Summary
The protaganist of this scenario is a young caveman named Pogo. One day while out hunting, he meets a girl named Beru, and decides to protect her from being a human sacrifice. This results in him, and his friend Gori (who is more of a side character/comic relief than a main character), getting exiled from their tribe, and the capture of Beru. After some adventuring to try and locate Beru, they find her as she is about to be sacrificed. The party fall into the pit she was going to be thrown into along with the main antagonist of the scenario Zaki, and they defeat the dinosaur "god" that Beru was going to be sacrificed to, Odo. Pogo and Beru get married and have some kids, and they live happily ever after.
Personal Thoughts
It's a really interesting concept, though a mildly overused story trope, with it being a damsel in distress story, but it has a unique strategy of storytelling, opting to not use words for the dialogue. I find the lack of dialogue to be a cool way to reflect the time period this story takes place in, due to the lack of language in prehistoric times. The enviorments also look really awesome in my opinion (the HD-2D really lends itself to the rockiness of everything).
The story isn't really my cup of tea. We don't really see Pogo and Beru's relationship that much (probably due to this chapter mainly being a damsel in distress situation), and what we do see of is still using the grunts and pictographs the rest of the chapter uses, so that feels a bit difficult to decipher.
Overall, it's a pretty solid chapter with what it has to work with, though it has a few flaws that I personally can't quite put aside. Also, the music is fire.