• Category Archives PC
  • Dragon Age: Inquisition – DLC

    Jaws of Hakkon: This one adds a new area to explore (that looks a bit like a cross between the Arbor Wilds and Crestwood) that contains a ton of tier 3 materials (some new some old), a few new tier 4 materials, a new ability for the Inquisitor that deflects projectiles, various new schematics slightly more powerful that what’s found in the default game, Astariums to unlock, skull shards to collect, a few War Table missions and agents, more Fade Rifts to close, and new Skyhold decorations to buy. It’s got a lot of stuff and for the most part fits into the rest of the game seamlessly, with the only real oddities being the tons of loot you find when closing Rifts and there being silverite scattered around instead of stormheart. Word of advice: Don’t take Sera with you when doing the quests here, as many are spirit-related and she does not like spirits.

    The Descent: This adds a new underground area to explore that’s not really anything like anywhere else which just so happens to have two immediate annoyances. The first it that using some (any?) texture mods causes the cutscenes that happen here to freeze the game, while the second is that to actually start exploring the Deep Roads Cullen cannot be assigned to any current War Table mission. That’s because there’s a special War Table in this area you have to use to unlock areas and do missions down here, and only Cullen can be assigned to the first one (you’ll need 64 power to eventually open all the side areas). Other than the new War Table, the area has some new enemy types, new schematics more powerful than the ones in the previous DLC, and a series of mugs to collect (like the main game’s bottle collecting). It does not have any new materials though, with just the same resources that you’d find in the Storm Coast scattered around spiked with a bit of silverite.

    Trespasser: The storyline portions of Trespasser remind me quite a bit of the Witch Hunt DLC for the first Dragon Age game (i.e. a sequence of somewhat forced events that ends rather abruptly). Thankfully, there’s more to this DLC than just the epilogue it tacks onto the main game (the new ending slides aren’t even narrated). The actually useful additions are the new ability upgrades you can switch between, the new Sigil loot that can be attached to most armor, and the extremely welcome upgrades to various quest and Wartable rewards; all of which have been inserted into the main game. Also possibly of note is that the ending makes it appear the next game will take place in Tevinter.

    So, are any of these worth the $15 price tag? No, not really. Jaws of Hakkon comes the closest probably due to sheer amount of content (repetitive though it may be), but you’re best off just buying the Game of the Year edition which comes with all three (along with some weapon/armor packs) for $40.


  • Fable III

    I’m not sure why I picked this game up after so long deliberately avoiding it. Somewhat unsurprisingly, it is indeed not very good. At the moment I’ve finished the Masquerade main quest and all of the side quests from before that point (except the Demon Doors), and the annoyances have begun to outweigh the fun parts.

    The game’s first and foremost issue are the visual effects, which are badly implemented enough to cause motion sickness. To fix that you have set the Effects slider to ‘reasonable’ or lower, turn off VSync (forcing it via graphics card instead), kill the mouse smoothing and reduce its sensitivity to about a quarter or so, and then save and exit the game. After that, open up the VideoOptionsConfig.xml file in the main game directory and change all the Blur/AA/DepthOfField lines in the first section to 99, then save the file and set it to Read Only. After all that it becomes tolerable to play; though the FoV is still an issue there doesn’t seem to be an easy way to alter that.

    Once you get past the technical issues, on come the gameplay and storyline issues: Combat is simplistic and gets old fast (particularly since there are tons of enemies in many encounters), the ‘side quest’ moral choices are set to extremes that I haven’t seen since Jade Empire (sign the petition or punch the petitioner; there is no middle ground), the main quest choices (when you get any choice) are ham-fisted, the quest progression in general is incredibly heavy handed and each and every one so far railroads you into a specific course of action, and of course there’s essentially nothing to spend the tons of infinite money you get from owning businesses on (there’s no armor and weapon augments are free; I currently have 10 million gold).

    That’s a lot of negatives. So why have I played this long? Exploration and collectibles mostly, which is to say silver keys, gnomes, books, and different outfit parts. While the areas are comically oversize and don’t really have much of use to be found in them (most chest and dig spot contents appear to be somewhat random, which is a bit of an issue in some cases since they don’t respawn), running around them looking for hidden treasure is still fun… or rather it was, it’s since lost its appeal now that all the main continent locations have been explored. The quest dialogue is also sometimes amusing.

    Not sure whether to keep pushing until the post-ruler portion of the game. Might instead go back to Dragon’s Dogma and finish the only unfinished quest (collect the last 2 Bitterblack armors), or perhaps start on Trails in the Sky‘s second chapter.


  • Dragon’s Dogma

    I first played the demo for this game way back when it first came out for PS3. I didn’t get very far at the time because the controller keybinds were awful (all of them). Now that it’s finally been released for PC, and has almost-fully customizable keybinds, I picked it back up.

    At the moment I’m at the Wrym Hunt part of the main quest with most sidequests completed (working on the last Bandit one and holding off on Search Party), and somewhere around 34th level. So far it reminds me of Witcher 3 (the open world, the RPG elements, the primary/secondary weapons) crossed with a bit of Assassin’s Creed (the running/jumping/climbing on rooftops/ledges, that ‘find the medallions’ DLC content).

    The class variety is nice, and being able to switch around nearly at-will and share certain abilities between them reminds me of Final Fantasy Tactics. It’s unfortunate though that Pawns don’t have access to all 9 of them. I’ve mostly been playing as Strider/Warrior so far (to get certain Augments, while leveling as Assassin). The idea was to end up with Assassin, but I’ve been kind of annoyed by that class’ seeming lack of Magical Damage options and so may go with a dagger-focused Mystic Archer instead.

    Mage/Sorcerer honestly doesn’t seem like much fun to play so my pawn has been filling that role. Warrior, which I’ve sort of been ‘forced’ to play, also doesn’t feel very fun: The attacks are slow and it has a very one-trick-pony vibe to it. Fighter, Strider, and Assassin are pretty fun though; a mix of blitzing small creatures and climbing around on big creatures to stab them in the face (the pommel smash while climbing is the real deal-killer for Warrior) while using the bow against flyers or as a preemptive attack. Mystic Archer and Ranger are presumably similar, though heavier on the archery, while I have no idea what Mystic Warrior is like at all.

    Difficulty hasn’t been much of an issue. I wouldn’t say it’s all that different from Witcher 3‘s system, but the limited fast-travel options are a bit of a pain. Being able to zip back and forth between the main hub, Bitterblack, and the starting town is nice… but that still leaves huge swathes of territory to the north and west full of annoyances to repeatedly plow through. Once I’ve cleared an area I don’t really like being forced to re-clear it. I hear that’s not an issue in NG+ since you can buy new portable and re-usable Port Crystals, but I’m obviously not in NG+ right now and have only found two in the game world (in that cave with the old Arisen on the hillside and in Everfall).

    It’s definitely been fun up to this point, but I have the nagging sensation that it’s going to start feeling repetitious very shortly. Some brief notes:

    • Don’t sell anything other than Sour Beast-Steaks (let regular steaks sit in your inventory for a day or two).
    • Save everything else in the Inn’s storage because you never know when a quest or weapon/armor upgrade will need something.
    • The best way to quickly gain Class ranks is to kill low-experience (100 or less) creatures. Goblins and passive wildlife are both nice and plentiful.
    • You can go to Bitterblack Isle to change your class as soon as you get your main Pawn.
    • The first 100 levels provide the highest stat gains on level-up.
    • Check around for sidequests before advancing the main quest, as some of them are time-sensitive.
    • Avoid the optional Escort quests until you’ve both found the location they mention and have a portable Port Crystal to place there ahead of time.
    • Related to the above: There are actually multiple Healing Spring locations.

  • Grandia II – First Impressions

    Bad. The first impressions evoked by Grandia II‘s Anniversary Edition are not good at all.

    First, there’s the controller issue. If you’ve got an Xbox controller you have to fiddle with some windows settings to get the game to recognize it correctly, and if you don’t then x360ce is required. Next are the audio issues. There are no volume settings. None. There is no way to raise/lower the volume of the BGM, effects, or voices either individually or all at once (besides opening up and re-mixing the .ogg files in a sound editor). This would be bad enough on its own, but ends up compounded by the fact that the effects are louder than the music which is in turn louder than the voices.

    What else is bad? The camera. While you can rotate the camera at will, you cannot manually zoom in or out. That appears to happen at random, with the default being ‘zoomed in as close as possible’. And speaking of things that you don’t have control over, here’s another: Storyline dialog. You can’t make it appear/scroll faster. Think ‘unskippable cutscenes’ except the scenes take place in the normal game field.

    One positive thing I can say about it is that it gives you the option to use the Japanese voices… but that’s all so far. Well, I guess I can also say that the battle system seems to be slightly interesting. Time will tell I suppose, though if either the storyline or characters aren’t at least decent I don’t think I’m going to get very far with this one.


  • Tales of Zestiria – Conclusion

    Unfortunately, the main storyline never gets any better. It actually gets worse as it progresses and the inconsistencies in the timeline start to really make themselves known (the dragon-creation segment and final confrontation are both pretty good though). The exploration aspects also start to lose their luster around the point you reach the desert area, making the final stretch something of a slog.

    Note that if you plan on doing a NG+ it would be a good idea to get all the Lords of the Land up to level 11 or so (the increased treasure rarity boon) so that you have enough Grade available to cover all the item/skill/stat importation options and have a decent amount left over for some enhancements.

    As for the Alisha DLC… well, it mostly consists of a lengthy ruin exploration (12 floors) that would be completely insufferable were it not for the Increased Movement Speed Boon. It’s still pretty annoying and the experience is capped off with a gimmicky boss fight where you have to kill both creatures at the same time to win. Storyline-wise it’s less an epilogue and more a continuation, seeing as how it goes and resurrects someone only to leave their plot-thread dangling with a ‘to be continued’. At least the character interactions it contains are pretty good.


  • Tales of Zestiria – Delayed Impressions

    Having now cleared the miasma from the second town I may have finally settled into a decent control scheme. Keyboard/mouse was a complete failure it turns out, so I ended up going with Y -> Merge, B -> Hidden/Seraph Arte, A -> Arte, X -> Blast, L1 -> Target Change, and R1 -> Guard. I also figured out why the system wasn’t clicking: I was treating it like an action game where each button press immediately executes an action. That’s not how it works. Instead, each button press queues up an action. That’s an important distinction. If the game would only stop arbitrarily switching around my battle party for plot-required battles the combat system might actually become enjoyable.

    Unrelated to combat, the storyline and cutscenes are still a bit of a problem. The former is almost painfully straight-forward (if a bit on the dark side) while the latter tend to be filled with these weird delays between character interactions that throw everything off. At least the characters themselves are still almost all enjoyable (the exception being that seraph that shoots himself in the head).

    Exploration is still a lot of fun as well, and there’s even some more things to collect now (Normins). Hell, even the equipment fusing system has become more or less transparent with time and experience. Now if only the available types of equipment were clear upgrades instead of Stat upgrades combined with different base abilities. In a sane game Void Rings and Fire Rings (for example) would both give the same bonus to magic defense while having different inherent abilities… yet here the Fire Ring not only gives a higher defense bonus, but it gives a magic attack bonus as well. But you can’t just whimsically replace the Void Ring with the Fire Ring because one resists non-element attacks and the other resists fire attacks. It’s annoying.


  • Tales of Zestiria – Initial Impressions

    Just started playing this recently. The last Tales game I played before this was either Xillia 1 or Graces f, neither of which I had trouble playing, and while I feel the combat here is reminiscent of Xillia… for some reason it’s just not clicking at all. The battles aren’t hard by any stretch of the imagination (on Moderate difficulty) but they consist primarily of button-mashing the same four/five attacks rather than using any actual strategy. It may be the control scheme that’s the problem.

    The equipment fusion system is also causing some consternation, as it’s pretty damn opaque regarding how the various attached skills mutate. The human/seraph fusion system on the other hand is pretty straight-forward, and it even has the benefit of looking great. Some other positives would be the scenic environments, semi-seamless battle transitions, and staple character interaction skits. Another negative would be the way your starting combo points steadily decrease as you fight battles, making visiting Inns to restore them something of a necessity. I’ve never been fond of rest mechanics and it’s no different here even though there seems to be some things that can only be unlocked by frequent Inn visits.

    If I can figure out a more natural control scheme this game just might end up being a great exploration time-sink. Maybe I’ll try Keyboard+Mouse out, since the primary issue here is being able to press four separate buttons (Arte/Hidden Arte/Blast/Guard) all more or less simultaneously (while still being able to move the camera around), which a controller can’t easily accommodate.


  • Gaming Update

    I posted these elsewhere, starting way back on July 23, but may as well cross-post here for consolidation purposes and ease-of-access:

     


     

    Just started playing Ys Chronicles in preparation for watching Minna Atsumare! Falcom Gakuen. It was cheap on GOG a while back so I thought “Why not?”.

    Looks very good. Very modern, quite Anime. We’ll see how the gameplay is.

     


     

    Ys Chronicles‘ gameplay is a little tricky. Having to run into the enemy at just the right angle is kind of a pain. Normal map monsters seem to be weak enough that this isn’t really much of an issue, but boss fights (based on the one boss I’ve encountered so far) appear to be bullshit.

    The boss itself wasn’t very strong, but the area you have to fight him in is full of flaming death that’s pretty much impossible to avoid if you want to hit him. So the fight basically boiled down to hoping my attacks would kill him before the flames killed me (since healing is limited while in battle).

    Hopefully most boss fights aren’t like that, as Touhou-like frame-based sprite-dodging is not my forté. The second boss was a lot easier at least; no environmental hazards to worry about.

     


     

    Remaining Ys I Bosses: The vampire is incredibly annoying, the mantis is a pushover, the molten rock thing is a pain, the twin heads start out hard but quickly become simple, and the final boss is bullet hell incarnate. 30 or so minutes of thumb-bruising flailing about to get just the right sequence of hits in.

    That 25-floor tower is also just plain tedious, what with the backtracking and the fact that you’ve almost certainly hit max level before even entering it. At least the floors are small.

    Such relief now that that’s over. On to Ys II.

     


     

    Ys II is far better balanced than the prequel.

    – Normal map enemies are more deadly and stay that way significantly longer, meaning that even with 6 levels on them they can kill you if you’re especially careless.
    – Bosses aren’t particularly annoying and can be beat without having to have excessive twitch-gamer skills.
    – The level cap is much higher and won’t be reached until nearly the very end of the game, and only then with time spent grinding. So killing things never feels useless.
    – The ending credits scroll faster and there’s stuff going on in the background so that watching them no longer seems like a punishment for winning.

    With that duology now out of the way, I think I’m going to move on to Suikoden IV next. Already completed III and V some time ago, but had skipped IV due to some of the criticisms leveled against it (mainly reduced party size & grindy travel). Time to see how accurate those complaints are.

    Update: Protagonist is ugly and the ship controls are awful. Annoying.

     


     

    Finished Suikoden IV. It was… not so great really. Okayish I guess, but rather small/short, annoying with all the random encounters, and the ending is kind of spontaneous.

    Going to try Suikoden Tactics now (which appears to effectively be a storyline sequel to Suikoden IV) before maybe moving on to Phantom Brave.

     


     

    So I’m reading this FAQ covering Suikoden Tactics, and in the introduction it goes on about how this is one of the easier sRPGs to get into. Said it’s easier than Final Fantasy Tactics and less complex than Disgaea.

    Less complex than Disgaea I will give it, but it does not seem to be easier than FFT. There’s tons of enemies on the maps, magic points can’t be recovered in battle and there don’t seem to be any infinite-use active abilities, the equivalent of FFT‘s Job Propositions require certain (hidden) character attribute scores in order to succeed, neither character class nor weapon type can be changed, there’s the constant threat of environmental terrain hazards, and you don’t get immediate access to any re-visitable training maps.

    It gives me a sort of Tactics Ogre vibe really. A less complex Tactics Ogre. And that relative lack of complexity is what actually makes it harder… since you have less methods available to you to accomplish your goals.

     


     

    Suikoden Tactics now finished, it gets quite a bit easier once you get access to the repeatable ‘Hunt Monsters’ maps. You can pretty quickly outlevel the storyline enemies by just doing a couple of those and the “Gather # Items” quests. At that point the lack of variety in the combat abilities really starts to bite, as the vast majority of the characters are interchangeable. The plot developments aren’t anything all that exciting either… though the ending does contain a nice reveal.

    Suikoden Tierkreis is up next, which will complete the franchise (the newer Gensou ones for the PSP have not been translated, and so I’m not counting them).

     


     

    Finished Tierkreis a bit earlier today. It’s surprisingly robust for being on a handheld, and fits in with the other Suikoden games well (bad voice acting and all). The difficulty level is pretty low overall, though things got a bit dicey with the final boss when it decided to use its ultimate attack 3 times in a row.

    Not sure what’s going to be next. Possibly Titan Quest, but I just grabbed Heroes of Might and Magic IIIV plus Chronicles from the GOG Ubisoft sale a little while ago and so may go with them instead. Of those four I’ve only played V before, long ago when it first came out, but abandoned it on the final level (which was unnecessarily complex).

     


     

    Decided to go with neither and play through the Quest for Glory series (which was picked up at the GOG summer sale) instead. Had only played/completed the 5th installment before.

     


     

    QfG 1-3 complete, but ended up stalled starting 4. Why? Because of the Might and Magic Humble Bundle, which included a starter set for Duel of Champions (which is sort of like a more restrictive Magic: the Gathering Online). Played it quite a bit back in the day and had around 3000 cards before losing interest. Now there are 4 completely new sets and tons of new achievements to unlock (achievements grant free in-game money, cards, and packs) so I’m getting back into it.

    Referral link for that is: JKAYGA.

     



  • 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.