• Tag Archives Exploration
  • Assassin’S CREED: ODYSSEY

    This… somethingth… entry in the Assassin’s Creed franchise incorporates quite a number of elements from Witcher 3: The choices (though less significant here than there), the scattered and numerous love interests (again, not as significant here), the occasional ‘investigation’ mechanics, and the open world you can explore as you wish.

    There’s also bit of Dragon Age: Inquisition there in the form of repeatable/infinite bounty board tasks, which can thankfully be completely ignored.

    While the main questlines aren’t all that exceptionally long, there are a number of optional character-building sidequest chains available and exploring/clearing the whole map will take quite a bit of time (and require playing the game as a schizophrenic asshole). In the neighborhood of 100+ hours. And is it worth it? Well that depends on your playstyle. If you go into it like the aforementioned Witcher 3 then it’s probably going to end up a disappointing, repetitive slog. Go all-in on assassination and/or hunter damage though and you can end up literally running through 4+ enemies at a time (Rush Assassination is a godly ability) while Ghost Arrow lets you pick off individual targets in complete safety.

    Fun for those who like playing characters that feel like gods. Not so much for serious roleplayers or completionists. Prudes may also wish to stay away, as ~40% of the statuary is nude and this is a game focused on climbing things in a location where pants don’t exist; expect to be flashed. Often.


  • Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire – DLC

    All three of the large DLC released for the game are roughly the same size (more or less equivalent to the full scope of one of Neketaka’s districts) and geared toward an endgame party. Which is a bit of a problem since the level cap has not been increased… meaning you’ll spend even more time than before gaining tons of wasted experience.

    The Beast of Winter is the first of them and is best tackled with a level 15-16 party, depending on difficulty (though if you want to face either of the two endbosses in combat you’ll probably want to be 17+). And make sure to pack weapons/spells that can do fire and/or crushing damage to have a slightly easier time clearing the opposition. Combat aside it’s notable mainly for adding an additional henchmen option and giving a number of interactions to Ydwin, raising her up to the status of companion during your time spent in the related areas.

    Seeker, Slayer, Survivor is a very different sort of DLC and cannot be accessed until after completing the game’s main He Waits in Fire quest. So while the ‘recommended’ level is 16 you’ll almost certainly be closer to 20 unless you’re doing a low-level challenge of some sort. That’s a good thing though since the difficulty level varies wildly between fights, which can fortunately be triggered as many times as desired (a feature extremely useful for leveling the clutch of new DLC-added soulbound items), and you’ll definitely want the breathing room granted by the extra levels. SSS also enhances a particular henchman for the duration, but otherwise the only other notable feature is that the arena feels kind of empty and unfinished. The merchants in particular stand out with their low-level/generic equipment and the ‘guiding spirit’ is pretty annoying.

    Depending on your choices in the prequel, the Forgotten Sanctum can be a bit tricky to start. Like SSS it requires He Waits in Fire be completed, but the Giant Wave event that triggers it doesn’t give you any information beyond ‘somewhere in the south’ and no quest gets added to your journal. A second event involving Llengrath is what points directly to the DLC content, but if you didn’t meet her in PoE 1 that event won’t trigger (having killed her dragons may also cause it to not trigger) and you’ll have to find the location yourself. Which, admittedly, isn’t very hard considering a large number of unexplored points of interest will have appeared on the relevant island.

    Triggering it aside, you’ll absolutely want to be level 20 before exploring the new content considering the difficulty of the encounters inside and gimmicky bosses you’ll be forced to face. And as with the previous DLC, one of the available henchmen gets some expanded focus. Unlike those however this adventure is more… wordy I guess you could say. Atmospheric as well. It very much gives the impression of being a throwback to Baldur’s Gate II actually and fits in seamlessly with the default game.


  • Ys VIII: Lacrimosa of DANA

    This game improves upon Seven, which occurs after it (Lacrimosa is a mostly stand-alone tale chronologically placed sometime between Napishtim and an occasionally referenced Celceta), in nearly every way… with the notable exception of stability. Chances are if you try to play immediately after installing, you’ll start running into persistent and seemingly random crashes shortly after arriving at the island. The two main causes of this seem to be the ‘Map Shadows’ graphics option (I always disable shadows) and a multi-core threading issue (the fix detailed there fully solved the problem for me). The Version 8 patch may or may not have fixed those complications; based on the changelog I’m guessing it didn’t.

    That’s the only problem it has though: Graphics have been massively improved, the system options have been greatly expanded and can be modified from the title screen, jumping along with combo-attacking have both made a triumphant return, dodging has been upgraded to provide an effect similar to Flash Guard (which now lasts longer), you can warp at any time, the playtime has more than doubled, you now have full camera control, the Japanese voice acting is included, and (wonder of wonders) the storyline and character behavior are actually pretty decent. At least until near the end when the big world-ending-whatever makes its appearance (just how many Roots of All Existence are in this universe?).

    Finished the Epilogue boss at level 77 in a little under 50 hours with 100% completion in all areas (though I forgot to pick up the last map completion bonus), all skills maxed out, and all Suppression/Hunt missions cleared at A rank or higher (4 at S rank). The main thing to note about this entry is that, unlike many of the previous games in the series, combat actually is skill-based. This is thanks to the combined Flash Guard/Dodge systems’ invincibility window, which allows you to negate every single attack so long as your reflexes are up to timing it right. The bosses may have a lot of moves and use them semi-randomly à la Felghana (the dragon-wall thing in Baja Tower and Dana’s last solo boss being the most annoying), but they are all beatable with zero reliance on luck.

    As for the DLC, which has caused a bit of a furor, the only part of it that you can’t find in the game proper is the (100% cosmetic) costume. Nearly all of the accessories are Chapter 2 level, the potions/food are common, you’ll eventually be drowning in materials, and the (non-Tempest) Elixirs are easily craftable late game. I will say though that the Fish Bait is mildly useful and the aforementioned Tempest Elixirs can help you defeat the level 80 optional boss and ‘Never-Ending’ base defense missions the moment they become available (otherwise you’ll have to do 30 minutes or so of grinding to get up to level 70 if you don’t want to wait).


  • ELEX

    If you’ve ever played a Gothic or Risen game before, then the content of ELEX won’t be much of a surprise: Clunky melee combat which deals notably more damage than ranged or magic attacks, no character respec option, large open world with pre-leveled enemies, uneven voice acting, and a choice between several joinable factions.

    I’m almost level 17 at the moment, having explored a chunk of Edan, some of Abessa and the Volcano area, and a small part of the Desert… and I do not think I’ll get much further. The main problem is the combat, which is the second worst out of the developer’s catalog (Risen 2‘s being the worst). You see, in addition to the clunky combo system they’ve added the requirement that attacking, dodging, and blocking all use Stamina… meaning you’ll often find yourself utterly helpless to avoid enemy attacks which, and here’s the real killer; do not require Stamina. Creatures don’t lose Stamina from attacking period, and NPCs can attack/parry even at 0 Stamina (though, admittedly, they usually won’t).

    Ranged attacking does not require Stamina, but the trade off is that those attacks are only as strong as an equivalent melee weapon’s fast attack. There is no equivalent to melee’s strong/heavy attacks, which is a major problem since that’s where most of your damage is coming from. So ranged, at least in the early/mid-game, is worthless unless you want to spend like 5 minutes slowly whittling something’s health down.

    Even were the combat less unfun though, there’s another issue: The conversations and quests. You literally have to exhaust all dialog options in order to receive and/or advance quests, and the dialog choices range wildly in tone. Aggressive lines that sound like you’re trying to pick a fight are all mixed together with understanding/passive and uncaring/cold responses making the protagonist come off as schizophrenic at best. In a way the dialog is nearly as painful as the combat.

    So I can’t really recommend playing this game.

    Speaking of which: The Age of Decadence. I heard a lot of good things about it and finally got around to playing a bit earlier. Didn’t get very far though because while the combat is fine the way text-adventure-like events kept popping-up almost like QTE‘s quickly became infuriating.


  • Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire – Endgame

    At the end of the journey I find myself with the same opinion now that I had after finishing the prequel: The game isn’t bad, but you should wait to play it until after a major patch or two has been released.

    Once again there’s a collection of bugs that range from the baffling (how did no one notice that reputations maxed out after only a couple choices?) to the more insidious (save import inconsistencies and quest-step completion order conflictions) which can really ruin your day… particularly if you’re any flavor of completionist. However, at least those issues can be fixed in theory; a more permanent problem is the abundance of quests that force you to run back and forth between city districts.

    The character selection though is pretty solid, there’s quite a range of unique equipment (although heavy on sabers and I don’t think I ever found an estoc), zipping around the world map is remarkably engrossing, and there’s a fairly large amount of character banter. Another thing worth noting is that the game can at times get remarkably sexual. While the first PoE had Hiravias, in here not only are both Serafen and Tekēhu overflowing with innuendo, but there’s also fully-nude models present in the bathhouse location along with Ondra’s fertility-deity-like vignette portrait (the content isn’t ill-fitting mind you; just surprising).

    When all’s said and done, while I did enjoy myself for the most part, just as with PoE I I’m likely not going to touch this game again until the eventual/potential expansion is released.


  • Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire – First Impressions

    While similar in many ways to its predecessor, Deadfire ends up bearing a nearly equal resemblance to Storm of Zehir.

    The way companions can now weigh-in on dialog skill checks, the new style of world map (though there’s no random encounters here), the collection of resources (ship-based here instead of trader-based there), ability to find pseudo-companion henchmen, and the encounter style (small maps and auto-refilling health) all bring Zehir to mind. The text-adventure vignettes, general class abilities and leveling system (though expanded), and the core combat mechanics on the other hand are pure PoE.

    I’ve only cleared the first island, Deadlight, and two small islands on my way to the capitol city so far so I can’t say much about the story or companions just yet. What I can comment on are the expanded class/skill system, reduced feat system, and overhauled combat:

    The multi-classing options are pretty fantastic, the new skill setup (while a bit overwhelming) is a definite improvement over how generally superficial they were in the prequel. The greatly reduced feat selection on the other hand hurts a little (though only a little, as most general ones were useless/ineffective for most builds). The combat changes could be viewed either way, but I’m greatly in favor of it having adopted a more NWN2 style of encounter setup with health being automatically refilled after each battle (which makes healing abilities more useful since you no longer have to worry about them causing accidental perma-death).

    It actually goes a step further though and makes the wizard/priest spells encounter-based as well, greatly enhancing their usability at the cost of versatility. Priests for instance no longer get access to all spells and now have to pick them as feats, while wizards can no longer learn every spell they find (they also learn spells as feats and can use the spells found in spellbooks only while they’re equipped). So far I like the change overall, but it leads to some oddities like the ability Grimoire Slam now being considered a spell.

    Not all the changes are so drastic however. One particular minor yet incredibly useful change from PoE I would probably be the decoupling of Mechanics, Hidden Items, and Scouting Mode. Stealth is now purely for sneaking (which has been upgraded with visible detection radii and distraction options) while the checks to find hidden items occur even when walking around normally and are now based on Perception. The inclusion of a pickpocketing mechanic is another minor change that serves to make things feel a bit more dynamic.

    Pros:
    – Far more character creation/development options.
    – Enhanced stealth system.
    – Greatly enhanced party AI system (akin to Dragon Age: Origins and FFXII)
    – Party-wide skill checks.
    – Expanded skill system.
    – Customized weapon/armor enhancement options.
    – Expanded crafting system.

    Cons:
    – Combat seems a bit too hyper/fast.
    – Limited feat selection.
    – Many local area maps are pretty small.
    – Ship to ship combat seems wonky (vignette says they have 2 crew, board them and they actually have like 10).
    – Smaller party size.
    – Resource management, minor as it is, is a hassle I could do without.
    – Playing in fullscreen mode with vSync enabled can cause system-crashing freezes.


  • Lords of Xulima – Early Game

    How refreshing. Based on all the warnings about stocking Food and limited resources I was very worried at first about this game, but as it turns out the hunger system is easily abolished through modding and only the XP is limited (which is barely worth noting since quite a few RPGs have limited XP).

    Once the needless hassle of the farmville simulator elements is removed it’s quite a lot of fun and reminds me most of, interestingly enough, the modern King’s Bounty games. You can pick up simple quests, find containers filled with loot scattered about, and encounter static enemies with listed difficulty classes which you can either temporarily avoid or fight (with exceptionally difficult/impossible groups blocking access to areas/items you’re not supposed to reach yet).

    The very beginning is tough since you won’t have many skills and your accuracy will be awful, but once you hit level 5 or so battles start getting notably easier since you have more options available (assuming you built your characters correctly and didn’t waste skill points). At the moment I’m about to enter the Tower, having cleared the beach/forest/cave/mausoleum/roads (apart from the Ogre/Mushrooms obviously) with a level 5/6 party consisting of a Paladin (Evasion-focused), Cleric, Summoner (Golot, Raznet, & Valvet), Thief (shurikens/swords), Bard, and of course the Explorer (not being forced to take the Terrain skill let me easily build him fighter-ish). Early fights were a real slog due to the anemic damage but now the defensive synergies are starting to come together and I’m finally able to upgrade some weapons.

    Of course that’s by no means an optimized party composition (their stats are though; Speed all the way) and I definitely would not suggest anyone try it on any difficulty other than Casual/Normal unless you want to do a lot of reloading. It’s nowhere near focused enough with weapon types scattered between bleeding, wounding, and stunning. Instead I suggest checking out multiple class guides to get a feel for the few absolutely necessary things to do (like always raise Speed each level, and max out Learning if you’re like me and want to decimate late-game) and then put together something that looks fun.

    Speaking of which, I’m kind of torn whether or not to keep playing with this party or start up a new one using two Arcane Soldiers and a Mage (since this one has 0 magic apart from the Cleric). By default the AS class isn’t very exciting, but I believe that can be fixed by simply tweaking a couple skill costs. I also want to modify the Explorer skill costs a bit and tweak the Nalaet summon to work as a Cleric substitute… so that you’re not effectively forced to run a Cleric in every party… but I’m not sure if the AI would still work with altered skills. We’ll see how things go.


  • Elminage: Gothic

    There are two kinds of difficulty, fake difficulty (primarily arising from having the adversaries cheat) and real difficulty. This game unfortunately includes both varieties in a particularly tedious and hassle-filled combination.

    On the one hand it features enemies that can do all the same things your characters can (including instant-death attacks) in great numbers (encounters range up to groups of 18). This is real difficulty. On the other… it also gives enemies abilities your characters can’t possess (even if you Summon Contract them; such as formation switching), gives them infinite spell casting, resets your attributes to the racial (not class) minimums if you multi-class, has equipped items reduce your free carry space, completely disallows resting outside of town, and restricts having a basic map to a specific spell/item (L1 Mage/Magic Map). That’s all fake, artificial difficulty.

    The two real deal killers are the map system, since the environmental graphics are incredibly bare-bones and floors are filled with miles of identical walls and doors which inexplicably auto-close behind you (more fake difficulty), and lack of a dungeon-based resting system which makes primary spellcasters dead weight most of the time… unless you had the fore-knowledge to make them Dragonewts for the Breath attack. It also doesn’t help that leveling is unexciting; apart from gaining new spells (which you’ll rarely use in normal encounters) the only other useful level-up abilities come from ‘mastering’ a class at level 26+.

    If all that wasn’t enough though, there’s also the technical issues. Sometimes left-clicking won’t work as a selection command (such as when transferring items between characters) and you have to use the relevant keyboard command instead (Enter by default), using the ‘repeat last round commands’ function does not repeat the character ordering if you set it, the identify/disarm traps menu is a clunky mess, and the town menus are an unintuitive labyrinth.

    So no, I don’t think I’ll be playing any more of such a highly random and deliberately antagonistic game. Some resources if you decide to attempt it:

    Useful Information and Walkthrough
    Cheat Engine Table (GoG Version)
    Age Stat Growth and Spirit Pact Information (GoG Version)


  • Risen 3: Titan Lords

    Honestly, though I know it’s not quite fair, I feel like I got ripped off by paying $6 for this game.

    Visually speaking it’s on par with Arcania (despite being released 4 years after) while the combat, though not as clunky as Risen 2‘s, brings to mind the first Witcher.

    If the above weren’t bad enough it suffers severely from a limited progression system, a general lack of combat variety, and several painfully gimmicky set-piece battles (naval combat & the Ore Titan). Consider that the very first tutorial fight is almost identical to the penultimate boss battle, and then take into account that even at 180 Slashing with the best Slashing weapon (or 180 Crystal Magic with an Elemental Attack spell) the weakest enemies in the game take 2 normal hits to kill. There is little sense of progression and you never feel truly powerful even with maxed-out stats.

    That’s not to say the game is hard… because it’s not. While your damage is fairly anemic, it’s pretty easy to become effectively invincible with high enough resistances. So all in all the game ends up being the worst of both worlds; people who want a challenge will dislike it because it’s practically impossible to die, while people who want to play powerful characters will also dislike it because the combat is awkward and enemies just never die fast enough.


  • ArcaniA: Gothic 4

    If you’ve heard anything about this game, it’s probably something along the lines of “It’s not a real Gothic game!“. That’s a lie, as it absolutely is a successor to Gothic 3 in just about every way… albeit a simplified one.

    Leveling-up has been reduced to raising combat abilities alone (as non-combat ones have been removed); three each for melee/magic and two for ranged. The spell system has also been simplified into three 3-tier main spells and four or so rune varieties, which act like infinite-use scrolls. While these changes are drastic, they’re perfectly in-line with the simplifications made between Gothic II & 3 (and nothing much is lost with the spell count reduction besides summoning, as only a handful were ever any good anyway).

    Two less severe changes are the switch from giant open maps to a mix of large maps and dungeon/corridor-like areas, and the flattening of the difficulty curve. The map change will be an issue of personal taste, and personally I felt Gothic 3‘s huge map quickly wore out its welcome while the sequential large maps to explore in here ended up more manageable (though the dungeon sequences are pretty bad). The difficulty change is what I suspect caused the most wailing and gnashing of teeth, as no longer can you wander into an enemy that will one-shot-kill you with no warning (unless you’re playing on the hardest difficulty with a glass canon equipment setup). However, melee is still king at early levels while magic still ends up more efficient late-game.

    Things that haven’t changed, despite some of the baseless complaints that I’ve seen to the contrary, include the protagonist personality (still sarcastic), the character depth (the side-characters are exactly the same as they were in the two prequels… Lester might actually have more of a personality here), and the voice acting quality. Some other things that haven’t changed are the quests (decently varied and most of the main ones give you multiple ways of completing them) and the combo->dodge->combo melee style.

    Notes:
    – Use a guide to find the collectibles, as some are hidden maliciously.
    – Don’t sell anything that doesn’t have ‘Loot’ in its description; keep a scythe if you want the Belial reward.
    – Sold items disappear the moment you close the dialog.
    – Oddly enough, the Belial Scythe is only useful for Ranged builds.
    – There does not seem to be any sort of respec option.
    – Once you hit a Magic Power of 85+ you can switch over to a Firebolt-first strategy.
    – Inferno deals the best magic damage while Slay-enhanced lightning is a good finisher.
    – Raising both Ranged and Magic is somewhat redundant.
    – Blocking is pointless.
    – Locked doors are tied to quests, and some of the tunnels in the North Stewark area will remain inaccessible depending on which main path you choose.