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kierun

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Everything posted by kierun

  1. I tired a few of those. Ended up using the LOC ones and a few custom godlike.
  2. Thanks guys. That's what I have done and added a post to that thread.
  3. Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn

  4. Not sure if those were there before or not but I found those images and converted them to the right size for portraits.
  5. Does anyone know where I could find some portraits for fire godlikes?
  6. Yeah, not convinced by the as low as they will get myself. I followed a cipher build from this very forum and they were keen on it. I tried, it's not too bad. ☺
  7. About two years ago, I played Pillars Of Eternity, just as it came out. I did not get very far: I kept dying, the mechanics were obscure, the quests confusing. So I stopped playing. I started again. I am glad I did: the patches have improved the game massively. Send this "guide" to some friends who thought it was nice so here it is: Anything I missed or that is inaccurate? Please let me know. Thus, have some Pillars of Eternity advise… In no order whatsoever. Character build is a min/max exercise. The above guide is good at giving you ideas. Personally, I play ciphers. If I had to chose another class, I'd go Wizard or Paladin. Chanter sounds great but all you do is chant… So, pick races and background that give you bonus to your class. Most state tests are 12+, 16+, and 18+ so getting as many things at 16 is a plus. Don't hesitate to dump state(s) to 3. Look at your companions, you need the following three as they are recurring in the next game: Eder, Aloph, and Pallegina. The first two, are nearly your first companions. The last one, you get after Act I. There are no quest markers but every journal entry for the quest tells you where to go. Read lore. It is a very rich world and you'll get quickly lost without it. All your items can be enchanted. This is the way to True Power. So, look at it all and get the basic ingredients -- even if it means buying them. You can do that at any time from the equipment screen: select an item, it's at the bottom of the description. Feel free to buy magical gear if you have spare cash. I prefer to buy ingredients and enchant. Find/buy raw food, cook it, and use it as a way to get massive bonus. There is a cook book. Literally, a cook book! Fill in your quick use slots with stuff to use during combat. You can set all party members to be AI controller. This is nice if you want to just concentrate on what your character is doing. AI does a good job. In fact, you could put all your party (not just the NPCs) as AI controlled and not worry about combat at all. I do not recommend that, but each to its own. In combat, I tend to concentrate on the biggest threat first and mush it. Then, back to the biggest threat left and so on. You can play combat at half speed as well, giving you more time to think. Or you know, pause it? Camping supplies allow you to regenerate abilities (eight hours sleep) and you can buy a few but you will find some as random loot. Always have lock picking sets, crow bars, and grappling hooks. ALWAYS. You can set a pattern in which your party travel: do so. Make sure the tanks are in the front, casters at the back, and supporter in the middle. You can set two: one for outside, one for inside. Some dialogue will have a marker (like "[Diplomat]" or "[Passionate]" or …) at the end. It is well worth picking the same one (or two) over and over again. You build up a reputation using those and get more out of people. Sneak mode is great but slow but you can speed time up. In sneak mode, you can detect traps and hidden things. Use fast mode to travel from A to B when you know there is nothing to fear. There is no level scaling so if you are getting mushed into a thine paste, you are not high level enough. Go back and do more stuff. You earn XPs by doing quests and exploring, not killing monsters. You make money by finishing quests, raiding everything not nailed down, and selling loot. The latter gets massive but your "treasure chest" is accessible form anywhere so you can just keep piling it and sell it later. In addition, your keep generate taxes revenue every so often although you need some of that to pay for the guards that you eventually get there. On the first map, head southwards and explore things there: you get a gun. Sell it, it is useless unless you play a cipher and can enchant it. In fact, sell as much stuff as you can before doing quest things -- hint: it's to the west. When getting to the first first town, avoid talking to anyone or exploring. In the first town, head to the smith (get quests, sell items), then the inn. You get Aloth (the tourette syndrome mage). In the inn, hire a companion (cheap!) then sleep. Who should you hire? Depends on where your weakness lie. They will level with you and can be left at your keep to protect it. This is the cheapest you will EVER get companions. When you wake up, head to the tree again: talk to the dead dwarf and then Eder (the cheerful fighter). Explore Vale to get a few more easy quests: Do them. Now, head back the way you came and explore: Get XPs and levels. You can explore the ruined temple, it is a nice dungeon and has lots of nice stuff inside. However, I would wait till you get Durance and Kana along with your keep. It will make it easier. On the other hand, finding your keep will be harder. Then head to your keep: you will recruit Durance (the mad priest) and Kana (the joyful chanter). Now, you should have a full party. Once you have you keep, start building! Make sure your value and armour are close to each other or you will lose a lot of taxes. I like to keep the armour over the value. Go back to the smith in Vale and sell stuff. From now on, you should have money coming out of your arse. The endless path is a great way to make money fast. However, at one point you will get pounded into thine dust. This is your clue that you are not high level enough. Go off, do other things, and come back later. This is by design! That should get you started. ☺
  8. I like the way quests were presented in Witcher 2. You have the objectives clearly defined but the achieved ones are in term of a blade that a bard might tell. It makes for a good and impressive read when you try to remember what you did three weeks ago.
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