• Category Archives PC
  • Pillars of Eternity – Conclusion

    After having reached level 10 and cleared the Endless Paths along with nearly all of the Act II areas, I can now safely say the following:

    While this is a very good roleplaying game, it is not a very good action game. The combat is a slog. A dull, annoying, repetitive slog made all the more-so by the horrible AI. All you need is a single fighter specialized towards tanking (Defender, that talent that gives Defender +10 deflection, sword/shield style, etc.), put them in plate mail with a large shield, and every encounter will play out the same way; all the enemies will cluster around and/or line up to attack the fighter while being utterly unable to damage them for more than a couple points.

    So, all the rest of your party has to do is stand back and fire barrage after barrage of projectiles until everything is dead. If you have a chanter they should be chanting that increased reloading speed chant, and if you have a cipher they can be doing whatever since they have infinite spells. Everyone else should just be using guns/bows to decimate anything that moves in complete and total safety. Of course, were the enemy AI smarter, that would not necessarily make things better considering the utter lack of any method to draw/keep aggro beyond ‘be the first thing the opponent sees’.

    Not helping matters any are the bugs that never should have made it out of beta testing, such as not being able to set multiple traps, companions’ inventories and quick slot items vanishing if you rest after removing them from the party, or there being no way to disable the rogue’s Reckless Assault ability (which seems like it was supposed to be a modal). Nor the more insidious bugs such as permanently losing racial/class passive effects if you double-click equip an item, or certain abilities becoming permanently unusable (stuck in the ‘on’ state) if the enemy they’re targeting is killed at the wrong moment.

    So, is the game worth playing? Absolutely. Just not now. Later, after it’s got a patch or two at the very least. Personally I’m likely not going to replay it until some sort of party-member AI is added; having to micromanage everyone pretty much guarantees I’ll never be able to enjoy the combat.


  • Pillars of Eternity – Acclimation

    I’ve started to come around to the combat dynamics thanks to three things: Installing the IE Mod (which has the option to remove the recovery penalty from combat movement), playing for a few more hours, and getting to level 4. I still don’t like it, but it’s become tolerable and I’ve settled into a steady rhythm that minimizes the inherent annoyances.

    The first and most important part of that is to always have both Scouting Mode and Fast Mode active, while the second is to make sure the ‘Switch to Slow Mode On Entering Combat’ option is checked. From that base state the party just roams around looting everything until they find an enemy. If it’s not guarding anything, usually I’ll just avoid it and continue roaming. If it is, then phase two starts. Phase two is very simple. Open combat with a hail of gunfire (which usually kills 1-2 enemies outright), have the Fighter and Chanter switch to melee and engage, have the Rogue retreat and then circle around to the side to flank, and have the Wizard and Priest just sit back and plink away with wands/scepters from a distance. Only with ‘boss’ fights do I ever bother casting spells (and the ‘autopause after a character finishes an action’ setting is very useful for those).

    I’m quite fond of the lack of combat XP, since it means that combat is mostly optional. Whether you go through the front doors and murder your way through 30+ footmen, or go over the wall and through a secret passage killing no one, you get the exact same amount of experience points once the destination is reached. It’s quite refreshing.

    Class-wise I really like the Rogue so far, the Fighter is kind of boring but does a solid job of tanking, the Chanter is phenomenal with the auto-chanting and essentially free spells, the Wizard blasts right through DR when necessary, and the Priest… well, the Priest is underwhelming so far. The healing is useful in certain circumstances, but I’d rather have someone that I A) Don’t have to babysit as much, and that B) Doesn’t have a limited number of ability uses per rest. Healing isn’t needed very often, and when it is potions/scrolls should be able to suffice.


  • Pillars of Eternity – First Impressions

    Some quick first impressions on the game, after about 6 or so hours of play:

    1. Combat is a clusterfuck. This is partly due to the near-total lack of party member AI, which forces you to babysit (up to) six characters, and partly due to a lack of maneuvering room.
    2. Scouting mode is, well not literally broken, but pretty messed up. Why? Because you can’t just have one person enter Scouting mode, the entire party has to do so. Worse, once one person is seen the entire party gets kicked out of stealth.
    3. The environments are beautiful.
    4. The setting is nicely fleshed out.
    5. The reputation mechanics are interesting.
    6. Stealth and non-combat resolutions to problems are actually viable paths to take here since combat does not grant any experience points.
    7. The Endurance/Health split is kind of interesting, but I’m not all that happy that it (combined with the Fatigue system) makes resting a more-or-less mandatory action.

    Can I say I got my money’s worth at this point in time? Sure, since I backed it on Kickstarter and so got it for a reduced price. Would I feel the same had I just bought this at full price? No, no I don’t think I would. Rather than being a successor to the Infinity Engine games, it feels a lot more like a successor to Dungeon Siege III… and I did not like Dungeon Siege III.

    Perhaps it will grow on me, but at this point I strongly suspect I’ll not enjoy the combat system until some sort of companion AI is added (there was some talk about adding it in the expansion). I do not enjoy having to micromanage six characters. Not at all.


  • Dragon Age: Inquisition – Progress Report

    At about 90 hours in now and some things have become clear while others… less so.

    At this point the main quest is completed up to gaining Skyhold, completing Wicked Eye/Hearts (which is a lot less complicated than the message boards lead on), and saving Crestwood. As for the side areas: The Hinterlands, Fallow Mire, Forbidden Oasis, Storm Coast, Western Approach, Exalted Plains, Emerald Graves, and Hissing Wastes are cleared, Crestwood is about half done, and Emprise du Lion is at about 75% done. Roughly.

    The controls are just as annoying now as they were in the beginning, with the added annoyance of realizing that the eight visible ability buttons on the GUI are all you get (you unlock more than eight abilities? Too bad; can’t use them) and the companion AI is… not very good. So one easily accessible key has to be assigned to “Attack My Target” to make sure your party members aren’t either standing around doing nothing while an enemy runs around panicked, or standing in front of you staring at you ’cause the nearest enemy (which is attacking you or other party members) is slightly too far away to register as a target (e.g. just out of arm’s reach). They also seem to like dispelling the frozen effect from enemies… for some reason. More minor oddities include a complete absence of Blood Mages and Abominations (an overreaction to DA2‘s response?), as well as Desire Demons (which look to have been replaced by Despair Demons).

    Now we come to a more personal complaint: My current PC is a mage. Unlike the first two games, here… mages are quite limited. They can either be support characters or… support characters. The only decently damaging default spell is Fire Mine, which means most of the time you’re going to be trying to Freeze/Paralyze/Panic targets (or casting Barrier) because your damage output is so ridiculously anemic. The only time this isn’t the case is if you’re a highly specialized Knight Enchanter, but that just trades Fire Mine for Spirit Blade. Not exactly an improvement.

    The problem here seems to be that rather than scaling with the Magic Attribute, spell damage scales with weapon damage alone (staves don’t have great weapon damage) while Magic just adds a damage bonus. How large a bonus? Not sure, but a piece of armor with +20 Magic increased the damage Flashfire did (with a level 20 character) by… 50 points. Which is practically nothing. There also seems to be diminishing returns, as using a Lyrium Potion (which gives +30 Magic) on top of that increased the damage by another… 10-20 points. You appear to be much better off increasing Critical Chance instead, as you can apparently Crit with magic and doing so seems to give about a 50% damage boost.

    Due to the above, and really just in general, not being able to assign your own Attribute points at level-up is bullshit. Now for some random tips:

    • Stop messing around in the Hinterlands/Storm Coast/Fallow Mire/Forbidden Oasis when you hit level 7-8, since you’ll want to progress the main questline until you reach Skyhold in order to gain access to your characters’ Specializations (though make sure to resolve the renegade mage/templar quests near the Crossroads before choosing a side in the main quest). Once there, leave and re-enter it to trigger the Wartable Mission that unlocks the Specialization quests. Note that party members will automatically unlock a Specialization, post-Skyhold, the moment you enter an area with them in your party.
    • Don’t bother with the Requisition Requests given to you by the quartermaster people in each area. They’re infinite and you’ll get plenty of Power from simply closing Fade Rifts and completing quests.
    • Willpower doesn’t increase your Mana/Stamina pool. Nothing beyond direct equipment enchantments, as far as I can tell, can ever increase your pool above 100.
    • Rune damage affects spell damage. For example: If you have a Corrupting Rune on your staff, your spells will do more damage to Humanoid/Beast enemies.
    • Sometimes characters won’t load and will be missing from where they’re supposed to be. A quick save/load usually fixes it.
    • In the Exalted Plains you’ll find an Elf Rune quest by the Dalish Camp that unlocks a bonus area. Do this new area before you hit level 16, as the enemies max out at 15 and the rewards aren’t very impressive.
    • Unlock the Emprise du Lion and the Hissing Wastes (the two 20-30 Power areas that appear after getting Skyhold) as soon as possible. The first gives you access to a ton of easily harvestable Tier 3 metals/leather (Dawnstone, Silverite, Everite, Snowfleur Skin), while the second gives you access to some easily accessible Tier 3 metals (Nevarrite, Volcanic Aurum) and the basic Tier 3 armor schematics.
    • Your character’s level determines how well you gather metals from Harvest Points. For Tier 3 metals, you have to be 16th level to start getting multiple items from them.
    • Do Wicked Hearts/Eyes around the recommended level. A ton of new Wartable Missions get unlocked afterward that will be useful.
    • In Wicked Hearts/Eyes, don’t get too caught up in the ‘Court Approval’ mechanic. It’s just a glorified timer for two short sections of the mission, and can easily be raised by turning in a handful of secrets.
    • Honestly, you’ll want to do most of the main quests as soon as possible since the rewards don’t scale. The downside to this is that you may miss some dialog related to events that were resolved in them (probably most notable on the Exalted Plains). But be aware that once you finish the main quest all the Inner Circle quests you haven’t finished will become unavailable.
    • As far as Wartable Missions go, make sure to do Companion-added/related missions (such as the ones for Bulls’ Chargers) as soon as possible since you never know when a decision you make might result in losing access to them. If that happens the mission will disappear from the table and (if you were in the process of doing it) you’ll just get a “Such-and-such couldn’t be completed.” message when it would have finished along with a lesser reward.
    • The repeatable ‘Gather Resources’ Wartable Missions will sometimes reward you with Throne Accessories in addition to the resources.
    • Don’t worry about money. Buy whatever you want whenever you want. You’ll be swimming in the stuff as long as you sell all the tons of useless (since crafted is 10x better most of the time) equipment you find lying around.
    • Caveat to the above: Don’t buy Weapons/Armor/Addons since you can almost certainly craft better ones for ‘free’.
    • Health seems to be a bullshit statistic. No matter how much of it you have, if an enemy can damage you it tends to just melt away in a couple seconds. So you should instead focus on not being damaged with Guard/Barrier generation and a high Armor Rating.
    • Blackwall likes killing darkspawn, Varric likes killing Red Templars, Dorian likes killing Venatori, and Iron Bull likes killing Venatori & High Dragons. Defeating those enemy types with those companions in your party will grant slight approval bonuses.
    • Every so often you’ll find green globe-like things that will glow if you activate them (a quest Solas gives early on will let you start activating them). Solas gains approval if he’s in the party when you do so.
    • Similar to the above, you’ll also sometimes come across chests marked as a ‘Red Jenny Stash’ if Sera’s in your active party. Opening them slightly raises her approval.

    And we’ll close with some incomplete lists. The first contains the maximum levels the basic enemies of an area will scale to (levels separated with a slash are for areas with starter regions and advanced regions), while the second contains the Fade-Touched material effects I’ve found so far (note that there appears to be two possible variations for each material):

    ———————–
    Max Enemy Levels
    ———————–

    Hinterlands, Valammar, Caer Oswin – 11
    Storm Coast, Forbidden Oasis, Fallow Mire, Crestwood, Western Approach, Exalted Plains – 11/15
    Temple of Dirthamen, Shrine of Dumat (Leliana/Templar) – 15
    Emerald Graves – 15/19
    Hissing Wastes, Shrine of Dumat (Cullen/Mages), Cradle of Sulevin – 19
    Emprise du Lion – 19/??

    ———————–
    Fade-Touched Items
    ———————–

    Bloodstone – +7.5% Damage per nearby Enemy
    Blue Vitriol – Max Stamina +10
    Dawnstone – Heal 25% of damage taken over 10 seconds || 10% chance of 3 second Walking Fortress
    Drakestone – Max Stamina +10
    Everite – Heal 25% of damage taken over 10 seconds || 10% chance of 3 second Walking Fortress
    Iron – Heal 15% of damage taken over 10 seconds
    Lazurite – Max Stamina +15
    Nevarrite – Target Explodes on Death for 75% Damage || Chance of Pull of the Abyss
    Obsidian – 10% of 75% Damage Chain Lightning || +3 Guard on hit
    Onyx – 10% of 50% Damage Chain Lightning
    Paragon’s Luster – Heal 20% of damage taken over 10 seconds || 10% chance of 3 second Walking Fortress
    Serpentstone – +10% Damage & -100% Damage Resistance || 2% chance of Shield Bash
    Silverite – 10% chance of 100% Damage Chain Lightning || +5 Guard on hit
    Stormheart – +30% Damage & -300% Damage Resistance || 10% chance of Shield Bash
    Summer Stone – +5% Damage per nearby Enemy
    Viridium – +20% Damage & -200% Damage Resistance || 5% chance of Shield Bash
    Volcanic Aurum – +10% Focus per nearby Enemy || 10% chance of Unbowed

    August Ram Fur – Abilities cost 7.5% less Mana/Stamina || 10% chance of 8 second Horn of Valor
    Bronto Hide – +10 Max Stamina || +20 Stamina on Kill
    Canine Leather – +10% Damage if not hit in 5 seconds
    Deepstalker Hide – 5% chance of Poison || 2% chance of Fear
    Great Bear Hide – +50 Stamina on Kill
    Gurgut Skin – +50% Stealth Movement Speed
    Halla Leather – +15 Max Stamina
    Hardened Gurn Hide – +30% Damage if not hit in 5 seconds
    Lurker Scales – +75% Stealth Movement Speed || 10% chance of Veilstrike
    Nugskin – +25% Stealth Movement Speed || 2% chance of Veilstrike
    Snowfleur Skin – Heal 1% of Max Health on hit || 10% chance of 12 second Horn of Valor
    Wyvern Scales – 10% chance of Fear

    Cotton – 5% chance to Revive at 50% Health || 10% chance of 5 second 50% Damage Walking Bomb
    Dales Loden Wool – +30% Focus Gain || 10% chance of 70% Damage Caltrops
    Darkened Samite – +7.5% Focus per nearby Enemy
    Everknit Wool – +7.5% Focus per nearby Enemy || 10% chance of 50% Damage Caltrops
    Highever Weave – +20 Magic for 10 seconds on kill
    Infused Vyrantium Samite – +10% Focus per nearby Enemy || 10% chance of Mind Blast
    King’s Willow Weave – +30 Magic for 10 seconds on kill
    Lambswool – 10% chance of 30% Damage Caltrops
    Lustrous Cotton – 10% chance to Revive at 50% Health || 10% chance of 5 second 75% Damage Walking Bomb
    Plaideweave – +10 Magic for 10 seconds on kill
    Plush Fustian Velvet – Abilities cost 10% less Mana/Stamina || 10% chance of Hidden Blades with +5 hits
    Ring Velvet – Abilities cost 7.5% less Mana/Stamina || 10% chance of Hidden Blades with +4 hits
    Royal Sea Silk – Abilities cost 20% less Mana/Stamina if not hit in 5 seconds || 10% chance of Fade Cloak
    Samite – +5% Focus per nearby Enemy || 2% chance of Mind Blast
    Silk Brocade – Abilities cost 15% less Mana/Stamina if not hit in 5 seconds || 5% chance of Fade Cloak
    Velveteen – Abilities cost 5% less Mana/Stamina || 10% chance of Hidden Blades with +3 hits


  • Dragon Age: Inquisition – First Impressions

    Having just started playing this game on PC, the largest issues by far are the interface and controls. Some bulletpoints, ordered by least to most severe:

    • Uses Skyrim‘s menu style of only being able to see one section at a time (only weapons, only armor, only one type of magic, etc.).
    • Cannot bind mouse keys.
    • Tactical Mode is an unmitigated disaster.
    • Have to hold down the mouse button to move, cannot click on a point and automatically move there.
    • No autoattack. You have to hold down the attack button to keep attacking.
    • Clicking on an interactable item will not move you to that item, you have to be standing right next to it when you click to use it.
    • No more tactics system. Can only enable/disable abilities and set what health threshold to use potions at.

    Another issue is that mages have only like half the available spell options they used to. The Entropy school has up and vanished along with nature/spirit damage, leaving you with just Fire/Frost/Lightning & ‘Spirit’, which is a mishmash of a few abilities each from Arcane/Creation/Mind. What the fuck?

    It certainly looks fantastic visually though and greatly encourages exploring for items off the beaten path. Time will tell if those rather severe GUI/control issues will eventually outweigh the novelty of exploring open areas for hidden resources. Oh, and here are some bug fixes I found lying around while waiting to start playing the game that may or may not help you:

    • Choppy Cutscene Fix: Add ” -GameTime.MaxSimFps XX -GameTime.ForceSimRate XX+” without the quotes (and with XX being replaced by the desired framerate, I’ve had better results using 30 rather than 60 myself) to the end of the target line in your DA: Inquisition shortcut properties. This fix may break starting a new game however, so only enable it on a saved game.
    • Banter Bug Fix: Fast travel to a camp. Mount up, dismount, and then rest at the camp.
    • Zoom Out Limit Remover: Cheat Engine
    • Assassin Token Quest: Apparently you have to defeat two of the assassins before draining the lake and finding the third. And you should save before fighting them in case the token doesn’t drop. Allegedly there’s also a rogue in Valammar by a bridge you can kill that has a chance of dropping them.

  • Divinity: Original Sin

    Take Kingdoms of Amalur‘s general look/feel, mix in Dark Messiah of Might and Magic‘s environmental interactivity, add in a Black Isle game’s combat system… and you’ll get something resembling Divinity: Original Sin. As long as you don’t mind turn-based RPGs, this is a remarkably sizable and in-depth game to spend some time with.

    A few quick bits of information:

    • After finding 7 Star/Blood stones you’ll unlock a character who can respec your PCs for 1000 gold. Respecing completely wipes your Skills.
    • That NPC can also convert your unused Trait points to Ability points at a 1:10 ratio, and unused Ability points to Attribute points at a 5:1 ratio.
    • Due to the above, don’t add any Traits that give raw Ability/Attribute points to your PCs.
    • At a certain point in the game basic weapon skills (One/Two Handed, Bow/Crossbow) get wholly replaced by the Tenebrium skill. While it is possible to miss getting this skill, there’s both a quest and a book just lying around that teaches it.
    • Don’t bother with Craft/Blacksmith on your PCs; hire an NPC to do that.
    • An NPC can also take care of Lockpicking, in the relatively few situations you can’t find a key for a specific lock.
    • Pick up the Pet Pal Trait for one of your PCs at character creation. More experience is always good.
    • The character on the right during character creation is considered the ‘Main’ character and will usually be the one talked to in a few situations where the dialog is automatically started.
    • Don’t put points in Sneak unless you plan to max it out for use in combat; the Scoundrel/Air Magic Invisibility spells are far better for stealing with.
    • Assuming you steal/loot everything lying around (and you should be), there shouldn’t be any need to put points in Barter.
    • Don’t put Charisma on Hirelings; NPCs won’t talk to them.
    • Merchant inventories are randomized the first time you talk to them after their inventory has been spawned/respawned.
    • Merchant inventories are respawned every time your PCs level up.
    • Sold items never disappear from the person you sold them to (unless that person dies due to plot-related reasons).
    • Potential enemies that allow a dialog check to prevent them from becoming hostile can often be traded with, and killing someone you’ve traded items to will cause them to drop all of those items.
    • Summon spells are very good as distractions (and elementals are great as tanks in specific situations), so try to make sure everyone has one.
    • Marksmen should be making frequent use of specialty arrows.
    • Unlock scrolls are the only things that can usually open magically locked doors/chests (they have a purple lock VFX on them).
    • There are at least four static Unlock scrolls (two of which require high Perception to find). Crafting Witchcraft scrolls has a chance of creating more (use someone with a Craft Rank of 2 for the best probability).
    • I’ve found 6 such locks so far, though one of those can be unlocked by a nearby NPC and the Key for another drops from an optional mini-boss much later in the game.
    • If you have a high Perception (11+) there isn’t much need to buy any Secrets (the map items) except maybe the ‘Secrets of the Stars’ ones.
    • When choosing the order to unlock the elemental rooms in your Homestead, note that Fire sells Melee Tomes, Air sells Scoundrel Tomes, Frost sells Marksman Tomes, and Earth sells Witchcraft Tomes.
    • Figuring out where to go next after entering the 2nd main map can be difficult; you should be trying to deactivate the Barrier. Talking to the Mushrooms hints at one method while talking to Zixzax hints at the other.

  • Might & Magic X: Legacy – Falcon & Unicorn DLC

    This first DLC is very… unforgiving. Also somewhat badly designed.

    It’s split into two parts. The first takes place in a prison where you’re stripped of your equipment and hirelings, forced to do a semi-tedious ‘stealth’ sequence, and then fight through a bunch of enemies and two bosses using crappy white/green equipment. The second takes place in a fairly normal and decently sized dungeon with a large number of enemies to mow down.

    The first half is brutal. Insanely brutal for any party that doesn’t have anyone that can cast Sleep and Burning Determination, and just normal brutal for those that do. The first problem is of course your lack of equipment. Depending on how you built your party (+Mana/+Health equipment instead of points in Vitality/Spirit) this alone can destroy you. The next is the status effects (Feeblemind and Sleep) that the enemies here can inflict on you; without Burning Determination Sleep will decimate you, and the only way to cure Feeblemind is with Expert Air magic or resting… and you have access to next to no supplies here.

    The final problem is the two bosses. The first boss is an insanely beefed-up Blackfang Thug (he can cast 250+ damage Fireballs) backed by two slightly beefed-up Blackfang Thugs. Without Sleep or a full-Mage with something like Implosion this battle is extremely difficult and may actually be effectively impossible (with an all-Might party for instance). The second is a Mage who can put people to Sleep, casts a new Light Magic spell that deals 250+ damage to each party member, and even heal himself. He also gets a free action the moment you open the door.

    If you defeat that second boss you can get your equipment back and return to the main world map. From there you now have the option of traveling to the second half of the DLC whenever you want (which is a massive improvement compared to forcing you into it as the first half did). The DLC’s second half is pretty straight-forward; kill everything that you see while exploring for loot. The only tricky part could be the optional Griffon boss, as it may Chain Lightning you into oblivion a few times.

    I honestly can’t recommend using this DLC unless you only want to play with optimized Freemage-dependent parties and/or are willing to cheat past the cheaper parts of the prison section (by editing a spell/ability to do massive damage for instance).


  • Might & Magic X: Legacy

    This RPG is a throwback to first-person RPGs of old. While the obvious comparison would be earlier Might & Magic games… I have never played those and so instead liken it to the old TSR D&D games (i.e. Menzoberranzan, Strahd’s Possession, Stone Prophet).

    Let me get some important links out of the way before going further:

    Interactive Map
    Secret Door Locations
    Puzzle/Trainer/Relic Information (largely based off of the information found in this Riddle/Puzzle/Trainer Guide)

    Another thing to get out of the way right now is a rather common and annoying ‘bug’:

    The game does a single online check to make sure you have the full version before unlocking the path to Chapter 2. If this check does not take place, then the Griffin Rider will have a dialog option grayed-out and the Sentinel blocking the bridge to the second town will never be removed. Both of these have work-arounds (editing the dialog file and using the horse-travel option), but it’s easiest to just make sure the check takes place. To see whether this connection issue is affecting you, simply go into the ‘Extras’ menu from the Title Screen, then click on ‘Bonus Content’, and finally the ‘Redeem Code’ button. If it says “Invalid Code” you’re good, while if it says “Connection Issues” then your firewall is probably blocking the game/launcher and you should fix that.

    Now, on to the gameplay:

    The first thing to be aware of when playing this if you’re more familiar with modern RPGs is that the learning curve is a bit unforgiving. If you’ve built your party ‘wrong’ or don’t know the quirks of the combat system it’s entirely possible to have one of your weaker characters get killed by a simple spider hiding in a barrel right off the boat. Another important thing is to actually read what quest-givers are saying. There’s a lot of stuff that’s only mentioned in dialog which will become necessary/helpful later.

    Some basic advice to get you started is to fully explore the town, talk/enter all the white dots/squares on your minimap (checking the top of the screen after entering a building to see if there’s multiple people to talk to), and open any chests you find (but not barrels). After the walk around you should have three new quests, a new follower (the girl from the Church), and enough money to go into the Armor Shop and buy a few pieces of basic head/hand/foot armor for your characters.

    At this point you can go open up those barrels. If you have difficulty killing the spiders that will pop out of two of them, you may wish to re-think your party makeup or character builds. Some things to be aware of:

    – You need an Elf, Orc, and Dwarf in your party to enter all areas (each has a race-specific area).
    – Mages should only put points in Magic.
    – Fighters should never put points in Magic/Spirit.
    – Your Mage(s) should have access to either novice Light Magic or master Water Magic (preferably both).
    – Someone should have access to novice Earth Magic.
    – Someone should have access to expert Fire Magic.
    – Try to have different weapon specialties for each character.
    – You’ll want one character focused in Magic, one in Might, and one in Perception in order to open all the secret doors.
    – Do not be stingy with resting/potions.

    To explain the above, you’ll pick up a ton of potions to refill your mana over the course of the game and potions/supplies/scrolls are basically the only things you’ll want to spend money on mid-late game. Add to that the existence of +Mana equipment and there’s no need to waste your Mage’s points on Spirit. Light Magic gives you the Celestial Armor spell which blocks a set amount of damage, master Water Magic gets you the Liquid Membrane spell which reduces all incoming damage by a certain percentage, Earth Magic gets you the Regeneration healing spell, and expert Fire Magic gets you the Burning Determination spell which blocks most harmful status effects.

    If you have Celestial Armor on a Mage, then you can likely get by with never putting an attribute point into Vitality (note however that the main quest requires you to have someone with 20 Vitality to proceed; there is a Relic available which grants +10 Vitality when fully upgraded that will help out here). Where to put your Fighter’s points is somewhat inexact. A general guideline would be: 3/1 Might/Destiny for 2H users, 2/1/1 Might/Destiny/Perception for non-dagger Dual-Wielders, 3/1 Destiny/Perception for dagger Dual-Wielders, and 3/1 Perception/Destiny for Ranged users.

    Next up is a quick rundown on the more useful Spells:

    Air Magic
    – Air Ward (Novice): Useful against elementals.
    – Clear Mind (Expert): Cures Feeblemind (Resting does this too, but you can’t rest in battle).
    – Eagle Eye (Expert): Party-wide Perception boost. Useful for secret doors and as a pre-boss buff.
    – Lightning Bolt (Expert): Solid single-target damage to non-humans.
    – Chain Lightning (Master): Tons of damage for little mana to a group of enemies.
    – Cyclone (Master): Good against Damage Reflect. Can be used to trigger combat from a safe location.
    – Thunderstorm (Grandmaster): Good against Damage Reflect.

    Dark Magic
    – Darkness Ward (Novice): Useful against ghosts/specters, dark mages, and those beholder-like enemies.
    – Shadow Cloak (Novice): The first incoming attack auto-misses. Good pre-boss buff and can make you invincible in certain situations.
    – Whispering Shadows (Novice): Reveals secret doors.
    – Purge (Expert): Removes enemy buffs.
    – Sleep (Expert): Fantastic disabling spell that will help get you into places you shouldn’t be yet.
    – Agony (Master): Great when combined with a dual-wielding dagger user.

    Earth Magic
    – Cure Poison (Novice): Poison doesn’t expire.
    – Earth Ward (Novice): Useful against elementals and venomous creatures.
    – Regeneration (Novice): Fantastic party-wide healing spell.
    – Poison Spray (Expert): Deals damage over time (bosses are immune though) and reduces Evade.
    – Stone Skin (Expert): Party-wide Armor boost. A semi-useful pre-boss buff.
    – Strength of the Earth (Expert): Cures Weakness (Resting does this too, but you can’t rest in battle).
    – Acid Splash (Master): Cut’s enemy Armor and number of Blocks in half, stacks with Warfare’s Shatter.

    Fire Magic
    – Fire Ward (Novice): Useful against elementals.
    – Burning Determination (Expert): Fully protects against Stun, Paralysis, and Sleep.
    – Inner Fire (Expert): Party-wide Might boost. Useful for secret doors and as a pre-boss buff.
    – Fire Blast (Master): Damages all enemies on the three tiles directly in front of you.
    – Fire Shield (Master): Damages enemies that hit your party. A useful pre-boss buff.
    – Fire Burst (Grandmaster): Tons of damage to all surrounding enemies, but very expensive.

    Light Magic
    – Celestial Armour (Novice): Godly damage-prevention spell.
    – Light Ward (Novice): Useful against elementals.
    – Cleansing Light (Expert): Curse doesn’t expire.
    – Heal (Expert): Single-target heal. Good for reviving a suddenly knocked-out character.
    – Radiant Weapon (Expert): Minor damage and prevents blocking.
    – Resurrection (Master): Revives a slain party member.
    – Heal Party (Master): Nowhere near as good as Regeneration, but useful in a pinch.

    Prime Magic
    – Arcane Ward (Novice): Stacks with the other wards.
    – Time Stasis (Novice): Can help you defeat enemies you’re not supposed to be facing yet.
    – Dispel Magic (Expert): Removes all positive/negative effects from your party, even exhaustion (though exhaustion effects will reappear on the next turn).
    – Heroic Destiny (Expert): Party-wide Destiny boost. A good pre-boss buff.
    – Identify (Expert): Not necessary, but very convenient and will save money in the early game.
    – Spirit Beacon (Master): Limited quick travel.
    – Hour of Power (Grandmaster): Party-wide Might/Magic and Melee/Ranged Attack boost. A good pre-boss buff.

    Water Magic
    – Consciousness (Novice): I’ve never had a character affected by Sleep, but it would be good to have just in case.
    – Ice Bolt (Novice): Single-target damage that reduces the number of enemy attacks.
    – Water Ward (Novice): Useful against elementals.
    – Circle of Winter (Expert): Damages all surrounding enemies and reduces their number of attacks.
    – Ice Prison (Expert): Can help you defeat enemies you’re not supposed to be facing yet.
    – Water Flows Freely (Expert): Paralysis doesn’t expire.
    – Blizzard (Master) – Cheap damage to a group of enemies that reduces their number of attacks.
    – Liquid Membrane (Master) – A damage-reduction spell.

    And I’ll close this with a guide of sorts regarding the order to visit various areas to get stuff as early as possible (a more in-depth version can be found over here):

    – Clear every nook and cranny of the entire outdoor area, heading to the Mysterious Crypt by the castle first.
    – Clear the Den of Thieves, but do not pick up the book (so that the secret-finding Hireling doesn’t leave you).
    – Clear the Lighthouse.
    – Go back to the den and pick up the book.
    – Clear Castle Portmeyron and the various elves out of the Elemental Forge (do not fight the Air/Light elementals).
    – Defeat the Earth Elemental boss.
    – Head directly for the next Mysterious Crypt west of Seahaven.
    – If you have enough money and a sword-user in your party try to upgrade to the +20 Earth damage swords the Seahaven shop usually sells.
    – There’s a hireling in the Seahaven Tavern that will drastically reduce shop prices that may help with the above.
    – Clear the couple of forest paths to the west of Seahaven.
    – If you have access to Sleep/Ice Prison/Time Stasis you can now do some boss hunting and clear out the three currently accessible Deadly Caves.
    – Depending on your ability layout and if you’ve gotten the new swords, you may also be able to break into the Desolate Wilds now.
    – First head through the Halloth Grove (avoiding any glowing Spiders you see).
    – The Grove can be reached by taking the path southwest of the Floating Tower west of Seahaven.
    – The Desolate Wilds entrance is guarded by four or so Orcs, so save and then try taking them out (Purge and Sleep come in handy here).
    – If you can kill them, head to the Desolate Wilds’ Deadly Cave near where you entered this area.
    – Stick to the northernmost tiles and you’ll now have an almost clear path west to The Crag (there’s another 3 or so Orcs and 3 Goblins on the way).
    – The Crag’s potion shop sells some of the the best spears, the weapon shop some of the best daggers, and the armor shop some of the best robes.
    – From there you’ll only have to take out one more group of Orcs/Goblins to get access to the Meteorite (which is a quest item that results in a very good sword Relic) and a Mysterious Crypt.
    – Head over to the bridge by the Axe Grandmaster Trainer next and try to break into the area around Karthal.
    – When you turn the corner to face the Black Mages, two War Dogs will attack from behind, so be aware of that.
    – If you can get through there, head south a bit a take out the next group of enemies which include a relatively easy Wolf-type boss.
    – You now have a clear path to Shadow Woods’ Mysterious Crypt and Deadly Cave, as well as the Tower of Enigma.
    – Clear out the path to the Lost City, which is northeast of the Observatory.
    – Stay as far south as possible while heading there to avoid some Black Fang enemies (which are very nasty).
    – Clear levels 1, 2, & 4 of the Lost City. Avoid Level 3, unless you can easily defeat the enemies that appear near the entrances to that area.
    – You should have the Water Shard now, so go defeat the Water Elemental at the Elemental Forge (use the Water Ward crystal by Sorpigal before traveling there).
    – Head northwest through the Marshes, west across the stream near the hut with the Potion-Selling Hireling, to reach the jungle.
    – A little ways into the jungle is another Deadly Cave (that contains a fantastic Medium Armor relic).
    – Now it’s time to see if you can get the Air Shard. Head back over to the Shadow Woods Mysterious Crypt.
    – Head south through the woods and you’ll come across two Black Fang enemies. If you can take them, good. If not then you’ll probably have to progress with the main quest for a bit.
    – Assuming they weren’t a problem, continue heading south until the beach curves to the east and you can see a group of naga.
    – Try to defeat them. If you have no real trouble with them, then you can go get the Air Shard now.
    – Head back to the Desolate Wilds and look for a cave guarded by a naga. Explore Lvl 2 (password is “swordfish”) to find the shard.
    – Go defeat the Air Elemental at the Elemental Forge to gain the ability to access the last two areas of the main map.
    – With them open, you can now finish the Obelisk and Dragon Shrine quests, and have access to the last Mysterious Crypt and Deadly Caves.
    – From that point on you can just do whatever.


  • The Last Remnant – Enlightened Seven

    I’ve spoken about The Last Remnant in the past (though that post was lost along with most of everything else when the site died), but not really about any part of it in specific. Now in the process of re-playing it for the third time after an extended delay (last save was from May 2010) and I’ve just defeated the titular Enlightened Seven to mostly finish out this playthrough’s party. So, why post about it? Because while the existing strategies on the Wiki and various forums that pop-up via Google are useful, they leave out a few key points. So, for future reference, here is my own exploration of this particular battle.

    Two things to be aware of here are that I’m playing the PC version (which has a number of improvements and other changes), and deliberately rushed through the main plot events and delayed a number of sidequests in order to avoid outgrowing the recruitable versions of the Seven.

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    Abilities
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    Abilities that will help:

    Abilities that may help:

    Abilities that should be deactivated for the fight:

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    Equipment
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    Weapons for your main damage dealers should be at or near their final customization if at all possible while accessories should lean toward physical/magical evasion and increased AP/HP (though you won’t have much control over this unless you edit the .ini file).

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    General Party Makeup
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    Three 4-person Unions and two 3-person Unions will generally give you the best balance between damage potential and damage avoidance. A 5-person Union does not have the best odds where Galaxy and Twin Snowpetal are concerned, and 3-person Unions tend to find Milton’s and Young’s single strike knock outs more deadly.

    You’ll want one healer and one reviver in each Union. Using one character for both roles will not be a good idea, as quite often you’ll want to revive a fallen union and heal yourself at the same time (not to mention the single-person KO’s mentioned above). You’ll also want the leader of each Union to have a Unique Art of some sort, preferably not an AOE one (i.e. not Gae Bolg, Zeal’s Virtue, etc.)… though that will do if no other options are available. The reason for this is the huge Evasion boost Unions get when a UA is triggered; the most troublesome enemy abilities in this fight can be dodged.

    Having a Morale-affecter in each Union would also be a good idea, as would grouping the characters who use Item-based skills together with the leaders who have the most expensive Unique Arts (Duke of Ghor, Jager, etc.) while putting the Mystic-based ones in the less AP-intensive Unions (Torgal, Emmy, etc.).

    As for Formations…. Well, that’s an entire subject all on its own. In this particular instance I used Hourglass (+Item Arts) for the 4-person Unions and Trident (+Combat Arts) for the 3-persons ones (having been unimpressed with Vampire, Mystic Henge, and Pendulum in some earlier attempts). Just stay away from Formations that bunch everyone together or reduce either your Physical/Mystic Defense or Speed and you should be fine. Defense for obvious reasons and Speed because it will help a great deal against Ludope.

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    Enemies
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    Snievan: Uses a basic attack, a physical Union-wide Unique Art that will kill you if it hits (Lugh’s Revenge), and a Union-wide non-damaging ability that causes Curse and turns the Morale bar red (Phantom Pain). Your Summon can tank him with few issues as it’s immune to Curse and the UA will only kill it if it’s not at full health.

    Milton: Uses a basic attack with an instant death effect, Mixed Messages, and a UA that gives him five actions a round and increases all his stats (Iron Will). He will use Iron Will a lot, and any Union without high evasion (including the Summon) will likely be wiped out before it can do much of anything. So you need to send two Unions at a time at him and hope the first one is wiped-out so that the second one can get a free attack. If you’re (un)lucky he won’t manage to fully kill the first Union and you’ll end up with two mostly-dead unions instead of a single fully dead one, drawing things out.

    Ludope: The first thing he does after appearing is cast a battlefield-wide UA that deals a lot of mystic damage (Galaxy). After that he switches between Maledict, Mystic Mine, Grenade Impact, basic attacks, and more Galaxy’s. If you’re lucky you should be able to get several turns in-between uses of Galaxy, if you’re unlucky he’ll use Galaxy multiple times in succession and that will be that. Hitting him with Silence tends to shut him down for a turn though, so a couple of fast characters with Silence-causing abilities will nudge the odds a bit in your favor.

    Zuido: The second character your summon will be tanking. He has an array of standard two-handed Physical Arts and a physical-based AOE UA (Giant Press). The only time he’s ever dangerous is when he initially appears with Ludope, as it’s quite possible that he’ll Giant Press right on top of the only units to survive that first Galaxy. Afterward, the Summon will likely drag him off away from your party, making Giant Press a non-issue.

    Young: Has a basic physical attack, a physical AOE UA (Brawl), and auto-uses an ability that turns the Morale bar red (Victory Cry) at the start of any turn it shows any blue. There are two things to keep in mind when facing him; his basic attacks can deal enough damage to insta-kill weaker characters while leaving the Union as a whole alive and if you kill him when the Morale bar is fully red the Twin Snowpetal on the following turn will probably wipe you out. Interestingly, those two things are related as having single characters KO’d in a fully-healed Union means a greater chance of surviving a battlefield-wide ability.

    Hinnah/Hannah: They use basic attacks, an ability which lowers a Union’s Attack/Defense rating (Attack/Defense Crusher), a battlefield-wide physical UA (Twin Snowpetal) at the start of any turn they’re both alive and have enough AP, and an ability that gives them five actions a turn (Overdrive) if one of them is dead. In addition to that, Hannah will cast Second Chance on Hinnah if she’s notably wounded and Hinnah may use an ability that Enthralls a union (Total Domination) if Hannah has been killed. Twin Snowpetal is very deadly with a red Morale bar, but notably less so with a mostly blue one. As such you have two options here; keep your Morale high and whittle them both down evenly to reduce your exposure to Overdrive, or go all-in on Hannah and kill her as quickly as possible (she won’t heal herself) to stop the Snowpetals.

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    Battle Structure
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    The fight has four phases. The first is Snievan and Milton, the second Ludope and Zuido, the third Young, and the last being Hinnah and Hannah. The second and last of these are by far the trickiest, while Young requires a bit of finesse.

    To start out you’ll want your Summon active on the very first turn. If it isn’t, reset/reload until it is. You can get by waiting until later to summon it, but it complicates things. The Summon’s job in this battle is to keep Snievan/Zuido/Young/Hinnah busy while potentially distracting Ludope. Every other Union on this first turn should Wait, Heal, or Stealth. Do not attack Snievan unless you get no other options, and if it does force you (this is how Stealth is semi-useful, it gives you more non-attacking options) then go for the lowest damaging choice; you do not want him to die before you’re ready for it.

    Snievan will likely Raidlock someone (doesn’t matter what attack he uses), while the Summon will respond by Multi-Deadlocking him. Turn two will begin and Milton will make his entrance. Assuming you had everyone Wait he should be in range of most/all of your Unions (the one Snievan attacked may be too far away). Send two Unions at him (preferably a 3-person followed by a 4-person, but attack order is hard to judge), have two Unions Heal, and free up that Union Snievan Deadlocked any way you can. From now until Milton dies you’ll be having whichever strongest two Unions happen to be available attack Milton while the remainder heal/revive (make sure to keep the Summon healed as well). Don’t bother with Morale-altering abilities until he’s dead.

    If you’re lucky with the above healing/reviving you’ll get some free Orphic Ward or Shield/Power Potion uses on the revived Unions. If not, there’s still hope for the next phase. Once Milton dies you should first have all five Unions sit back and completely fill their AP bars (while still healing the Summon), and then when everyone’s at or close to max attack him with everything so that you’ll hopefully get at least one flanking union, preferably more. The next turn have the two that Deadlocked him disengage while the flankers continue flanking to build up your morale bar. When he’s near death, if the bar is still mostly red (due to Phantom Pain), you’ll want to attack with as many Unions (who are not protected by Orphic Ward) as possible.

    When Snievan and Milton are dead the second phase begins and both Ludope and Zuido appear in the middle of your party and immediately get to attack (with Galaxy and probably Giant Press). This is why having everyone attack when Snievan is near-death is important; Ludope and Zuido will only Deadlock a Union instead of Raidlocking them. That keeps your morale at a decent level and gives a better chance to have multiple Unions survive that first Galaxy. Assuming the Galaxy doesn’t kill all of your Unions (the Summon will survive just fine as long as you kept its health up in the first phase) you now have a window of opportunity. The Summon should engage Zuido and Ludope likes to Flank-attack any Union Zuido has engaged, that being the Summon in this case, and so if two unions survived the Galaxy you should be able to revive two more unimpeded and will be in a decent place. If only one survived then things don’t look good, as the Summon will likely only be able to hold off both Zuido and Ludope for two turns unless they only decide to use basic attacks.

    Once you have four/five Unions alive you can start going on the offensive, and you’ll need to do so quickly because another Galaxy could hit at any time. Have one/two of them (particularly any with Orphic Ward or Power/Shield Potion IV+) revive any remaining dead Unions and the rest (particularly any physically-focused ones) attack Ludope. Try to favor attack options that contain Unique Arts, Cachexia, or Morale-boosting/Silence-causing abilities. With a little luck you should be able to take him down in two or three turns while the newly healed/revived Summon keeps Zuido busy. Once Ludope falls take the time to replenish your AP pools and then take out Zuido however you want (don’t bother with Morale-boosters after Ludope is killed).

    With four of the Seven now dead the third phase begins. Once the fourth body hits the ground Young will appear, turn the Morale bar completely red with Victory Cry, and then attack the nearest Union with Brawl. As long as you’re not using the Orb formation on all your Unions or had a couple flanking Zuido when he died your party should be spread out enough to survive this. The next turn the Summon will start tanking him and you can treat him almost identically to how you treated Snievan. One difference is that his Morale-draining ability is ‘free’ (though it seems Cachexia at the end of the turn may stop it). The other is that his basic attacks tend to KO the character they hit even if the Union survives, which can actually be something of a blessing for the next phase if you’re lacking Morale-based abilities.

    Once he falls Hinnah and Hannah appear the same way as the earlier three did; right on top of you with a free attack. This will likely just be a basic attack (which you’ll hopefully block) but could be an Attack/Defense Crusher. At the start of the next turn however they’ll get an auto-use of Twin Snowpetal, which can wipe you out just as fast as Galaxy if the Morale bar is mostly red (though the Summon won’t really care either way). At this point, assuming you have at least two Unions standing (not including the Summon) you should be able to rebuild the same way you did post-Galaxy. Otherwise it’s a coin toss as to whether the sisters will gang up on the Summon or if one will try to take you out instead (a high speed comes in handy here).

    Once you’ve got at least three Unions revived you have two available paths. The first depends on Morale control. If you have enough Morale-affecting abilities to get yourself quickly back into a mostly blue Morale bar then you can take your time to whittle down Hinnah first. This will take longer than focusing on Hannah because Hannah will heal Hinnah but not herself. If you do not have many Morale-affecting abilities, or they’re simply not appearing in your available options, then it would be best to gang up on Hannah and take your chances dealing with Hinnah’s Total Domination ability (which she may or may not use). In any case, as long as you treat the remaining sister similar to Milton from the first phase you shouldn’t have much trouble finishing the fight once Twin Snowpetal is out of the equation.

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    Example Party
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    And now here below is the party I used on this most recent win. It was at BR 44 at the time (winning the battle bumped it up to 45) and far from optimal.

    Hourglass – HP: 3029 AP: +40/282

    1. Emmy (72 Str, 42 Int): Nightbloom, Superior Bluesteel; Physical Arts, Remedies, Rejuvinating Water, Hundred Flowers
    2. Glenys (61 Str, 38 Int): Optimal Tataraichi; Physical Arts, Remedies, Swordflash
    3. Caedemon (77 Str, 51 Int): Ose Dominus; Physical Arts, Herbs, Silencer
    4. Rush (47 Str, 74 Int): Superlatative Hawkwind, Optimal Tataraichi, Idol Amulet, Ragna-rock; Herbs, Cachexia, Bewitch, Silent Gas, Orphic Ward

    Hourglass – HP: 5312 AP: +50/357

    1. Duke of Ghor (113 Str, 44 Int): Bilqis Artis; Physical Arts, Bel’kwinth’s Fury
    2. Gaou (86 Str, 39 Int): Obsidian; Physical Arts, Lotions
    3. Allan (67 Str, 33 Int): Oriax Dominus; Physical Arts, Sound Dampener, Retreat Flare
    4. Gabriel (60 Str, 31 Int): Superior Bluesteel, Soulshield; Physical Arts, Herbs

    Hourglass – HP: 4785 AP: +61/353

    1. Jager (106 Str, 44 Int): Schiavona Artis; Physical Arts, Lob Omen, Schiavona, Beowulf
    2. Roberto (78 Str, 28 Int): Frostblade Artis; Physical Arts
    3. Darien (89 Str, 33 Int): Pitchfork; Physical Arts, Herbs, Lotions
    4. Khrynia (58 Str, 64 Int): Serpent Star; Physical Arts, Moonlight, Silencer, Acid Bomb, Sound Dampener

    Trident – HP: 3547 AP: +27/193

    1. Torgal (59 Str, 54 Int): Gremory Dominus, Gremory; Physical Arts, Silencer, Lugh’s Revenge
    2. Blocter (73 Str, 30 Int): Sagaris Heroicus; Physical Arts, Herbs, Silent Gas
    3. Paris (57 Str, 74 Int): Commander’s Greatstaff; Remedies, Bluff, Addle, Stealth, Mixed Messages

    Trident – HP: 2911 AP: +28/198

    1. David (62 Str, 48 Int): Enchanted Bluesteel, Force Targe; Physical Arts, Herbs, Ex Machina
    2. Wyngale (74 Str, 106 Int): Gaap x2; Physical Arts, Remedies, Bluff, Addle, Stealth, Retreat Flare, Silencer, Silent Gas
    3. Nora (57 Str, 60 Int): Flame Blackjack; Physical Arts

  • Skyrim Modding – Dynamic Loot

    I find myself in a curious predicament. Basically, I find myself in the role of the “idea guy”. I have what seems like a rock-solid idea, yet am not able to personally implement it… it’s a somewhat distressing situation.

    The issue is this:

    Normally if I get a modding idea I simply fire up the relevant modding utility and make it. In this particular instance though I seem to be totally disinclined to learn how Skyrim’s scripting language differs from Oblivion’s (never even mind the fact that I haven’t dealt with Oblivion in what feels like decades). Even if I were interested in figuring it out, it would require using a Toolset and I pathologically avoid Bethesda-made Toolsets because they tend to be clunky messes for the most part. So I’m doubly stuck and it’s eating at me something fierce.

    What’s the idea? The idea is simplicity itself:

    Quite some time ago someone made a Dynamic Loot Mod for Skyrim that created dynamically enchanted weapons/armor on enemies. They did this by making a ton of pre-enchanted ‘blueprints’. That method is incredibly inefficient and introduces all sorts of continuity issues if used with any sort of weapon/armor rebalancing Mod. What I want to do is use a method similar to that used over in the Dynamic Weapon Speed Mod, switching out the ‘change the speed’ bit for ‘add enchantment x’. That way anytime the base unenchanted version of an item is spawned it would get dynamically enchanted (all the default generically enchanted weapons would be replaced by the unenchanted version through TES5Edit’s “Change FormID” functionality).

    This should not require much effort, which raises the question of why hasn’t it been done yet (though perhaps it has, as I’ve only checked Google and Nexus). Can you not add enchantments to weapons via quest or item-based scripts? The default enchanter obviously uses a script to add them and the Enchantment Shouts Mod appears to add enchantments on the fly… so that doesn’t seem to be the case.

    Maybe it’ll eventually bug me enough that I’ll actually investigate some day. It’s more likely I’ll just fix the bugs in the existing Dynamic Loot Mod (such as its Orcish Shield templates using the Draugr Boots item values) and then forget about it though, as Skyrim angers me to the point that I have little desire to actually play it.

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    UPDATE
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    So yeah, I made that patch for Dynamic Loot after all. Not going to bother uploading it to Nexus because I’m lazy.