Sales Shattered Lands debuted at #17 on
PC Data's computer games sales chart for the month of September 1993. It climbed to third place in October.
Critical reviews Writing for
CD-ROM Today, T. Liam McDonald called
Shattered Lands "a refreshing new twist on familiar
AD&D games", and noted its "vastly improved interface" compared to SSI's previous products.
Scorpia of
Computer Gaming World in 1993 assured readers that
Dark Sun "is about as far from [the Gold Box series] as you can get ... SSI is taking their role-playing line in a new direction, which is good to see". While criticizing the "inanity" of the AD&D 2nd edition rules, and insufficient documentation, she concluded that "my impression of
Dark Sun is favorable. SSI is moving to a more mature form of CRPG [with] much promise for the future, and promises a good game to play right now". The game was reviewed in 1994 in
Dragon #205 by
Sandy Petersen in the "Eye of the Monitor" column, who gave the game 3 out of 5 stars. John Terra of
Computer Shopper mostly praised the game.
Dark Sun was a runner-up for
Computer Gaming Worlds Role-Playing Game of the Year award in June 1994, which ultimately went to
Betrayal at Krondor. The editors wrote that
Dark Sun "managed to capture the uniqueness of the magic system and 'scorched earth' look of Troy Denning's
Prism Pentad series of novels". According to GameSpy, "Dark Sun was TSR's "post-magical apocalypse" world of brutality, blood, and incredibly violent death.
Dark Sun: Shattered Lands' graphics, on the other hand, were rather cutesy—not the violent, mature affair fans were hoping for". ==References==