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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_enchanted_cave.png]]
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3''The Enchanted Cave'' is a 2010 DungeonCrawling WebGame created by Dustin Auxier and available on Website/{{Kongregate}}, UsefulNotes/{{Steam}} and mobile.
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5A crowdfunded sequel, titled ''The Enchanted Cave 2'', was released in 2015.
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7Both games follow a simple premise: there is a cave and you explore it, killing monsters and collecting items along the way. The cave of the title has 100 floors in the first game, and 80 in the second (100 in the Steam or mobile versions). You can go down, but never up. You can, however, exit the dungeon by using wings that are found in a random chest. Escaping will keep your gold and stat boosts (your level and skill point distribution are also kept in the second game), but none of the items you found, except for artifacts, which are marked by a different background color.
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9After exiting the dungeon, you then start again. In the first game, you go on the second lowest shop you have reached. There are shops on floors 9, 19, 29, etc. so, for example, if you have reached a floor between 29 and 38 inclusively, you will return to floor 19. In the second game, you can choose which floor to start at, but you can only start on a floor with a shop you have visited. There are shops every 10 floors.
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13!! ''The Enchanted Cave'' contains examples of:
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15* AllSwordsAreTheSame: Your attack animation is always the same regardless of your weapon.
16* CerebusSyndrome: ''2'' starts out as a whimsical, fantastical adventure, but as you trek further and further into the cave, more and more people from the town go missing (heavily implying that they've met their end in the Cave), the discarded journals you find throughout the Cave become increasingly deranged and nightmarish, and by the final few floors, the town is all but abandoned as almost everyone has either died or abandoned the town due to how dangerous the Cave has become.
17* {{Checkpoint}}: Each dungeon shop appears every 10 levels. They're available for use when reaching the next shop in the line.
18* CombatExclusiveHealing: In ''2'', items may be enchanted to provide health or mana when defeating an enemy. There is still out-of-combat healing available.
19* CursedItem: The non-artifacts are stated to be cursed, but their downside is simply having the item destroyed when you exit the dungeon.
20* DoYouWantToHaggle: The second game has a guy in the village who is willing to buy artifacts from you and is willing to raise his price twice.
21* DungeonBasedEconomy: The first game doesn't tell us much about the world outside the dungeon, but the second game has an inn and museum that attract visitors.
22%%* {{Greed}}: [[InvokedTrope invoked]] by the second game's villain.
23* HyperspaceArsenal: While you exit the dungeon with only your artifacts, while ''inside'' you can carry dozens of swords and armor, potions, etc.
24* InexplicableTreasureChests: [[AvertedTrope Averted]], as the chests were put there by the BigBad to lure adventurers.
25* ItemCrafting: You can produce potions from ingredients for healing or a time limited buff. Ingredients may also be used to give a permanent bonus to an existing item. This requires a forge, appearing once every 5 levels.
26* JokeItem: A guy in the second game tries to sell a rare ring for 1000 gold. Actually buying it reveals it's a fake diamond ring that grants a paltry 1 defense boost and can't even be put in the museum.
27* MegaDungeon: The entire game is set within a dungeon with 100 floors.
28* PaletteSwap: Only a few monsters (e.g. Spider, Goo) appear to be full palette swaps. There's additional monsters (e.g. Crystal Golem) that alter details after the palette swap.
29* RareCandy: Stat gems are scattered throughout the dungeon, and give a permanent stat increase.
30* {{RPG}}:
31** The first game has HP, MP, Attack, Defense, Magic and Agility, as well as offensive and defensive stats related to the ElementalPowers. You can increase your stats by collecting crystals.
32** The second game adds leveling up.
33* SecretRoom: ''2'' has a NoticeThis effect applied to some walls, which reveals a hidden area with a guaranteed non-cursed item, a page from the villain's journal, and a level exit.
34* TechTree: In the second game. There are three sections: alchemist (get more drops, boost potion efficiency), mage (increase MP and magic power while learning new spells) and fighter (increase attack, defense, critical hit rate, and XP gain).

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