Everything posted by Endrosz
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I figured it out... Why RPGs seem to be going down hill.
This. Sturgeon's 2nd Law applies everywhere ('90% of everything is crud').
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Suggestions-questions from nearest tavern
About 7: I think that qualifies in that category. There will be probably some more, not just this one. Scripted interactions also offer occasionally class-specific solutions.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
As we look around, mostly at the insistence of Eper, who can't believe this is the entirety of the loot, we do find something else. An ornate brass bottle, stuck into a hole in the wall. Szilva: -- We shouldn't... Eper: -- We should! *opens the bottle* Alma: -- No, we're not vampires. Samir Ahwahl: -- You don't mind me testing this with the usual methods? Barack: -- I... I faint when I smell garlic, it's such a terrible smell... Szilva: -- There is a silver mirror over there, feel free to test our mirror images. Samir Ahwahl: -- I can sense you're telling the truth. Then I must return to my resting place. Only call me if there's a vampire present, otherwise, I might get angry. You really shouldn't make me angry. There is nothing left to do loot here. We decide that the rumor about the dragon lair is worth checking out. The pyramid is surely nonsense. As we travel towards the Dragonspine Mountains, we are attacked by tiny creatures. This is honestly the first quickling encounter of my life. I've never seen these mobs before! I checked the Journal, and they're listed there. Random encounter only, because no scripted battle in the game has them. The quicklings are worth a lot of XP because they carry gems as loot... LOL. Eper: -- I changed my mind. We should look for the lair of these talking flies instead of the dragon's. Good loot, lot less trouble. Barack: -- But they're soooo cuuuuuuuuuute. How could you all hurt them! Alma: -- Because they were killing us? They were really hard to hit, fluttering around so fast. And packed a decent punch, too, I didn't expect those little swords to hurt so badly! Citrom: -- Ma-ma-magic missile, I love you so much. We reach the lower range of the mountains. We expected a long search, but just following the river upwards... Narancs: -- It's definitely a silver dragon. We should approach with cautious optimism. Eper: -- Silver or proudly pink, I don't care, I'm here for the shinies. Citrom: -- Unless it used an illusion to disguise itself as a silver dragon. I would do that if I were a smart evil dragon... Narancs: -- Ha-ha, very funny. Citrom: -- You think I'm kidding? Your thinking is all textbook. One day, you're going to die whispering "but this is not supposed to happen" with your last breath... Alma: -- Am I the only one worried about entering? Hello, we're not little kids, our parents telling us a nice fairy-tale about how the poor farmer's boy defeated the mighty dragon! This is for real! After a hot debate, the lure of adventure wins out. We're greeted by a magic mouth, which bellows out a greeting by Diogenes. It's friendly this far. We are asked to stare our intent. Eper: -- We should ask for a bit of monetary help. We're killing hordes of monsters left and right, which is surely appreciated by an honorable silver dragon, and there are certain expenses, et cetera. Alma: -- We'll ask for advice. Whomever this Boss is, who runs the show from Valjevo Castle, he must be powerful. Dragons know everything that's happening around the lair. Been there, done that. Here's the bottle, o wise Diogenes. It's a brass bottle, by the way, although we understand why you remember it as silver. Silver is really cool, obviously, no doubt. We already know the business of that efreet, but the info about the graveyard is welcome. We'll be packing a Deluxe Vampire Killer Kit (complete with stakes, garlic, holy water) when we go there.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 8: It's Raining Kobolds & Interview With the Vampire-Killer The mages finally hit level 5. We already have 2 copies of Fireball on scrolls, and one Blink. I chose Haste for both of them, but it was wasteful. There is Haste on scrolls later, for one. But the real bummer is that Haste ages the recipient by 1 year in ADnD. IE games replaced aging with fatigue (that's a non-permanent effect), but the GB engine has it. And as your characters age, first age modifiers kick in, then your characters die of old age. Since there are a lot of battles ahead us in the saga, Haste will be actually a very limited-use spell. Now that we have Fireball, the game has changed again. Our game, that is. In the eternal words of Deekin Scalesinger, kobold bard extraordinaire: Fireball. Fireball, fireball. Nice and warm. Then it burns And kills you all. Fireball. 5th level also gives access to Invisibility 10' Radius, Lightning Bolt, Protection From Evil 10' Radius, Slow, all good stuff. Lightning Bolt deserves special mention: they 'rebound' on walls, and travel backwards until their 'length' runs out. Against some strong mobs and bosses this comes in really handy, to hit them twice with the same LB. Also, a good damage spell against fire-resistant mobs like salamanders. Slow is great because it's AoE, foe-only, and no mobs are resistant against it (except for general spell resistance). We don't have all of this yet, but our goal is to have at least one mage have each of these in their spellbooks. There is no magic shop in the game, we can only learn what we find on scrolls and select on level-ups. Our latest missions from the Council are to deny allies to the Boss. One is a tribe of nomads on the plains, the other a tribe of kobolds inhabiting a cavern system. We leave the city to the east this time, going across the Stojanow River, and then head north, towards the mountains. To our surprise, the nomads are not hostile. The chieftain greets us. Barack: -- I only eat healthy foods, a special paleo-vegan-glutenfree diet. Do you have shade-grown spinach? Alma: -- Don't mind her. We're honored to be your guests. Narancs: -- Am I supposed to be amused by half-naked primitives hitting each other? Citrom: -- Mmmm, I like what I see. It doesn't matter what they do, as long as it showcases their shapely, muscular, sweaty body... Szilva: -- I will not partake in filthy debaucheries. Instead, I will use my rhetorical skill to guide these heathens towards an enlightened lifestyle. I'm sure that I'll find at least some who will listen to my words of wisdom. Eper: -- *slaps Szilva* SHUT UP! DRINK! Szilva: -- That is... that is... Eper: -- THAT IS MY ADVICE! Szilva: -- *casts Hold Person, Eper is frozen in motion, falls over* Enjoy the party... We learn that the kobold tribe's lair is to the east. We also learn that there is a pyramid to the west, on an island in the Stojanow river. A pyramid? Like, a dead pharaoh's monument, on an island? We file it away as drunken rambling, but still note down the directions. And apparently, there is a dragon lair to the northwest, up in the Dragonspine Mountains. Narancs: -- What kind of dragon? Metallic or colored? Chieftain: -- I've only seen it flying overhead. It was white, I think, but it was snowing heavily, and kind of hard to tell. Might have been silvery. Eper: -- What does it matter? Loot is loot, and dragon hoards always have the best loot. Narancs: -- Your ignorance is only heightened by drinks. Metallic dragons are honorable and only attack when provoked, while colored dragons are violent, cruel and insidious, not to be trusted even if they don't attack on sight. Eper: -- So? The only difference I see is that Alma will feel bad about looting a metallic one's hoard. Alma: -- Dragons eat bragging drunkards like you for breakfast, as an appetizer. Eper: -- DRAGON, I WILL KILL YOU AND TAKE ALL YOUR TREASURE, YOU HEAR ME! Alma: -- *bashes Eper in the back of his head, who collapses on the table* That's enough for today. Another surprise comes when the chieftain asks us a favor. It's kind of flattering that they threw a feast to buy our help... Szilva: -- Our mission was to ensure that the nomad's don't join forces with the Boss. That's already taken care of. Alma: -- Nomads change their minds easily. But if we help in a big way, their loremasters will remember it, and a bond with the city-folk will be formed, turning them into long-term allies. That's worth some effort -- and since that effort is kicking kobold asses, which we have already mastered... The next day we fight three groups of kobolds, back to back, each of them number around 40-50. One of the most grating part of the game, since the kobolds are all equipped with shortbows, and I have to watch the slow pew-pew animation and hear the 'pew-pew' sound effect constantly. They're spread out in a 2-3 deep line, so we can only fireball about 1/3 of a wave at once. We have (unneeded) nomad allies on our side, also equipped with bows, which makes the battle an even bigger pain in the ass. As the last wave of kobolds approaches, the chieftain apparently loses his mind Flee? As in, run away? From kobolds? Dude, how did you become chieftain of this tribe? After the battle, we go straight east. Bigger is better, we suspect the larger entrance leads to a monster's lair. We are right! A single wyvern is no challenge at this point. A six-pack, maybe. As we enter the kobold cave from the wyvern's lair, we walk into an ambush, where they hit us with nets. These nets are bugged, the movement reduction (to 2 tiles!) remains until I remove the characters from the party in the Training Hall, and then re-add them. Extremely annoying, thankfully, this is the only place in the game with this mechanic. We find a prison, but unlike other prisons, the prisoner here already freed herself. Princess Fatima: -- Are you here to kill the kobold king? That was my mission, too, but I got captured. Sneaky bastards, with their pits, nets, and poisoned darts. Alma: -- They have a king? We're on a mission from Phlan. We might negotiate a deal with this king. Princes Fatima: -- Fat chance, there are envoys here from Valjevo Castle. They've already bought him. Eper: -- More enemies, more loot. Let's go and kill them all. Princess Fatima: -- Wait, will you allow me to join you? I'm quite capable, as you can see. Alma: -- You're welcome to join. You can help me keep these morons in check. We burst into the "throne room". The envoys recognize us, which is kind of cool: This is the first multi-part battle in the Pools saga. The designer who thought of having multi-part battles was later asked to do an optional extra tough challenge in Pools of Darkness, as I learned over at the TSI forums. That challenge, Dave's Challenge... there are no words for it. But I'm skipping ahead. This one is not difficult, if you conserve a few spells for the last part. 4 trolls plus kobolds in the first part. Then some unavoidable damage: Narancs: -- I want to learn the Summon Ballista spell, too! 6 wild boars plus kobolds in the second part, and in the final battle: The envoys are 8th level fighters with plate mail +1, two-handed sword +2, wand of magic missile. But there only two of them, and we have sooo many Hold Persons (there was no reason to use them in the previous parts). And we still have a Fireball and a Stinking Cloud left for the rest. This multi-part battle could've been challenging, it was almost there. The cowardly king escapes from the battle, but as we chase him into his personal quarters... Barack: -- Hahaha! Poetic justice, nyanyanya! *almost falls into the pit as she waves her arms* Eper: -- Robbed me of the deed. Bastard. Citrom: -- Maybe this was his secret pleasure pit, only forgot the safety protocols? We find the a big pile of treasure, the result of years of pillaging. Eper: -- WHAT IS THIS?!? Alma: -- The treasure of the kobold king. Eper: -- Oh, I don't know which one to get excited about! Look at these bone chains! And these rotting rugs, so valuable! And this plain silver brooch, almost worth an entire platinum piece! Narancs: -- *silently tucks away the scrolls he found*
- Next Obsidian Kickstarter
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 7: Maniac Mansions North of New Phlan, across the Bay of Phlan, lies the wealthy district. What's left of it, anyway. But they're still waterfront property! We have two reasons to go there. One, another guild of thieves is operating out of Kovel Mansion, which is a walled estate of a powerful family of days past. The Council is paying for their removal. Two, we heard in the Baneite shrine at Podol Plaza that they converted another large mansion in this area into a Temple of Bane, and that is where High Priest Mace resides. Kovel Mansion is in the north. It is a very large estate, with double (locked) doors at the single entrance. There are no guards posted in the entry hall. Entering a side room... This is repeated in about half of the rooms until the mansion is cleared of the guild's presence. The other half of the rooms has a different surprise: In one of the room, after an annoying amount of backstabs and traps, we find a pile of treasure. ...Or is it? Cloaks and daggers are inadequate against us. (2nd edition backstabbing is much more limited than 3rd edition sneak attacks). In one room, we find a number of caskets. All trapped and locked. Is this a test course for our thief? He gets an A+, and they elect him as the new leader? Around the mansion, we find maps of a large castle. There is only one castle around here, Valjevo Castle, which is a kind of headquarters for the monster army. These maps will be handy later. We stumble upon a torture scene. We save the old thief, and he gives us a piece of paper with neatly organized information on it, with lines like: And many more, each item lists the credibility as well. Actually, this information is more valuable than a lot of loot we found. These thieves wanted to rob the castle, and they were doing a great job of collecting intel. We almost -- almost! -- want to thank them for the efforts. Entering a storage room, we find our biggest haul so far. TAPESTRIES!!!!! Barack: -- I'm going to hang that one in my room! Oh, those pea****s are so beatifully woven! Szilva: -- Are how will you carry it home? In case you hadn't noticed, we're being assaulted constantly by these scoundrels. Can you fight with a rolled-up tapestry swung over your shoulder? Barack: -- I was thinking that maybe... One the strong men in our group would carry it for me. Szilva: -- That doesn't change the problem, only shifts it to someone else. Besides, you're no less strong than me, and stronger than Eper or Narancs. Remember the arm wrestling we did on our first day in Phlan? Barack: -- I... must... have... that... tapestry. I know! I'll be using it as a weapon to knock them off their feet, by swinging around! Everyone: -- *silence* This is the final battle, no more hit-and-runs, a large group of the guild, led by 6th level thieves. They're human, susceptible to Sleep and Stinking Cloud, say no more. After the battle, we find even more organized information. We learn a lot about the lords of New Phlan, but no real dirt. It seems that Councilman Cadorna indeed has a secret agenda, but it's not clear what it is. Szilva: -- Told you so. Alma: -- Rumor is rumor, fact is fact. We venture south, into the middle of the once-wealthy district. We find the odd piece of jewelry here and there, and destory a group of ogres and other inhumans lording over the area. Those black hands reminds us that's we're near the Temple of Bane. We encounter a patrol of Baneite orcs, and take their symbols. Might be useful to pass as believers. Is this the good touch or the bad touch? (in whispered voices) Barack: -- I'm not letting an orc feel me up! Why are we not killing them already? Citrom: -- Ssh, sister, you haven't tried any kinky stuff yet? We have an Orcs and Medusas party every Thursday night. Want an invite? We enter the temple, our symbols make the old blind orc think we're believers. Luckily, there was no quiz. Um, loot? Why is there no loot here? It took so much effort to get here! That makes us... angry. Altar is destroyed. High Priest Mace himself appears, along with a host of orc. Lots of archers. Mace carried a Mace +3, which is now in Szilva's hands. After the battle, we search around the temple, and find the missing loot, mostly scrolls and +1 weapons, some potions, and a wand of paralyzation. We caught the scent of this loot back at Podol Plaza, and our perseverance paid off. To boldly go where no adventurer ever looted before!
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
A large chunk of the credit goes to Jim Ward, who wrote the game as a tabletop adventure first. I'm just walking around in his fantasy, and enjoying myself. I accept the rest of the praise. He was a member of the original Dungeons and Dragons group, a friend of Gary Gygax. Became creator of the first sci-fi role-playing game, Metamorphosis Alpha.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 6: To Cheat or Not to Cheat It costs 2000 gold to get Szilva back in shape. The wondrous gifts of the gods, delivered by their faithful servants! For a large fee, of course. Now that we have intel on the Textile House, time to tackle that special mission for Councilman Cadorna, finding his family's hidden strongbox and possibly the servant sent to retrieve it. The Textile House is on the other side old Old Phlan, south of Podol Plaza. Taking a boat to the western reach of the old city will be faster. Ah, the great outdoors! Higher levels monsters, more XP, better loot! This is the first time we leave the city since we got off that boat a few weeks ago. As soon as we enter the Textile House area, we find another well that seems to be used by people for living. Is this a regional custom around the Moonsea? Everyone looks at Eper. Eper: -- What? It says "Thieves only". I'm not a thief. And even if I were a thief, I wouldn't want to mingle with others whom I don't know. No honor among thieves, you must've heard that one before. Barack: -- Oh Eper, I've seen how agile you are, when you climbed down Kuto's Well to show us how it's done. Surely this climb isn't a big challenge for a capable man like you! Eper: -- When you put it that way... Okay, just this one time. But it better be worth the risk. We find a man named Restal, claims to be the leader of a guild of thieves. He's well informed, too: Alma: -- Taking anything from that box is stealing. Eper: -- We didn't give back what Norris stole from other people. We've taken everything from Sokal Keep, that was city property, strictly speaking. We get it, we keep it, simple. Alma: -- This is different. We're working for that man, it's his family's property. Szilva: -- I've heard a lot of rumors about this Cadorna. They say he's got a secret agenda, wants to replace Lord Eberhard as Head of the Council. Alma: -- And you always believe rumors? And it would still be stealing, even if Cadorna has certain ambitions. Citrom: -- I met a girl who works in one of the taverns who's also a goth. We became really good friends, sharing everything. Just two days ago, after hearing that we were summoned by Cadorna, she told me a horrible story, with more tears and sobbing than words. Cadorna... took advantage of her when she was a young girl. I didn't want to share this with you. But it happened, I believe her. To tell you the truth, I already set my mind on taking stuff from that box, even before we met with this Restal. I was... uh... talking with Eper about it. Alma: -- Behind my back? This is getting richer by the minute. Alma: -- ... Alma: -- ... Alma: -- We will deliver an empty box. With our deepest regrets that someone, somehow stole its content. Still, this offer from Restal, it's suspicious. I don't trust them. Eper: -- Well, they have a means to deal with the seal on the box, leaving no sign of tampering. They know more about that box than we do, admit it, and shared their knowledge. Alma: -- Not ten minutes ago, you were all 'no honor among thieves'. And now you're advocating for them? Eper: -- There is an old buddy of mine among them, we chatted a bit while you were talking with Restal. It's just business, nothing more, nothing less. They want half of what's inside, it's not free. I wouldn't believe their offer if it came cheap or free. Alma: -- My head hurts. I like it better when we're surrounded by greenskins or undead. It's much more simple. Szilva: -- You wanted to be the leader. You got exactly that. We're blindfolded and led through a maze of tunnels below the Textile House, emerging from another well inside the compund. We avoided the guards at the gate, and no alarm is ringing. We see a building converted to a temple of Bane to the west. These monsters, they're really feeling at home here, don't they? We shall change that very soon. It's the who-wins-initiative dance. Grishnak is faster, and holds 3 persons of our party, half of them. One of them is Narancs, who was casting Stinking Cloud, but couldn't finish it. The remaining members still manage to beat everyone into a bloody pulp -- one cleric is not enough stop us, and the greenskins are only good as meat shields at this point. The loot is sweet: -- A necklace of missiles, to be used by Eper in tough battles. -- Magic user scrolls with various spells, including Fireball. We're not level 5 yet, but it's still nice to have it on parchment. Comforting. -- Another bracers, both mages now have a measure of protection. -- And a brass key. Goind deeper into the temple, we find a muscular man in chains. The key opens his chains, and we learn that he's the servant of Cadorna we were told about. We let him join our party: Great chest and abs, Skullcrusher. Since you look so great naked, you don't mind that we don't have an armor for you in our backpacks? Following the advice of Skullcrusher, we find the hidden room with the ogre chief. The battle is another joke. A single ogre plus a bunch of greenskins? We fought entire patrols of ogres outside the city. We take the box, untouched. On the way back to the thieves's hideout, we're assaulted by various deadly creatures. Poisonus frogs and scorpions, and finally... ghouls, led by a wight! This battle costs another reload. The ghouls can paralyze, the wight drains levels, they have some decent THAC0, and both Sleep and Stinking Cloud are useless against them. I find great irony in that the random encounters of the Textile House are much more dangerous than the boss battle. Not the only place with this setup in the Gold Box games, mind you. Back in the hideout, a guilty pleasure: Some gems and jewelry and art pieces, and... ... Gauntlets of Ogre Power! We couldn't let the evil, nasty Councilman Cadorna have this, could we? Yes, this precious belongs to us, and no one else. Going back by boat, as soon as we leave the docks, we're asked to present the box. Restal's experts have done a fabulous job with the seal, nobody suspects a thing. Oh, we would pay to see the looks on Cadorna's face when he opens the box... Skullcrusher leaves the party, and thanks for saving his life. Citrom: -- Skullcrusher, I spend the evenings in the Headless Goblin. I wouldn't mind if you dropped by. You've got such a presence! *can't stop staring at his chest ever since she's seen him* Skullcrusher: -- Just like you, my lady, with your fine black displacer beast-skin boots.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 5: Silence of the Tomes One of the new commissions is to do something about the undead problem in Valhingen Graveyard. And they're even offering equipment, neat: We get a two-handed sword with special enchantment against undead. It's definitely useful, but no shield is dangerous against some types of undead. We head south of Kuto's Well. Mendor's Library is an imposing, huge building, mostly preserved from the ravages of war. The doors are magically locked, but Knock is now on the mages' spell menu, entry is possible. The library's content is mostly intact -- we hit the motherlode! The four sections we find are: history, philosophy, mathematics, rhetorics. There are all kinds of interesting books, scriptures, parchments which store lore about Old Phlan and the Fall. The Council will pay well for this treasure trove of information. One starts to wonder how is it that nobody took anything from the library? Is there some unseen protection here? As we enter the Rhetorics section, we stumble upon a lizard-like monster. It's just a big lizard, nothing to be afraid of, right? We rush to attack it. As it turns to face us, its gaze transforms Szilva into a stone statue! It's a basilisk, straight from the terrifying tales of our childhood! Alone, with no friends or family supporting it, the basilisk falls quickly after that. Barack: -- I'm so glad it wasn't me! *claps* Eper: -- Now he's shut up forever, no more preaching! Citrom: -- This is... horrible and cool at the same time. Wish I could turn people to stone! Think of the artistry! Narancs: -- Don't worry, In the temple of Tyr, they have the means to turn him back to a living man. Eper: -- Ahaha, what are you talking about? My job description doesn't include carrying heavy and worthless objects over long distances. I say we leave him... it here. Alma: -- And even after we get back to Phlan, there is the matter of cost. The priests of Tyr are not running a charity, it'll cost several thousand gold to reverse his condition. Eper: -- WHAT? We need to carry it back, AND pay for a cure? No way. Instead, we should look for a replacement in the Training Halls, there are plenty of adventurers there. Our fame allows us to pick whomever we like. Alma: -- *sighs* Remember our first major battle, where were you unconscious and bleeding out of arrow wounds? We took care of you, instead of just leaving you to die. That's called loyalty. I know it's a difficult concept to grasp for you, since you've been wandering on your own for a long time before you joined us. But a group of loyal comrades are capable of much more than a group of selfish bastards. Think of it this way: if we revive him, he'll help you have more loot. Much more loot. Mountains of loot! He's been very useful, saved us many times, even you can't deny that. In most party-based cRPGs, if one your characters is dead, unconscious, turned to stone, or otherwise incapacitated, he or she is still "walking" with you, carrying his/her part of the inventory. Isn't that weird, if you think about it, which you shouldn't, really, because it'll break your immarrr-shone. I remember playing a solo challenge in Wizardry 7 with a fairy ninja, who has an abysmally low carrying capacity. And the solution to that was 5 dead party members in a mule capacity, whom I allowed to die in the first battle. Dead adventurers are the best carriers: no payment needed, no gear of their own! The basilisk guarded one of the best items in the game, a Cloak of Displacement. It's great because its 2 AC bonus stacks with a magical armor and shield, unlike Rings of Protection. Having finished with collecting written reminders of the past, we look around in other parts of the library. Look, there's a garden! We look around, hoping to find treasure hidden somewhere, but can't find any. Instead, the insidious green slime inhabiting the garden damages us several times. Worst field trip ever. Hello, person who tried to loot the library, but wasn't as badass as us. I think we'll just ignore you, there are enough loonies on our roster already, thank you very much. In one of the scribes' rooms, we find a group of kobolds. They have no will to fight left in them, blabbering about some terrible monster which guards the entrance. There was no terrible monster guarding the entrance, dear kobolds, you're just wusses. In exchange for sparing their lives, they promise to describe the lair of a group humanoid monsters who are living in the ruins of the Textile House. That's great, we're heading there next. We start to heave the statue of Szilva out of the library. But back at the entrance hall, we're greeted by this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?&v=KMYgwGrv_AY#t=101 Well, we're actually greeted by this, but it's about the same: Oh, so that's why the library wasn't looted. In the back of my mind, I always knew that librarian ladies are actually monsters in disguise, but now I've seen it with my own eyes! Next time I'm visiting the local library, I'll be prebuffing with Negative Energy Protection, and carrying a Wand of Fireballs. Safety first. The spectre costs me one reload. It drains 2 levels in one hit, but that's not the real problem. The real problem is that even if I use a Restoration scroll (you can find several in the game), the character still loses XP, because Restoration only puts you back on the minimum of your previous level. Depending on where the character was when hit by a level-draining attack, you can potentially lose almost an entire level's worth of XP. This is the game mechanic in ADnD that I consider the worst, and hated it with a burning passion. 3rd edition solved many issues, among them this one: you still lose levels, I'm not against that, but it doesn't affect your XP total.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 4: MonsterCon Cosplay The new mission is to go to Podol Plaza, past the Slums and Kuto's Well, which is kind of Monster Town. They have a market there, taverns, houses and such. We are quite surprised to learn that we don't to need to massacre every single creature there (please?.... pretty please?), just quietly listen in on an auction. A magic item of high power is auctioned off soon in the marketplace, and the Council wants to know whether it's a threat to the city. Infiltration is the name of the game. But that is not all, we are receiving special attention from the one of the Councilmen. Our fame grows! The Councilman doesn't waste words on pleasantries. He sent his most trusted servant, a skilled fighter to retrieve it, but he hasn't come back for several weeks now. We will investigate this later, as the Textile House has a nasty reputation. Past the Slums we're entering the area of Kuto's Well. The well itself is one of the very few buildings from Old Phlan which is still intact and does what it did before. Lizardman tribes inhabit the area. As we look around, we're ambushed by a lizardman leading a pack of lizards, and beyond them is a door which has been nailed shut. We smell treasure! After the troll fight, the game is simply out of challenges for a while. Lizardmen and hobgoblins are only slightly dangerous than the greenskins in the Slums, and we're much stronger, the cleric and the thief are already on level 4. This fight is a joke. What's behind that nailed door? After the woman leaves, we search her room, and under a rug, we find a trapdoor and yes, treasure! We find the first magical bracers, which is a godsend to the mages. Those pew-pewing greenskin leaders often caused trouble for them -- just one hit, and no spellcasting for that turn. As we approach the well, waves of kobolds rush out to attack us. Another joke. Interesting... We heard rumors in the Slums that Norris the Gray, a bandit leader, is using the well as a hideout. There's supporting evidence now, let's climb down and find more evidence, possibly Norris himself. As we stumble around in the dark, kobolds pepper us with arrows from hidden holes. This place is full of secret doors, we find several that the monsters also use to move around and harass us. Then after passing through one of these doors, we find the criminal mastermind. At this point the game asks us: surrender or fight? Ummm... loot? My choice is loot? Oh, we need to fight for the loot. Okay then! Norris's merry band of kobolds and lizardmen falls faster than he can say "take my treasure, just leave me alone!". We find his diary (the bandit leader who knew how to read and write! belated respect, dude!), and in his diary we find the first mention of a certain "Boss" who is behind all the monster hordes around Phlan. Norris turned down the Boss's offer to join his forces, because reasons. He wanted to be a lieutenant and have a share of the spoils. Oh dear late Norris, you should have managed your expectations better, including when you engaged with us. The honest settlers can do us a big favor: offer their most handsome daughters and boys -- depending on preferences -- to our glorious party for... serving drinks and engaging in meaningful conversation. We also realize that this place, now devoid of bandits, is safe for resting. A kind of forward outpost, beyond the Slums. Onward to Podol Plaza! Szilva: -- NO. Just... no. I'm not donning a monster disguise! Eper: -- You look like a monster with or without a costume. Every soulsucking preacher is a monster. Deal with it. Szilva: -- If I do look like a monster, then I don't need a disguise, right? Alma: -- Look, it boils down to this. Do we want to fight an entire town of monsters, or do we want to complete our mission? Overconfidence kills, literally in our case. Eper: -- I want an entire town's worth of loot. Alma: -- Go ahead, be my guest. I'll be waiting here, then proceed with the mission after your death screams have subsided. Narancs: -- I know a spell that can be used to make friends easily! Maybe I could make friends with the goblins and the ogres? Alma: -- Maybe you could. Why don't you try it? ... Alma: -- No more moronic objections? Good, let's start with the face painting. It's very strange to walk around in a crowd of monsters without weapons drawn and spells readied. Sometimes, they look at us, but street perception is easy to fool: everyone's after his or her own business We approach the center of the marketplace, where the auction is going to start soon. We learn that the item is a magical staff with no truly extraordinary capabilities, just mundane magic effects. Our work here is done... But let's take a look around, shall we? We enter a tavern, where a human pirate insults us. His buddies don't live long thereafter. In one desolate corner of Podol Plaza, we find magically locked doors. Neither raw strength, nor Eper's lockpicks can open them, and the mages don't know the Knock spell yet. We'll come back later. The place looks like a church of Ilmater, the god's symbol is still on the doors, which is very odd. A "good" temple near a crowd of monsters? As we're leaving the Plaza, we discover another temple. inside, we find an orc with an offer to turn us into believers of Bane. Moaaar infiltration! He says that we should come back in two hours, and even have a chance of meeting Mace, resident high priest of Bane, in person! In addition, we learned about another, bigger temple, in another city block. Ohh, we smell loot again... Well, our disguise was really nice and helpful until it lasted. And now, something completely different: several dozen greenskins to kill! Routine job. After this, monster assaults are taking place basically with every step we make. We're out of spells by now, and they're wearing us down, one flesh wound at a time. Thankfully this Baneite temple is close to the exit, and soon we're heading back to New Phlan to report on the death of Norris and the auctioned staff. Another round of monetary rewards, another training session coming up!
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Online board gaming
There is a German site called Brettspielwelt. Available in other languages. I tallied a total of 51 games you can play, including favorites like Settlers of Catan, Power Grid, Carcassone and 7 Wonders.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Answerman here! Gizmo & Majek: I'm very, very thankful that DosBox gives me the tools to smooth the jagged edges of the originals, so that my eyes don't bleed when reading text for hours. (Wasteland 2 was atrocious in this regard, too. It didn't matter that I set text size to very large, it still made my eyes bleed, especially the character/inventory screens with the weak contrast. And that's a new game. The old ones have old tech as their excuse...) Enoch: Oh yeah, in my original run, I did hire a mercenary for the troll battle, and used him as cannon fodder. Now, I'm not really concerned about the XP, there's enough to be had in the campaign, but mercs take magical loot arbitrarily (no negotiation or something), which is gone forever, and that's a capital offense. rjshae: PoR has wildly different XP/level limits for different classes. The caster classes are capped at level 6, I suspect because they didn't want to implement 4th level spells (balance concern? not enough time?). Fighter cap is level 9 (125k XP), thief cap is level 10 (110k XP). But you can still collect XP for the next level, XP is not capped, and I finished the game with around 200k. So it's both: I hit the cleric cap about halfway into the game, but didn't hit the "extra level" cap with the fighters (250k) and the thief (220k). It's great that I could start the next game with ready levelups for the entire party, 2 levels for the casters. Nepenthe: Oh man, I knew I would be treading on someone's precious memories when I trash-talked some of the GB games. I suspect there is someone out there, in the mystical realm of Oldschoolia, where fey energies drive arcane mechanisms, who enjoyed the Gold Box Spelljammer, one of the worst games I ever played. I don't want to argue with you, you like what you like, I'll just list the reasons why I disliked Secret of the Silver Blades so much. 1. Totally linear. In PoR, the game opens up after clearing out Sokal Keep and the Slums, and you can go anywhere except the endgame zone, Valjevo Castle. You're free to get killed -- or possibly, not! -- in places you're not supposed to go yet, a design missed by lots of old-school gamers. In Curse, after you remove the first bond, you're free to visit many places, and decide which of the three "middle" bonds you want to tackle. In Pools of Darkness, the same freedom with visiting the different dimensions and non-quest places. SotSB has nothing of this: it's Advanced Fighting in Tunnels, you go into the single zone that's available, then to the next, and do this until you're either bored to death or bore death into the final boss. 2. No world map, the only GB game without a world map. Closely related to the linearity. 3. Almost zero lore connection. You're teleported away to some other place in the Realms, then teleported back to the Moonsea region at the beginning of Pools of Darkness. By contrast, PoD builds upon a lot of things in the first two games, making it much more interesting. 4. Except for remorhaz, no interesting monsters/fights. The remorhazes are cool, they made a lasting impression on me, I used them in tabletop later. Again, I didn't write this to change your attitude, just to give reasons why mine is what it is.
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What does the Combat Log lack?
It seems I am in the minority for whom color coding makes information filtering much faster. I do that on my own when working with Excel tables, I'm using colored backgrounds in the important columns and the bottom line cells, etc. So I would like it to be preserved at least as an option. A method to gain a lot of space is to replace text with icons. Have an icon for the damage types and effects, and you can have a very dense combat log, telling a lot of info in a very small space. A sample: BB Fighter -> Wood Beetle, <graze icon>, 5 <slashing damage icon>, <interrupt icon>, 3.2 s <procced effect's icon>
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
The second time we encounter undead, Narancs notices that they seem to follow a predetermined path. Like they're on patrol or something... It stands to reason that they're the original defenders of the keep, still doing what they did in life. Maybe they respond to one of words on the scroll we found? Nothing to lose by trying, worst case is they attack us anyway. The first word has no effect, as we find out. Entering the main building of the keep, we find the ruins of the former barracks. Also, some ghostly shapes rise before us as we poke around. Okay, maybe the words will work here? Yes, the first word is accepted as the password of the.... of some day long ago. After another round of mandatory howling and moaning, can't have proper ghost talk without that, we get this tip: The diary finally gives insight to what the pluck has happened here. When Sokal Keep was about to fall, their cleric enacted some nasty ritual which bound their spirits in place. The monsters took over, but their hold is tenuous, because always-rising undead patrols still control most of the keep. There is one place, though, where they camp out, much to the chagrin of the cleric's spirit, who's responsible for the transformation. Our task is obvious: kick greenskin ass with the usual ferocity, so that the spirits can finally rest. Good, we mounted twice as much Mk82 Sleep clusterbombs on our mages' mental hardpoints as before, which were totally useless against the undead, but now, targets in sight! Bwahahhaha.... As is usual with the mass battles, there are more mobs outside this view. About three dozen various greenskins total, plus the bow-wielding leaders hiding behind their ranks. But this time, we have space to move around, and by taking some risk, we can advance a mage+fighter combo on one side, and cast one of the Sleeps on the archer bunch. It's a flawless victory in the end, nobody falls. Level 2, best levelup. We enter the room behind them. Oh yes, the cleric dude! Let's talk to him: Dude, seriously. Stop asking stupid questions. What do you mean, "freed"? Freed in the political sense, not being oppressed? In the economical sense, able to have private property and enterprises? In the spiritual sense, free from the chains of the material world? In a psychological sense, not being haunted by traumas of the past? If you ask whether we slaughtered the greenskins, then yes, Sokal Keep is "free". Sheesh, I expected more conciseness from a learned man. He also tells us the codeword for the undead patrols -- it's the last word on the scroll, but we didn't have enough encounters with them to get that far in trial and error. We learn some interesting lore about Phlan's Fall in return. We planned to visit Mendor's Library anyway, since that seems to be the best place to find info that the Council's looking for. By the way, I had no idea that spirits can be bald. Can't change your looks if you're damned into spirithood, another reason not to be eternally cursed. All these adventures allow us to be accepted for another training session. Which allows the mages to learn a powerful new magical tool: Stinking Cloud. I have another metagaming flashback -- it's incredible how much I still recall, I'm surprised by myself constantly -- that there are no scrolls in the game which carry this spell (scrolls are fixed loot in PoR), there's no magic shop either, so it's a no-brainer choice. Barack: -- Are you kidding me? Wasn't that enough that the menaces we faced had horrible smell -- the unkempt orcs, the manure-reeking goblins, the piss-scented kobolds, and the rotten flesh of the... no, just remembering it makes me sick! And now you're telling me you learned Stinking Cloud, which is a magical smellbomb? Like the world doesn't already have way too much smelly things in it! I've always had this notion that mages are totally out of the freaky minds, but this just proves it! If you ever cast it so that I end up inside, Citrom, I'll strangle you with your own guts. Citrom: -- About that... Ummm... The thing with Stinking Cloud is that it has a really small range. Much smaller than Sleep and... uh... yeah, there might be issues with targeting. But I'll take special care just for you, Barack. Girl, I know you're sensitive. I'm goth, you know, so I deal with disgusting stuff for fun. It's easy for me. People who only know about RPGs by playing computer games have no idea how radically different is the way something gets decided in tabletop. On the computer, you're in total control of your party, there are no arguments about goals and tactics, no bickering over loot, no finger pointing when something goes bad, no deadly betrayals by sinister, selfish players in the group. Yeah, a REAL role-playing party has all kinds of fun conflicts, which is part of the 'magic'. A cRPG party is just a pack of dolls under your control, so you can have your own special power fantasy. Some 'serious' RPGs try to emulate the conflicts, mind you, Baldur's Gate 2 did, Neverwinter Nights 2 did. Where was I? Oh yes, we're going back to the city to receive our first Council reward. That and the magical chain mail we sell covers the cost of advancement. Time to go back and finish clearing out the Slums. This means a total of 3 boss battles, but I'm only showing the last one, which is a big jump in difficulty. 4 trolls, 2 ogres, who live in the south part of the Slums, a place once called the Rope Guild. Before we go there, though, we visit a general store to buy a special throwing weapon. These jars deal fire damage, which the trolls can't regenerate back. Very important. The thief will fling these all the time, the mages too, when they're out of spells. Memorized spells are changed. 2x Stinking Cloud, we don't even have anything else yet for 2nd level. 3x Enlarge puts the frontliners at 18/percentage Strength, +1/+3 bonus, up from +1/+1. The last 1st level slot is Magic Missile, that is the last resort if we're close to victory, but keep missing the attacks; trolls have 4 AC, that's pretty great against our not-so-great THAC0. Cleric brings his Bless as usual, to help with that. Unlike many other screenshots that are post-win, this one is the original, the frontliners had around 30 HP: So you wanna play with us? We're game! Round 1, applause! The first try is a disaster. I'm not yet used (again) to the extremely small range of Stinking Cloud (3 tiles), and have to abort one of the two castings. Then I put the thief in range of the front troll, another mistake, and it all goes downhill from there. Yeah, it's a tough battle for a level 3 party. Second try is flawless, though. The first SC takes care of two troll and one ogre (very lucky with the failed saving throws there), half of the enemy, AND blocks the passage for several turns. Only the other ogre can attack us, we're free to throw jars. Speed is important in this battle, because the trolls' regeneration is implemented, and they can get up if you down them with normal weapon attacks. The other SC takes down one more troll, so in the end we only need to kill one troll with melee engagement. A very satisfying victory. As others commented in the thread, when I was young and unfamiliar with DnD rules, this battle seemed impossible to me. And now I came fully prepared, using everything that's available, and it's very manageable. Oh, and at 15, my English was nowhere near as it is today, and I often struggled to understand the forsooth-filled archaic vocabulary of a fantasy RPG. Back in New Phlan our blood-soaked hands are once more filled with rewards from the Council. There's a faint hope now that the Old City blocks can really be reclaimed, and new missions are posted on the Council's board.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Dude, I KNOW. It was irony: the party members find a piece of magical armor, which is supposed to awe them, but instead they sell it. Role-playing vs. metagaming, as always.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 3: Nobody Told Me About the Smell After we got back to New Phlan, the mages still didn't qualify for level 2, some 50 XP was missing. Which made me use one of the unique features of Pool of Radiance, which was removed from later GB games: dueling. We could go back to the Slums, but I wanted to duel, it's part of this game's charm. Dueling works like the "mirrored" battles we've seen in other RPGs: the game creates an exact copy of the character, including current hit points, memorized spells, inventory with gear and consumables, and then the clone and the original face off. With low level mages, the duels are a one-roll affair: whoever wins initiative casts Sleep on the other (no saving throw in ADnD, that's 3ed correction), next turn coup-de-grace, WIN. Winning nets current level x 100 XP and no loot. (No, you can't duplicate a character's inventory by winning a duel. But that's what you immediately thought you could do, right? Cheesy bastard, you're just like me. ) Level 2 gives us enough confidence to pay a visit to the other starter area, Sokal Keep. Time to show you maps from the Journal. The right-side map shows the blocks of Old Phlan, those are mostly monster infested places, with some exceptions like Kovel Mansion and Mendor's Library. Sokal Keep on Thorn Island controls the Stojanow River traffic. We need to clear it out so that boat travel can resume on the river, which will allow us access to new places, and also provide a big relief to the city. We visit another tavern to wash down the bad aftertaste of the Slums, but we become a cutpurse's mark after entering. We were given the options for either 'Grab' or 'Ignore'. We chose the one that resulted in another tavern brawl. The boat trip is uneventful, the Keep's current occupiers are bad at playing military. In the front yard, we find a long dead elven soldier's skeleton with a scroll clutched in his bony hand. Now this is a special moment. The above runes can be decoded by an old-school implement -- the game's copy protection code wheel, which contains elven and dwarven runes and their English equivalents. Here's an online version of this ancient artifact, which you can use to decode the above three lines yourself, if you wish. To my knowledge, no other Gold Box game used the code wheel for an in-game quest. We get three enigmatic words from the scroll, . We have no idea what they're for, at this point. We start exploring the keep, which is strangely empty for the most part. What's the big deal? Why was this place not taken back yet? Entering a rotten-apart smithy, we discover some giant frogs who have taken residence there. They're poisonous, by the way, but our universal hazard prevention measure called 'Sleep' takes care of that. Active defenses, and all that. But shortly thereafter, the young and intrepid members of our party experience their first encounter with the living dead. Skeletons and zombies! Our squad support weapon, the Sleep spell, is of no use against them! WE'RE DOOMED! Our always blabbering cleric now offers some non-selfish use of his mouth: Turn Undead! The skeletons are... fleeing? No, please, no, it'll take forever to chase them down! The scenery reminds me of why I didn't use Turn Undead and the Fear spell in my old playthroughs. We get free disengagement attacks on them, sure, but we're still 2nd level missers, not high level hitters, if you know what I mean, so it doesn't help. That'll teach me to ignore Turn Undead yet again (except when you can get "Destroy" as a result against lower level undead, but that'll only come later). Barack: -- This was... I don't have any words for this. The smell of those shambling corpses! When I was eight, Billy put a piece of dung in my boots, because he was in love with me. But this is even worse than that! I didn't sign up for... ugh! Alma: -- That skeleton with the halberd could have chopped off one of your arms, or even your head, for that matter. And all you're concerned about is the smell? Are you sure you're in the right place, dear? This is an adventuring party. We deal with all kinds of ****, including actual ****. We have a map of Sokal Keep with is, courtesy of the Council clerk who handles the missions. The armory we find in the northeastern corner had been picked clean long ago, but something seems off. The map shows another room here... We start to look for secret doors, illusionary walls, anything that's hidden, another sacred tradition of adventurers everywhere. Lo and behold: That glint in the corner... Yes, it's treasure time again! Our favorite part! Later, back in town, a Detect Magic spell reveals that all of the items we found in that hidden backup armory is magical. Upgrades all over the place. Except for the chain mail, which somehow doesn't seem to protect better from harm than our current banded mails. Strange, innit? Oh well, at least we have something to sell to cover training costs.
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RANDOM VIDEO GAME NEWS
In the new South Park episode, #REHASH, Kyle's little brother Ike becomes a fan of PewDiePie, and instead playing the new CoD with Kyle, who was looking forward to that, just watches PDP's videos. Kyle doesn't understand what's the big appeal of watching when the real fun is in playing yourself? I believe this exact same question was discussed in the last two days on this forum. This season has a new feature in the form of some episode-to-episode continuity. Among them, one calls back to the one which dealt with "freemium" games, where Stan spent all of his family's savings on microtransactions (he stole his father credit card). Now Randy, who's a famous singer by disguise, must take on a gig because they're broke: The new Let's Play craze also raises the interest of Cartman. You can make money by playing games and commenting on them? Hmm.... You can watch the episode on South Park Studio's website (link above) for free, if you can withstand 3 repeats of the same ~40 sec ad block.
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The Official Romance Thread
I grant you that exception, and possibly a few others who missed those things. But please show me any journalist review (who are keen to point out such issues), gamer blog review etc. who mentions that. I don't remember any. I didn't become a discussed issue, as far as I can tell. About Fallout 2: Oh yes, I remember the redneck boy and girl in Modoc. It was one of my favorite moments of Fallout 2. It's a darkly humorous prank that is the trademark of the Fallout universe: hey, surprise, when you awake the next morning after having sex, there's her daddy, now comes the shotgun wedding! (To keep with the redneck theme) There is only one possible further development of that relationship: divorcing him/her. No more dialog, no reactivity, no party contribution (they don't have skills and don't level up), and they are not mentioned in the ending slides. It's hardly a defining moment of the Fallout 2 experience, and it didn't change Black Isle's public perception to a "romance-telling and/socially progressive studio". On the other hand, BioWare consciously built up its reputation as such, step by step. While DA:I was in the making, the whole romance thing was all over the place in the interviews, tweets by devs, con panels, etc. Romance options are now tenets of their games' narrative design. Like this:
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The Official Romance Thread
Short answer: Who cares? Longer version: It's BioWare who painted themselves into that creepy corner. It's them who whipped their fanbase into a romantic frenzy (ahaha), and advertised themselves as the company who does socially progressive romances. Other RPG makers, like Larian or Obsidian or Bethesda are not known as such. When people play their games, they don't expect such content. For example, Mask of the Betrayer has 5 full companions, among them one romanceable straight male and one romanceable straight female. Did anyone complain about "lack of inclusivity" or "very few romanceable NPCs" when reviewing MotB? No, because there were no such expectations in the first place. What you say is only true in the context of BioWare. They are boiling in their own special hellish cauldron, where they provided the cauldron, the firewood, and even the flint and tinder. Thankfully, the rest of the industry is not like that.
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The Official Romance Thread
Your jadedness reminded me of my own. But in the back of my mind there's a secret wish involving video game romance. Pat Rothfuss is the New York Times best-selling author of the The Name of the Wind and it's sequels. Rothfuss's prose was praised for many things, including his portrayal of the romantic and/or sexual life of the protagonist, Kvothe. The Penny Arcade creators both like Rothfuss's works, and as usual in their line of work, they made some friendly mockery of Kvothe's adventures. They're on very good terms with Rothfuss, BTW, he's now a regular at the PAX theatrical DnD game sessions. Rothfuss was a stretch goal in the T:ToN Kickstarter, and is/will be writing a companion for the game (IIRC he will write The Toy). By now he's probably transitioned into dialogue-choice based video game writing, which can be difficult at first if you were a "normal" writer before (it was difficult for Nathan Long when he started on Wasteland 2, for example). Now, the reason why I'm talking about Rothfuss is obvious: I want a PROPER video game romance. Choice-driven, deep, conflicted, multiple endings, not just "you **** him/her or you turn him/her down". I'm not really into video games romances, I just want see ONE that is done right. And IMO Rothfuss is one of the very few people who can do it right. I would like to see him become not just a stretch goal, but a regular team member on an RPG dev team, tasked with -- not exclusively, mind you -- writing a good romance that can be held up as an example for others to follow.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 2: This Is The Beginning of a Beautiful Massacre To clear out the slums area, we need to fight 15 encounters, each encounter has about a dozen greenskins. Plus there's the matter of the area bosses, but let's not even think about that. We're puny, we want to destroy even punier kobolds, so that we can feel powerful. The game has an encounter interface, which is used all the time when you're not surprised: Let us Parlay... That is so much classier than talking or chatting! The interesting thing here is that different monsters respond to different stances. If you play "meek" with ogres, they might laugh at you and leave you alone. They like to feel they're badass. On the other hand, you should be "abusive" to kobolds, because that's what they're used to, being bullied by bigger creatures. And there's the matter of skeletons and other undead -- talking won't accomplish anything. It doesn't always work, but talking is a nice option to have. Why would you want to avoid XP that comes in the form of random encounters? That's a good question, and I'll be answering it later. The northern area of the Slums is beginner-friendly, there are no big ambushes, traps. We stumble into a fortuneteller's hut: She tells us that: blah, blood and violence, blah, expect the unexpected. Thanks for nothing, we came here explicitly for the blood and violence. We find some scripted battles, nothing very interesting, some minor treasure like a clerical scroll with Cure Light Wounds, or a few gems. As we enter a large plaza on the western side, we overhear some rumors. These are valuable bits of info, and one of the rumors tells about a treasure hidden in the northwestern corner. Who needs a hint book when the monsters themselves tell you where the treasure is? This is almost enough for level 2 for the cleric and the thief. But we'll wait for some more XP, that second level is more important for the fighters and the mages. The Gold Box games implemented the ADnD rule where you got XP for the gold value of the loot you found. Even the Council mission rewards work that way: There's no separate XP reward for completing missions, you get money, gems and jewelry, and the XP value for those! For the low levels, this means that the party will get much more XP from finding loot and getting than killing monsters. For comparison with the above treasure XP, a standard encounter with greenskins yields about 60-80 XP per character. Later GB games contained separate XP rewards, because it was quite silly this way. This is one of the reasons why we avoid random encounters via fleeing or talking. It's just not worth the time, each of those battles takes minutes to play out. Thieves? Well... It's true. Our goal is to loot everything, even what's nailed down. That's what self-respecting adventurers do. Like this: After this fight, we find our first magical weapon, a Flail +1. Yes, that's exactly why we're breaking into homes! On the western side, we fight the first of many, many mass battles: There are even more orcs on both sides. On the far side, there are a number of orc archers, just for fun. Remember, we entered here with a first level party. 2xSleep takes care of about half of the melee orcs -- the range of Sleep is not enough to reach the archers at the back. It's a long battle, and it could go either way, but the Gold Box games implement something important called morale: So the morale of the orcs breaks before our front line falls, although the archers knocked out the thief. Our first great victory! I could go on to the next room, which is one of the boss rooms, but nah, let's level up first. The random encounters, the treasure, and this battle puts everyone on 2nd level. We're leaving noob status! Sadly, the very first level-up of our party rolls a 1 for Alma. Drats, 15 HP for a 2nd level fighter with 18 Con! I hope this trend doesn't continue, and the Law of Large Numbers helps me out a later...
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
(NOTE: I thought I have enough screens, but apparently, I don't. So some images are taken with the winning party entering the game again. Sorry about that. ) I took a nostalgia trip through the town. 24 years, man, I owe this game that much. Look, here's the city park! Isn't this beautiful? Well... It kind of was, back in the day. Tile-based gfx left a lot to your imagination. That's the same reason Gilbert&Winnick's Maniac Mansion-inspired Kickstarter goes back to retro pixels: instead of the GPU, it's the player's brain that renders the vision of a certain place. We need drinks! Let's hit a tavern! We could gamble here, but we don't want to. A tavern tale is referenced, can be read in the game's Journal. As we turn to leave, a brawl breaks out, and we're caught in the middle! Oh noes! In this battle, some fighters on your side, and some are enemies, and you start right in the middle of the two groups. The party was unequipped when my first party got into a brawl, and most of of them were knocked out pretty quickly. Thankfully, these enemies don't deal enough damage to kill outright (-10 HP). But Szilva the cleric managed to stay standing, gathering a whopping 577 XP! I didn't really expect to collect XP while exploring the city... We need an inn to rest and heal up. Because if we just try to rest anywhere else, this happens: And if you stay, you're attacked by a pretty heavy patrol, lead by 8th level fighters, and about two dozen lvl2-3 city guards. ... No, that was just a bad dream! It didn't happen! Now, where is the nearest inn? I answer yes, expecting no trouble, but the game says we don't have 1 platinum. What? We still have all the starting money, 200 gold pieces on each party member! 1 plat = 5 gold, what's your problem, bitch? I'm flabbergasted. Then it all comes back: this exact same scenario happened to me when I first played game. And I recall the solution: The game tracks currencies separately. 5 gold is not 1 platinum, it's 5 gold. When we visit a shop, and either buy or sell something, the carried money is converted into platinum (as much as possible), so that it weighs the least (because in the GB games, money has weight!). Back then I had no idea what was wrong for a while. I thought it was some form of copy protection, like the time travel access codes in Bard's Tale 3! The problem was auto-solved after equipping the party, which we should do right now. Time to hit one of the arms&armor shops. A grand total of 1200 gold is the pool to equip all six members. That's pretty generous. The only real cost are the armor pieces, weapons are really cheap, except for composite bows. A quick calc shows that I can afford banded mails for the frontliners. Since each level-up costs a 1000 gold, and the game does provide you with enough treasure to afford that, spending 1200 gold to buy 3 plate mails is a close reality. And after that, only magical loot will improve the AC. As you can see, SSI implemented all the ADnD weapons meticulously. I have the metagaming knowledge that sword and board is the way to go, so all of those two-handed renaissance polearms that some military history buff put into ADnD are ignored. I've checked the manual at this point, the weapons allowed list. You don't spend points on proficiencies in the GB games, it works like in 3ed, you're proficient with everything on a list. But this list was strangely prohibitive in PoR, with clerics having no access to ranged weapons at all, and thieves having access only to slings (no shortbows). Curse, the second game in the game saga, rectified this. I bought morningstars for the fighters for two reasons: 2D4 (avg 5) is better than the 1D8 of a longsword (avg 4.5), and for a low-level party, every little bit counts. Also very soon, we'll be fighting skeletons in Sokal Keep, against them slashing or piercing damage is halved, rounded down. That's a pretty horrible penalty at this point in the campaign. The cleric uses a flail, the mages a quarterstaff, so they're covered for bashing damage. And now that we have platinum pieces in the purses, we can rest at an inn and memorize the Low Level Nuke: Oh yeah, we'll be putting 5+ greenskins into a helpless state with each casting. The game accounts for that, though, by sending hordes of them at you... The final step is visiting the City Hall to hear about the current tasks. At this point it's simply to kill every monster we find in the surrounding areas, though there are some exceptions: And with that, we're off to the Slums, the first step in our blazing Reconquista.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
"Begin adventuring". -- Our glorious party came to New Phlan to assist in the rebuilding of one of the great cities of the Moonsea. Get out of the way, little man, we're on our way to be heroes! -- But Alma, we don't even have armor and weapons yet! I feel kind of naked. -- Oh... that. Okay, let's follow this Rolf guy for now. -- Wow, they have schools for adventurers? -- It says here that each training sessions costs a 1000 gold pieces. That's daylight robbery! A suit of well-made plate armor costs less than half as much! -- Are you sure it's not a joke or a scam? It sounds like a scam. -- We'll ask around later. -- Fame and fortune... I like the sound of that! -- I'll use this line as your epitaph, which you'll be needing soon enough, if you just foolishly rush into danger. -- What kinds of monsters are we talking about here, Rolf? -- You know, the tribal ones, who like to pile on you in big numbers. Goblins, kobolds, orcs, hobgoblins. There are rumors about ogres and trolls, too! -- Oh, I'm sure those are just tall tales to scare the people of the city to work better on the reconstruction. -- Ummm... yeah, sure. Whatever you want to believe. Onward to shopping! (the screens were taken with the first party, where Barack was a cleric with 7 HP)
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Chapter 1: Fresh off the bus boat Party composition. I spent an evening thinking about it. Must have: 1 fighter, 1 cleric, 1 thief (some good treasure and quest options are sealed off without a thief, the knock spell doesn't replace them entirely, also TRADITION!), 2 mages. That leaves one spot open. My first choice was another cleric, so they can heal each other in dire situations, and have more resilience in the no-rest and limited-rest areas, even started the game with 2 clerics. But as the memories started rolling back, I remembered that in high level play, a second cleric doesn't bring that much to the table besides Heal (they don't have access to Hold Monster). And there are a lot of good martial weapons in all of the games, which the cleric can't use, doesn't get multiple attacks, not eligible for +4 HP Con bonus, etc... I'll have to do with one cleric, two cleric is for multi/dual-classed parties. So I restarted with a second fighter. Initially, I wanted a paladin as the second fighter. Then I realized that PoR only offers the 4 base classes. No paladin. The immunity to fear and brave aura is their main feature, immunity to disease is good sometimes, and lay on hands gives an option to revive a fallen, but not dead cleric. Same with the cleric spells later, not really powerful, but nice to have as a backup. Bummer. As I started rolling, I thought I could assign the rolled numbers, as in other games, like ToEE recently. No-pe. You get fighters with high Int and Cha, and mages with 18/percentage Str. Hmm, I don't have the patience to get the rolls that way, look at all these failed creations... In tabletop, most GMs do allow you to assign rolls to attributes. Otherwise the player will beg and whine to re-roll anyway, because the result doesn't even resemble what he wanted to play. There is a Modify Character option in the character menu which allows one to set attributes and HP as long as the character is fresh, so I used that exchange attribute values. Hooray for in-game cheating features, they have uses for honest players, too! Without further ado, here's the party. Alma, which means Apple in Hungarian is the leader of the group. She's grown up in a borderland village, and learned fighting from his soldier father. Reliable and loyal, though a bit picky on morality issues, also the effect of her much-admired father. Wanted to be a paladin, but no order would take her. She has 18s where it matters, and a solid 17 for Str. I favored Con and Dex over Str because there are several options to raise Str drastically (both items and spells), but very few options to raise Dex or Con (Ioun stone). Her basic HP roll without the Con bonus is 6, not the best, but acceptable. Barack, meaning Peach* is looking all peachy. She's a cheerful, naive girl, who thinks that adventuring is like telling tales and dreaming, but a bit more real. Try nightmares, Peach, and you're closer to what's in store for you and your companions. She has only 17 in Dex, but 16 in Wisdom, which gives a +2 mental defense bonus against Hold Person, Fear, Confusion, and other nasty anti-fighter measures. Also, I thought it would be good to have some variety, and not just the same bonuses everywhere. Her first hit die is a perfect 10, good start. * Yes, in Hungarian, Barack Obama literally means Peach Obama. The pronunciation is different, but the spelling is the same. Szilva, meaning Plum is the grim party-pooper cleric of the party. He has "Preaching Mode: On" all the time, even when he's treating people in their death throes. He's got the best set of rolls I could find, and only needs a 16 in Con, so I could afford a 16 Cha on him. There are so many suckers out there falling for sect-building preachers, that's what his Cha actually represents. You might notice he has 577 XP, unlike the others, there's a story about that, coming soon. Eper, which translates into Strawberry, is an honest man. It's all lies and accusations, don't believe a word they say about me! He has the honest profession of locksmith, only he's a... traveling locksmith. Yes, he wants to see the world. That's why he came to Phlan and carries a big sword; the world is a dangerous place, who can deny that? Citrom, who might be known as Lemon in other places, is a laidback goth girl who's in love with spellcasting itself. Look at this, I can use Sleep to create living statues! For her, casting a spell is a chance to create True Art . Not concerned with having proper girly looks, she's been working out for years, mostly to protect herself from guys who think that a goth girl is all emo and vulnerable. Not Lemon, she can kick your ass even after she runs out of spells. And finally, we have Narancs, or maybe he's Orange in a parallel universe? It's a mystery why his hair is all white at the tender age of 28. Maybe he has planar heritage, but with a lesser manifestation than tiefling horns and such? Poor luck all the same, the ladies think he's a freak and avoid him, the guys think he's cursed and do the same. That gave him a strong motivation to learn serious magicks, Friends being the first spell he learned. He's a good guy, really, wouldn't really hurt someone, but having a bit o' fun with magical help is no deadly sin, right? Yeah, I wasn't very heavy on roleplaying. I need more than what a Gold Box game offers to immerse myself.
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Let's Play: The Pools Saga (SSI Gold Box classics)
Thanks, I got my 5 flowers likes, so I'm putting up Ch1 tonight. Drowsy Emperor: I had a hunch that there will be a few people who didn't play these oldies because they started with other RPGs and can't stomach them, but have a faint interest to know them. For a quick comparison: These games have little in the way of 'quests' outside of the main path, and little choice and consequence, although there is some. They don't compare favorably to the Baldur's Gate saga that way. The encounters and the challenges, however, are surpassing BG1 (definitely), and are comparable to BG2, though not as varied (there is no stealth/trap setting, for example). I think the best parallel you can draw is with Icewind Dale: lots of big battles, sometimes a bit of story (maybe more than IWD), occasionally a choice. Keyrock: I first played these games, up until Secret of the Silver Blades, on my C-64. But I finished the saga on PC, with nice VGA graphics. I don't remember this bug -- what platform? BruceVC: I have a special surprise for you, Bruce! As I was reading bits here and there on these games, I discovered an interesting tidbit about Treasures of the Savage Frontier: You need to play this game, Bruce! It's where it all started, man! :D ... No, you don't need to play it. It was an uninspired game, and all the innovations (not just romance, but weather effects on the overland map, etc.) couldn't save it from being bad. Leferd: It's a very different engine, it has a different story and encounters, it uses 3ed rules, it's buggy -- why should I play it as a replacement? I can't import characters from there. BTW, there is an NWN module remake of Pool of Radiance. Now this is a faithful adaptation, and I might play this one day. But not now, the challenge is the old GB games.