Just finished Chris Crawford's adaptation of Le Morte D'Arthur.

I have very little to say about the piece itself, but a LOT to say about what it represents having been made by Chris Crawford of all people, and what it means to him. Too much to put in a toot or a piecemeal thread. Maybe I'll write an article on it at some point.

As for a review; don't play it unless you know who the creator is. 85% of the value of the text comes from its existence as his self-proclaimed "magnum opus". The narrative concept is novel, I won't speak much on the themes but it's not like his take on the Arthur legend is groundbreaking. The meat of LMD is ironically in the meta-narrative of its creator's life and documentation in relation to the text.