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#1 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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To me, the Forgotten Realms games, like Baldur's Gate and Neverwinter Nights, is some of the best role playing games ever created. Especially Neverwinter Nights which is just amazing. If you havn't played any of theese, you should and if you have, what do you think of them?
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#2 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Age: 25
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Love them as well, except for the rigiddity of story lines, and at least in the earlier ones, there was no randomized items and very few random encounters, which meant you always got exactly the same items, which further meant that with a little fore knowledge, you could create a character specifically for the challenges you knew you would face and to use the items you knew you would get.
For instance, you could safely design a melee fighter with only 13 strength and 18 -15 everything else, because you knew once you beat the first dungeon you coul buy a belt that would put your strength up to 19 anyway. Neverwinter is much better in this respect, mostly because of the new rules which are much nicer, except my problem with it was that it scaled enemies to your level, but fighter types gained less experience due to thier higher HD rating, so paladins and rangers were horribly useless because you could never level them, so you had to use the NPCs, which was a further drain on your exp, whereas something like a fighter bard gained wicked exp but could gain almost all the bonuses of a fighter of the same level, but be 3 or 4 levels up. Basically, it was way way too hard to play the games with some hero classes but way to easy with others, still, very fun regardless.
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"The word rustic doesn’t even begin to satisfy the requirements of an adjective used to describe this town. Rustic is a looming butressed cathedral to this town’s Stone Henge. Rustic is the ocean to this town’s mud puddle. Simply put, rustic is a word inadequate to describe the squalour." Get more like this just by clicking on this link. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2007
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To be specific, I always found those particular games brilliant not because of the Forgotten Realms setting (which I've always found to be a frankly dull and tacky world), but because of the system at it's core; the Dungeons and Dragons Ruleset V2.
V3 is just too easy to manipulate, and it's far to easy to overpower yourself in the process.
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#5 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
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Age: 25
Posts: 763
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Yeah but you could overpower yourself in BG2 just as easilly. You just had to know what Items you would get. Chaotic evil Kensai with the soul reaver for instance, was absolutely invincible. You get +8 attack damage, +4 speed (So like 7 attacks per turn or something stupid like that) and a culmulative -2 dex penalty each hit.
Pair that with some of the magic items that give you positive buffs, like the haste boots. You're up to 8 attacks a turn, and the blury stuff, and you can basically 3 hit a dragon in less than a turn. Alternatively, take an undead hunter and use Yoshimo's special traps to kill the red dragon when you're still level 10 and grab the corsoramir, which dispels magic on each hit making you have the power of all the special paladins. So you can now use dispel magic inately, attack for +5, dispel on hit and are immune to hold charm and level drain.
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"The word rustic doesn’t even begin to satisfy the requirements of an adjective used to describe this town. Rustic is a looming butressed cathedral to this town’s Stone Henge. Rustic is the ocean to this town’s mud puddle. Simply put, rustic is a word inadequate to describe the squalour." Get more like this just by clicking on this link. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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I loved Neverwinter Nights and Baldur's Gate. This probably stems from my childhood playing Dn'D though. The fun of creating characters, sending them off to slay enemies and find treasures and to be involved in adventures of all kinds. The battle system is a wonky at times but the sheer fun of exploration and discovery is what made them shine for me.
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For they could not love you, but still your love was true
And when no hope was left in sight, on that starry starry night You took your life as lovers often do, But I could have told you, Vincent, This world was never meant for one as beautiful as you Vincent-by Don Mclean PSBEYOND |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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I am endlessly replaying the Baldurs Gate trilogy on PC. Throne of Bhaal was a fitting ending for the storyline of your character. With the various mods you can get on the Net- new characters, areas, missions etc- its an amazing series that can offer something different each time you go back to it. Oh how i wish they would do a Baldurs Gate 3...xD
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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You never played the PC Baldurs Games? They are so much better than the console. Plus you could probably pick up the trilogy for next to nothing now...xD
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