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  • Two Worlds II: Velvet Edition

    While theoretically a sequel to Two Worlds, Two Worlds II is effectively no such thing. Not really. It’s more like a sequel to an alternate universe version of Two Worlds; the geography and character history are completely different.

    As far as mechanics go however it is definitely a sequel and the two games feel very similar despite some rather drastic changes (some good, most bad). Let’s get the good out of the way first so that I can dwell on the bad:

    Magic damage now scales with Willpower, summons can actually reach a decent power level (level 40 with doubled strength), you can now have more than 3 spells, unique loot has been added (received as quest rewards), melee combat is a bit more dynamic, and… well, that’s about it really. Short list huh?

    The list of degradations is a little longer: The GUI is atrocious, Steal is now useless (awful rewards and an awful mini-game), Alchemy is now next-to-useless, killing wildlife no longer grants decent XP past a certain level (making exploration pointless, since that’s all that’s out there), lockpicking quickly becomes an annoying chore (lock difficulty scales with your character level), spellcasting requires an equipped staff, a ton of quest-locked doors, and dungeons are somehow even less rewarding than they were before (30+ generic enemies; ~maybe~ 2 chests with the same leveled loot you can find in people’s houses).

    As far as combat goes I like the magic changes and all in all those are a major improvement despite the the new staff requirement and a continued dependence on vendor-farming. The melee changes seem good at first, but it quickly becomes clear that most of the variety is superficial with it now being attack->block instead of combo->dodge. And as for ranged, well I’ve not touched ranged so I can’t comment on that.

    Exploration and loot is what makes or breaks a game like this though, and so far (just reached New Ashos) that department is where the game really falls flat. There is literally no point whatsoever in visiting an area that a quest marker isn’t directing you toward (unless you enjoy continuously discovering conspicuously out of place doors you can’t open) and the loot is painfully uninteresting with blatantly obvious tiering.

    The second island is only like 10% the size of the first, and despite having just arrived I already know there’s nothing out there besides a bunch of trash-mobs to kill in uninteresting ways. I have zero motivation to keep exploring and honestly now just want to go re-play Neverwinter Nights 2 with a Monk-Sorcerer or mod in some sort of new fighter/mage class in Dragon Age or something.

    That said, I think I’ll try to power through the rest of this game first to see if the Tenebrae content is any better. Maybe switching over to a magic-first strategy will help the unrewarding combat since the spell creation system does actually have some variety to it.


  • Two Worlds – Finale

    With my equipment and skills essentially maxed out earlier (and wanting to start playing Two Worlds II), I decided to not bother exploring every nook and cranny and just go to the last few quest locations and finish the game up.

    Surprisingly, the lower half of the map has some new enemies to fight. None of them were much of a challenge though except the Lava Dragons and Adamantium Golems, which took forever to kill. Everything else fell to either 1-2 Multi Shot volleys (most stuff) or 1-2 Berserk-enhanced melee combos (Scorpions, Sand Dragons, and Stone Golems).

    Both endings are kind of abrupt and disappointing sadly. Which is unfortunate, but I did have quite a bit of fun scouring the countryside for loot earlier and the developers obviously put a lot of effort into the textures; there’s quite a bit of variety in both the environments and the creatures, which helps mask the repetitiveness of the game’s combat system. So all in all I guess it was worth the… whatever it was I payed for it when it was on sale oh so long ago (it’s definitely worth the 99 cents it’s on sale for now).


  • GWENT – Rank 18

    After the last post I ended up stuck at Rank 17 for like a week. Couldn’t gain any traction whatsoever against all the Butterfly and Kaedweni Sergeant decks that were suddenly so popular.

    So I built a Eithné deck specifically to fight them:

    • Smuggler x3, Trapper x2, Dragoon x3, Thunder x1, First Light x1, Shackles x1, Epidemic x1, Mardroeme x1, Lacerate x2
    • Toruviel, Ciaran, Myrgtabrakke, Braenn, Nature’s Gift, Necromancy
    • Saskia, Saesenthessis, Schirrú, Ithlinne

    Unfortunately, I was not skilled enough to make the most of it (making dumb misplays rather often) and didn’t get very far. So to hell with it I thought, I’ll go back to my roots with John Calveit:

    • Golem x3, Pikeman x3, Brigade x2, Medic x2, Rot Tosser x3, Emissary x2
    • Peter Saar, Aukes, Assire, D-Bomb, Fake Ciri, Cantarella
    • Cahir, Vilgefortz, Tibor, Letho

    Less weak to player error and far better at topdecking… and it certainly didn’t hurt that Letho plays havoc with Fogling/Resilience strategies… this deck finally broke me past the 3600 point barrier. The only change I made since putting it together was switching out Twisted Mirror for Assire (it was a dead card too often and I sometimes ended up without any cards to draw). Now let’s see if I can make it any higher.


  • Two Worlds – Midpoint

    As with Gothic 3, calling this a midpoint isn’t quite accurate since the game’s only as long/short as you want it to be. Half the map is cleared though so it’s close enough.

    At level 66 now and I experimented with both magic and ranged combat to see what ended up being the most powerful. Basically, it comes down to this:

    Melee: 20x Exotic Hachet/Armor Opener (no element) at 200 Str = ~5500 Damage
    Melee Boost: Strong Hand (Rank 10) + Berserk (Rank 10) = +500% Damage

    Ranged: 20x Whistling Death (no element) and 20x Ornamented Quiver at 200 Dex = ~11100 Damage
    Ranged Boost: Overdraw (Rank 10) & Multi Arrow (Rank 10) = +100% Damage and +4 attacks

    Magic: 20x Eruption (Earth Rank 15) with 5x +Damage/+Level/-Cost = 9390 Damage for 1174 Mana
    Magic Boost: 20x Concentration (Air Rank 15) with 5x +Damage/+Level/-Cost = +2370% Damage on 1 attack for 305 Mana

    So melee is most efficient at low skill levels (you only ‘need’ Strong Hand and Berserk), ranged at high skill levels (you need all four passives), and magic is best for doing insane amounts of one-time damage (but requires a ton of vendor farming). I have not run across all the spell cards yet but the ones I have point toward magic being best as a support ability; Strength of God, Adamantium Shield/Reflection Shield, and Grapple Ivy/Freezing Wave are great at eliminating melee/ranged weaknesses. Summoning seems to be near-useless since the best summons max out at level 30.

    Some other worthwhile things to know, in no particular order:

    • Force Triple Buffering and Vsync in your graphic card’s settings to reduce the stuttering.
    • Equipment can’t be stacked beyond 50.
    • Spell Booster bonuses max out at 5.
    • The best equipment starts appearing around level 40.
    • One-handed axes stop appearing around level 50.
    • Pure-piercing damage spears stop appearing at around level 50.
    • Items can have a maximum of 5 enchantments.
    • I’ve never seen the magic schools, Sneak, or Steal appear as +Skill equipment enchantments.
    • I’ve never seen an enchanted dagger or swordbreaker.
    • Only certain herbs are worth collecting.
      • Blue Eye/Screama Badilla/Ostrich Plumes if you want to make +50% magic stones.
      • Dotted Toadstool/Adder Brother to make poison immunity potions.
      • Saffron/Lavender/Centaurium/Nothern Frostroot for the permanent stat boosts.
    • When making stat-boosting potions, use either 4 minerals and 6 mana/health potions or 10 herbs.
    • When making stat-boosting potions try to make sure all the ingredients boost the same stat.
    • Poison prevents mana regeneration.
    • Berserk and Critical Hit don’t stack.
    • Sneak does not affect Steal success or Lockpick crime reporting.
    • Stealing often has to be done from the front/side of a target.
    • If NPCs attack after Lockpicking something, running far enough away will usually reset them.
    • Strength increases melee damage, Dexterity ranged damage, and raising the magic skills increases magic damage.
    • Carry Weight maxes out at 500.
    • Different enemies resist different types of damage; make sure to have both a bludgeoning and slashing weapon.
    • There’s not much off the beaten path besides more enemies to kill.
    • The only use for swimming so far was to reach 4 small islands, each with a stat-boosting potion.

  • Two Worlds: Epic Edition

    Ever played Gothic? Well this game is just like it:

    Clunky melee that lets you dominate with hit and run tactics, a large map to explore with enemies that don’t respawn, a difficult beginning until you pick up a level or two, a forced male MC with slightly jokey voice acting, the ability to attack/kill NPCs, a wide variety of skills to customize your character with, and tons of stat-boosting herbs scattered around the map to collect.

    Been playing for a while now, reached level 33 and just got around to entering the first town to max out Alchemy in order to use all the permanent stat boosters I’ve been collecting from the ground and NPCs’ pockets (the Steal skill is actually good since it lets you find stat/damage boosters instead of just gold). Other good all-around early skills would be Lockpick (get it up to level 8 and keep it there) and Set Trap (traps do tons of damage). I haven’t used much magic (mainly just Heal) or any archery yet, but for melee you don’t really need anything more than Strong Hand and Critical Hit; I have Parry up pretty high but it never seems to do anything… and you shouldn’t be getting hit in the first place.

    So yeah, if you’ve played Gothic II or III before you should feel right at home. If you haven’t, then it might be better to start with this since it’s more forgiving of character building mistakes (there’s a repeatable respec option available in towns that can reset your stat/skill points).


  • GWENT – Rank 16

    I’m continuing to play this game almost religiously.

    After my earlier success with the Bran-Discard deck I hit something of a wall, winning and losing in equal measure. Changing things up I switched over to a Calveit-Spy deck following the random acquisition of the Rainfarn card in a keg:

    • Golem x2, Brigade x3, Medic x3, Engineer x1, Rot Tosser x3, Emissary x2, Ambassador x2
    • Peter Saar, Aukes, Vanhemar, Decoy, de Wett, Fake Ciri
    • Cahir, Rainfarn, Vilgefortz, Tibor

    I had remarkably good success with this and practically flew up the ranks. It has bad matchups against both Elder-Consume and Voorhis-Reveal though (two popular archetypes right now at this position; the third being Dwarf-Boost) and I’m debating whether or not to fit Letho in somehow.

    Aside from that one I have two other ‘main’ decks I switch between in ranked play. A slightly revised version of the previous Bran deck (which I saw at least two other people playing):

    • Queensguard x3, Pirate Captain x3, Pirate x3, Priestess x1, War Longship x2, Shackles x2, Mardroeme x1
    • Champ of Champs, Donar, Operator, Sigrdrifa, Svanrige, Alzur’s Double-Cross
    • Ermion, Villentretenmerth, Ciri: Dash, Decree

    I picked up Villentret for an Elf control deck, but he worked out remarkably well here as well… still might switch him out for Lugos or Coral though. The bronzes haven’t changed much but the silvers were switched around often; I may yet go back to running Johnny instead of Operator and Svanrige is still underwhelming (following the post-update nerf, Morkvarg’s no longer in the running).

    As for the third deck, well I took my own advice from earlier and saved up the necessary scrap to build a more powerful monster deck. Elder-Consume in this case:

    • Celaeno x3, Nekker x3, Ekimmara x2, Vran x2, Behemoth x3, Mardroeme x2
    • Grave Hag, Fiend, Katakan, Crone x3
    • Ge’els, Caretaker, Decree, Succubus

    It’s pretty standard, with the only real departure from the norm being the Mardroemes. I was running Kayran instead of Caretaker for a while, but playing the Kayran more often than not resulted in severe card disadvantage.

    The recent hotfix definitely altered the metagame. With weather no longer being so dominant it’s now possible to actually play decks without being forced to find space for 3+ weather-removal cards, which opens up a number of options. While it was manageable, there is no denying that weather was definitely overpowered before with average bronze weather cards being able to shift the power balance far more than average bronze unit cards.

    It’s still powerful now, you just can’t run all-weather decks anymore. So all in all I’d have to say the change was welcome. The Morkvarg and Olgierd changes are a bit more questionable though. Well, we’ll see how things go.


  • GWENT

    So, since shortly after the public beta started, I’ve fallen down the Gwent rabbit hole. It scratches that card game itch I previously soothed with first MTGO (stopping after it seemed like WotC cared more about making money than satisfying their customers; shortly after the super epic rares popped up I think it was) and then slightly more recently Duel of Champions.

    Having spent no money on this just yet, I’m at level 32 (floating between ranks 11 & 12) with pretty much all the bronze cards, some key silver cards, and a handful of gold cards.

    Starting out in ranked play I went with Henselt-Reavers (I’m missing the golds and witcher trio to make it really good), then moved on to Elder-Consume (missing all the golds) and Voorhis-Reveal (lacking the reveal golds), next to Elf-Control (missing Villentret), and finally ended up having the most luck with Bran-Discard:

    • Queensguard x3, Pirate Captain x3, Pirate x3, Priestess x2, War Longship x2, Mardroeme x2
    • Champ of Champs, Morkvarg, Donar, Operator, Sigrdrifa, Svanrige
    • Ermion, Ciri: Dash, Drought, Decree

    Primarily the deck wins with giant Pirate Captains, supported by giant Ciri, but it also has a bit of a Queensguard-resurrection backup plan (whether you use Operator on them or the Captains depends on the matchup) and I’ve also won a number of games thanks to a 20+ power Champion of Champions.

    The Mardroeme used to be Raiders, but I desperately needed more removal. Svanrige has been a bit underwhelming while Cerys, Coral, Kambi, and Lugos are all possible Drought replacements I’m considering. That said, I don’t really like playing Skellige and so may instead save up Scrap for the cards necessary to make a better Monster (Kayran, Ge’els, Crones, Succubus, Woodland Spirit), Elf (Villentretenmerth), or Nilfgaard (Leo, Letho, Vattier) deck.


  • REZROG – First Impressions

    While the game has several extremely annoying bugs, for the most part it’s a fun (if repetitive) dungeon crawler.

    There’s all the multi-character persistence and loot of a Diablo-like game, with the turn-based and environmental traits of a Dungeons of Dredmor-like game. There are two unique aspects here. The first is that instead of doing one run/character at a time, you have immediate access to 7 characters (one of each class) which share loot and can be used at will. The second is death; if a character dies they get captured and have to be rescued by a different character.

    At the moment I have all 7 at levels 10-12 and have just reached the 11th dungeon. So far there’s decent enemy variety (each odd dungeon number introduces new ones) and skill variety (though I’ve only found 2 non-starter ones at the moment), but having to repeatedly grind the same area (even with the randomized layout) to overcome sudden difficulty spikes is annoying. Particularly since any time you fail to clear a level for any reason (death/capture, bug, menu exit) any items found/used or changes made since entering it are completely reset.

      I mentioned bugs earlier, and here are some of the ones I’ve run into:
      – Doorways becoming impassible after attacking through them.
      – Traps killing an enemy and making that square impassable.
      – Frozen movement when attacking crystals with a ranged skill.
      – The first page of the shared stash wiping itself on game exit.
      – Losing items transferred to a character with a full inventory.
      – The ‘consumables are 25% stronger’ roulette effect doing the opposite.
      – The ‘+1 move’ roulette effect actually doubling movement range.
      – XP skill books behaving oddly.
      – Entering a Boss level drains all of your money.
      Aside from avoiding those issues above there are a few other things to be aware of:
      – Do the first dungeon at least once with each character to get all the starter skills.
      – Run through it a few more times to hit level 3 and stock up on potions
      – Ice Slab is insanely good.
      – Skills can be added/removed to/from any non-captured character.
      – Weapon skills won’t work with 0 Durability weapons.
      – The random ‘destroy all crystals’ objective is extremely difficult.
      – There tends to be difficulty jumps every 2 levels.
      – Exit via the Esc Menu immediately if it looks like you won’t be able to finish a level.

  • Nier: Automata – First Impressions

    This game is quite a bit different from conventional RPGs.

    I’m not at all fond of the top-down shoot-’em-up elements, bullet-hell aspects, combo-heavy melee attacks, or save point system. The washed-out color scheme is a turn-off as well. On the other hand I like open world exploration and collecting things quite a bit. Some other positives would be the easily customizable control scheme, access to the Japanese voice acting, cool visual effects, and… that’s all I can think of right now.

    Maybe I’ll warm up to it in time.


  • Torment: Tides of Numenera – Endgame

    Finally got around to seriously playing the game and just finished it.

    Turned out my earlier annoyance regarding the multiple resource pools was mostly an over-reaction; once you get a point or two of Edge it becomes practically impossible to deplete them. I only ended up resting 3-4 times over the course of the entire game, and could’ve probably got by doing it just once if I had used those full-heal cyphers. That said the game isn’t very large by RPG standards… maybe about the size of Tyranny (perhaps a bit smaller).

    It certainly is Planescape: Torment revisited though. Much like its predecessor, this game rewards high Intelligence values on the PC, heavily promotes exploring every branch of every dialog tree, and allows most confrontations to be solved/avoided without engaging in combat. That last one is particularly good since (also like PS:T) combat is kind of a pain.

    However it’s the gameplay as a whole that’s holding it back rather than just the combat: The character building system is lacking, with many skill/ability choices being either useless or redundant, and you never really feel particularly powerful or godlike even at max level (which is Tier 4). Attack abilities don’t do all that much damage and companions who aren’t in the party not gaining experience certainly doesn’t help either. Equipment ends up being the main source of combat effectiveness, and the variety in that department is notably lacking (while there are tons of cyphers/oddities, there are only a few interesting weapons and a highly limited armor selection). There’s not really anything to collect either aside from merecasters.

    Which all adds up to this being the perfect game for people who love replaying the exact same scenario while making slightly different choices (since those choices do actually tend to affect things here). Anyone looking for a more physically engaging or mechanic-based experience however will most likely be disappointed.