One of the first, and most notable, shortcomings is the game’s visuals. While the game claims HD graphics for the iPad, the backgrounds for each of the game’s locations are less than impressive and often filled with items too small to really see, or too dark to really see any kind of detail, yet somehow you are supposed to find and tap on in order to add them to your inventory.
While Tales from the Dragon Mountain contains voice-acting, the dialogue is read with little or no emotion, at least not enough emotion to really convey some of the events that are happening around the main character. You would think that running into creatures like werewolves, nature spirits, dragons and creatures made of shadows would elicit more than just a slight raising of the voice, but that doesn’t seem to be the case here.
As for the rest of the game’s audio, both the sound effects and the background music fit the situation, but they are as generic as you can get and feel like something any gamer who has played an adventure title with a fantasy theme would have heard a dozen times before.