I essentially never pay full price for games but the combination of gameplay and the studio itself being gamer-friendly I think it's gonna be in my library soon.
yeah i was going to wait - and it's not like i don't have other stuff to play.
but for same reasons i bought it.
those other games are now going to have to wait - even longer.
It's like the early 2000s again and it's great. Wonderful single-player experiences that can be enjoyed offline and no bullshit microtransactions or collectables.
Some corpo playing BG3 somewhere right now: "This game would have been so much better with a battlepass!" 😒 "And it need repeatable quests!" 🤨 "Oh, and if we put collectibles in the game, we can sell them the map to find them all." 🤮
I generally have a 1 year delay for Triple-A games, to see if they're still relevant and then maybe look into buying. I might shorten that time for this game.
I too normally have the approach of playing games on a 1-2 (or more) year delay and picking them up for a huge discount versus original pricing, but I picked this up in early access way back when. You won't be disappointed if you decide to pick this one up earlier than normal.
If you're into RPGs, or DnD, or general fantasy stuff, I would highly recommend it. I haven't finished it yet, but the first 20 or so hours have been incredibly fun. It's been a long time since I've enjoyed a game this much, the reviews aren't wrong with this one.
I'm not into DnD nor fantasy generally, but I am absolutely loving it. 40 hours in so far and I can't get enough. I have the itch where I'm just thinking about spells all day when I'm not playing
How similar is it to Divinity: Original Sin II? I'm playing through it right now on my steam deck, and I'm really enjoying it so far. Also does anyone know how it runs on a steam deck?
I was sure Starfield (regardless of quality) would win GOTY most places this year. I didn't expect BG3 to be this successful or even this good. It is definitely the best RPG I've played since at least Dragon Age Origins, but I'm pretty confident ever.
My only complaints would be not being able to control the pitch of the camera and sometimes it's hard to walk through corridors because the wall cutaway doesn't happen fast enough.
Personally I really want to like it more, having just finished it at 80 hours. But from what I can tell, it just doesn't have much that makes me want to replay it and endgame is very buggy. I have a whole host of issues but after starting very unsatisfying re-run through today (I played 125 with different people in early access a year or 2 ago) I looked up some stuff and realized how few of the choices felt like they actually mattered, or were straight up broken/cut content. Very disappointed. LOVED the first playthrough, though.
I don’t exactly love these kinds of top down, turn based, save scum games, but the D&D 5e mechanics pulled me in. I will say the game is quite fun even as someone who gets burned out quickly on this style. I’ve played about 20 hours so far and there have been plenty of bugs and crashes, but I can definitely say I’m enjoying it
Yeah it’s great. I encounter bugs here and there but non are game breaking. Worth the buy, if your unsure pirate it first. By far the best DND game I’ve tried.
If you want a good single player RPG with bullshit, collectables, or microtransactions that you can play offline if you want, it's great. If you want a modern game with all that stuff, it would suck. I don't know why you'd want that stuff, but some business people think we do.
I remember when all these games were just coming out and the hype surrounding them. My favourite was always Minsc and his hamster companion Boo from BG1.
I adore Minsc but feel like WoTC has started flooding him into stuff once they realized that he was popular. He's in a comic, in Magic the gathering now, and I think even showed up in modules and games. Their involvement in any of this has made me trepidatious, tbh. It sounds like Larian may have made a good game despite them. (I have my own nitpicks there but I'm a very inflexible and nostalgic person, so that's to be expected.)
It is incredibly long. I've got over 50 hours now, and I'm not even seemingly anywhere near the titular city that is the game's namesake. I know it's in the game; I have quests to visit people there. I don't know how many acts there are, possibly 3; I've not even finished act 1 and I've been glued to this game super hard.
But you can also save literally at any time. Mid combat, mid sentence of dialogue, wherever. So you can always stop exactly where you are, at least.
I'm probably mid way through act 2 (hard to tell, but it feels like it won't be too long) and it seems like Baldur's Gate is still a long way off. I'm assuming after taking care of the main act 2 thing Baldur's Gate will be right around the corner though. Still, if that city is anything like the rest of the game so far, it's going to have a lot to do.
I've played it for 50 hours and I'd estimate I'm about half way through. So you are right. Though I've enjoyed every second of those hours. Also if you're constantly so busy you can't play a game or have you time, you're definitely living life wrong.
I work most of the day and when I finish I have little time to share between studies, chores, family, partner, friends and games. Maybe during the weekends I can play more but I don't have the time I had during uni.
Edit: Fuck I'm mad with the
you’re definitely living life wrong.
Pay me a salary and I'll stop wasting my time going to work so I can go play games.
How is the combat? I bounced off of Divinity 1+2 hard because combat seemed to be too aoe focused and save scumming required, because just going in as you'd usually do would result in one or two members of my party being killed before I could even get my first turn in.
Not a fan of launchers either. But as far as they go, this one seems pretty benign. Didn't need to login to an account or anything. Plus --no-launcher (or whatever the cmd us)
It runs very well. The control defaults are not impairing the gameplay too much.
Being quite new with SD, I'm progressing slower than on PC with mouse and keyboard.
Graphics are a bit fuzzy but I didn't tweak the settings and left them as per default.
Solid. I'm playing it docked, so M&K and a 21" and not 7" screen, but the device runs it fairly well.
30-40 FPS in normal gameplay (without really having to turn the settings way down), running in native 800p upscaled to 1050p, and it really only chugs during a handful of cutscenes that have a trillion elements moving around in the background. I could probably worsen the graphics to get more FPS if I wanted, but this seems like a good balance. Very enjoyable experience so far.