a OK story, and was the right length to tell it, but it has a ton of little problems which I find add up, so much so that I would not recommend this game. Lets get this out of the way first. The they, them, there, and other things of this nature were laid on pretty thick, to the point where it felt very unnatural and made it awkward to read at points. Speaking with a person who went by they was fine one on one, but when in a group I often would be in the situation where I wasn't sure who was talking. Now, this is the first book I have read where a large portion of the cast is like this, so it my just be me. However, I feel it shows a authors skill, or lake there of, on how easy it is for someone to read a story like this without any trouble on there first time. Some authors do it better, some do it worse I'm sure. I feel like there should be a feature like in Mech Ace where you can choice what all the characters are from the start, or at least a o...

16 helpful
5 hrs at review
Not Recommended

The writing has a annoying pretentious quality of some one who believes they are an expert, unfortunately they only think that and often have a fundamental misunderstanding about the subject matter they are writing. The story is exposition heavy and wordy, it focuses more on telling you everything instead of showing (something that can happen even in a book). And overall it tries to cram to many subject matters into one story without any real direction.

8 helpful 1 funny
3 hrs at review
Recommended

A very enjoyable read. One that i look forward to repeating a few more times at least. The writing is well done, the story is interesting and even though I had a feeling about who was the bad guy, I was really pleasantly surprised not by whom but by what they were up to. Also kudos for allowing me to get out of the "competition" portion of the story line. I really groaned out loud when I was told my character had to participate, and went on a self rant (you know when your talking out loud as if to the author arguing your points,) about how not every hero has to be the team captain or even interested in trying to be in the limelight of school spirit and popularity. So i was very grateful when the story line allowed me to show my less than stellar interest and allow someone else to go do all that ; ) TY! So if you liked Creme de la Creme or The Fog Knows Your Name, you will enjoy this story. If you happened to like both this is almost like their love child!

7 helpful 1 funny
15 hrs at review
Recommended

A really fun choose your own adventure game with a lot of choice for anyone wanting to play a morally interesting character. I loved the relationships you could build. The only thing I didn't like was the statblock as it was a bit confusing. I recomend this game to anyone wanting a magical based lgbt friendly school game, it's hella good.

5 helpful

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System Requirements

Minimum

Minimum:
  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS *: Windows 7

Recommended

Recommended:
  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

FAQ

How much does Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts cost?

Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts costs $5.99.

What are the system requirements for Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts?

Minimum: Minimum: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS *: Windows 7 Recommended: Recommended: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

What platforms is Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts available on?

Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts is available on Windows PC, macOS, Linux.

Is Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts worth buying?

Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts has 65% positive reviews from 26 players.

When was Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts released?

Blackstone Academy for the Magical Arts was released on Apr 9, 2020.

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