🐉 Rise of the Dragon – A dystopian mystery in a futuristic Chinatown.
Rise of the Dragon is a noir-inspired adventure game from 1990, developed by Dynamix and published by Sierra On-Line. The game blends classic point-and-click gameplay with a Blade Runner-like atmosphere, complete with shadowy alleys, neon-lit nightclubs, Asian cult iconography, and a menacing sect spreading death in the city streets.
You play as Blade Hunter, a former cop turned private detective hired to investigate a string of brutal murders. What starts as a routine investigation quickly escalates into a case of occult rituals, lethal drugs, and a threat to the entire city.
🧠 Story and atmosphere
The game is set in Los Angeles in 2053, a city marked by technology, crime, and political decay. As Blade, you navigate:
- Grimy back alleys and high-tech apartments
- Shady contacts and mob-infiltrated nightclubs
- A secretive Asian cult seemingly trying to awaken an ancient dragon god
The story unfolds in real time, meaning the clock is ticking, and your choices and the order of your actions can influence the ending. You have a limited number of hours to solve the case—and certain events only occur at specific times.
🕹️ Gameplay – classic with choices
Rise of the Dragon is a point-and-click adventure with:
- Interactive dialogue with choices
- Inventory-based puzzles
- Mini action sequences (duels and timing-based scenes)
- Exploration and backtracking
The game also offers some non-linearity, where certain objectives can be solved in multiple ways, and mistakes can lead to unfortunate outcomes—including death or bad endings.
🎨 Graphics and audio
For its time, Rise of the Dragon was a technical gem:
- EGA and VGA graphics with detailed backgrounds and realistic character animation
- Atmospheric music and sound effects (the CD version also features voice acting)
- A color palette and aesthetic directly inspired by film noir and cyberpunk
It all stands today as a nostalgic yet effective expression of the 1990s’ ambitions with interactive storytelling.
💾 Availability
You can play the game today via:
- DOSBox
- Digital collections (e.g., via GOG or bundled in Sierra classics collections)
- Fan projects and emulated versions
It runs well on modern systems and requires no complicated setup.



