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Everything posted by thelee
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lolol, when i first opened up this thread--despite the fact that i've rolled pretty much every variation of a priest--I was immediately like "oh yeah, a cipher/priest multiclass, i've done that" before reading closer and remembering that that multiclass is a "mystic." totally agree that the names should be switched. (my prior experience in a game with "heirophants" is in Diablo 2 and those are definitely priest-types). this phrase does not compute. psion + blood mage sounds fine in theory (i haven't tried this myself), so long as you test blood sacrifice beforehand and verify that it doesn't interrupt psion's focus generation (also verify that deletrious alacrity of motion does not interrupt focus generation). It's pretty easy to not get hit (relatively speaking) at range, and a blood mage has spells that help you avoid getting hit even more (illusion magic, extra stride and engagement immunity from deleterious alacrity of motion, and even if deleterious alacrity of motion interrupts focus gen, fleet feet can work as well). in fact, i honestly think it would work better for a "caster angle" than some of the other stuff people are proposing here; in my experience, caster + cipher has real action economy issues because you need to be attacking to generate focus, you basically have to end up being a more martial build. for going down the caster path, a psion has no such action economy issues due to their autofocus regen, even if you aren't great at avoiding getting hit. also their extra focus power is pretty decent I think. Even though it has a party-unfriendly push effect, it interrupts on graze and with decent power levels you basically have enough focus gen to spam it over and over. can even be used to help you avoid danger if it manages to push you away from a creature that has gotten into melee range. (though the party-unfriendliness does mean it's hard to use it on an enemy you are surrounding/focusing down)
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God Challenges Feedback!
thelee replied to Aarik D's topic in Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire Announcements & News
Wow I never thought to do that! I'm going to be doing that now -
Agreed, but does 2 points make a change? And how this falls under your "Bugfixes" definition. mathematically, i think it's closer. I think +7 would be better, mathematically, but i hate odd numbers that aren't multiples of 5 when it comes to accuracy adjustments and I think +6 is too weak, so it's also an aesthetic thing, yeah i'll concede it's partly irrational also, while i wouldn't want to use a non-bugfix exclusive mod, if an effort like this has a lot of sway, I would at least like the balance tweaks to be what I personally think are at least systematic and well-considered with minimal power creep.
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i don't know specifically how the game works undreneath, but my understanding is that creature upscaling happens based on the encounter. so it's possible those skuldraks got upscaled even at level 9 if the encounter itself was a lower level and had a few skuldraks. (this is mostly an educated guess based on what i've seen) also: why would console spawning a creature automatically upscale them?
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from what I've heard they add extra time for the DLCs for this new version of the ultimate. (when I did Eothas I could probably have done all the vanilla encounters. you are really time-constrained in act 1, but you can frontload a lot of quests in act 2 (nekataka and dunnage focused) and act 3 (to beat ashen maw) and 4 (to get to ukaizo) give you plenty of time, so long as your'e not randomly wandering on the ocean. so they probably will give you extra time when you start a DLC and the DLCs are pretty well-contained. if they don't add extra time for DLCs... well doing SSS's exploration quests is going to be real rough) and boy oh boy, when I beat the Ultimate for PoE1 I swore off doing it for any other future pillars (I even posted as such here, back when I had only double-digit post count), but if they're handing out patches you bet I'm going to be doing it for Deadfire.
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No. It's just a cosmetic changes. Leave it alone. as it stands, accurate empower should be basically the first empower talent that virtually anyone takes because of its superior utility compared to the other empower talents. if one is interested in re-balancing those talents (as MaxQuest signaled the intention), one should focus on reining in accurate empower rather than boosting the others. Because otherwise that's how you get power creep. And I've played D3 long enough to be traumatized by power creep. What about Warhammers and War Bows? They a ok? + I prefer to leave alone stiletto, since it's a fast weapon and Recovery penalty don't hurts bad. yes, warhammers and war bows are ok. I don't know why these changes are being proposed, because mathematically +2 PEN for +50% is a no-brainer tradeoff for any PEN vs situation of -2 to -4. The fact that swords are able to get +2 PEN for no recovery time trade off (similar to Estoc) is an advantage that swords have that is diluted by these changes. So I still think the changes in 7/7b are unnecessary. lololol literally did a spit take laughing Josh, please, log in under your account. EDIT: I wonder again and again about some peoples. Keyword section contains 43+ spell and abilities, and i suggest to add elemental keywords to only 6 of them. Yet, i still reading some complains about "ELEMENTAL KEYWORDS EVERYWHERE! WE ALL GONNA DIE!". it's the difference between a "Bug fix" and a "Balance/gameplay tweak." It might not matter to you, but it is eminently reasonable (even if from a game design perspective, confusing) for spells of an elemental type to lack the specific keyword if you want to bar a specific interaction. Frankly if MaxQuest made a mod right now with all the listed changes, I wouldn't use it, because I like the vanilla experience and am only interested in obvious bug fixing. Riposte being adjusted to counter on graze is to me a bug fix (from a turn-based perspective); obviously enough that I expect Obsidian to fix it themselves in the next patch (or else I will sigh in exasperation). Tweaking weapon modals is not a bug fix. I think keywords are a murkier area, but because they have real gameplay impacts, it's a reasonable perspective to have that adding extra elemental keywords does not qualify as a "Bug fix" and is instead a "balance/gampelay tweak." I think re-adjusting some priest keywords to be more sensical makes sense from a bug fix perspective (and have evidence of developer intent with Blessing with Cdiaz having confirmed it as a bug), but adding extra elemental keywords does not, unless the intent is clear. (For example, Warding Seal already has electric keyword, so its hazard effect should also have the electric keyword--or hazards in general fixed to benefit from keywords. Counter example, Spiritual Weapons do not have keyword on the ability, so it is much less clear whether or not the developers intended for the summoned weapons to benefit from keyword interactions, so adding keywords there is less of a bug fix.) Back in the days of Baldurdash and fan-made BG/BG2/IWD/IWD2 fixes, people there were extremely focused on "developer intention" and would only really include a non-obviously-a-bug fix change if there was clear evidence that this was a correction to make something function more like what the developer intended (either through documentation or emails or direct messages). Not being clear about the bug fix vs balance fix situation is what leads to the Fallout: New Vegas situation where you have different "bugfix mods" and I only find one of them to be a defensible bug fix mod--yukichigai unofficial patch vs e.g. mission mojave--due to the latter's extra gameplay tweaks for non-obviously-broken things with lack of evidence of developer intention.
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When will the next patch be for turn based?
thelee replied to Devoted Scout's topic in Beta Feedback for Turn-Based Mode
where was this mentioned? Obsidian Entertainment's Official Discord. I could upload a screenshot if I really must... But I'm a trustworthy fellow. You can just just take my word for it, right? boy in this day and age i just have to keep creating accounts on so many sites just to keep up with a game i like. i thought it was bad enough i had to sign up for twitch just to get updates via developer streams. *sigh* i'm getting old. -
When will the next patch be for turn based?
thelee replied to Devoted Scout's topic in Beta Feedback for Turn-Based Mode
where was this mentioned? -
Pretty much everything works better in Deadfire, in my view, although early on there were a few strange moments before coming to term with the changes. Judging by the amount of bugs Ive been finding in my first playthrough, i'd disagree. Of the latest patch of PoE1 I can still literally soft-lock the game if I use consumables ever-so-slightly incorrectly or weirdly. (And it's random). Traps were so bugged, I wrote an entire section in my PoE1 gamefaqs guide imploring people to try to lobby Obsidian to get it fixed. Nothing in Deadfire compares to that. PoE1 also gets bloated and takes forever to save/load the further you get into the game. Deadfire is rock solid there. I pruned up my PoE1 bug-report dropbox folder (hitting dropbox free storage caps) but the size of that folder dwarfed my Deadfire bug-report folder. PoE1 isn't all that stable or intuitive a game (relatively speaking). You're just used to its particular idiosyncracies. Deadfire is way more stable (though with the TB-related patches it has notably regressed a bit). Oh yeah - and interrupt/concentration in PoE1 was pure murk and needed to be fixed mechanically.
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yeah, I think I have to modify my original post about PoE1 vs Deadfire to more generally say that I think the companions were handled better (I think the affinity system ultimately weakened how much they could do with companion narratives in Deadfire) and not just call out specific PoE1 companions like GM or Hiravias. I would actually disagree re: Xoti and Eder. I found Xoti basically a flat, uninteresting character. Her personal quest she basically has no ounce of personal agency (I mean, granted, this is an RPG so you call the shots regardless) - things are just happening to her all the time. And when she does meet Eothas in person, it basically doesn't even register to her at all what Eothas is saying. Meanwhile, with Eder, you get to see his character reflected in circumstances and those circumstances reflected back onto Eder, even if whatever growth or arc in Deadfire is kind of minimal compared to PoE1. Some nice touches - if you save Bearn Eder has the line of like "hey kid, Eothas owes you an explanation, not vice versa" and while wandering the map Eder can have chatter like "i've been chasing eothas my whole life and he doesn't even know who I am", and then when you meet Eothas, Eothas absolutely does know Eder by name (and calls him out as a exemplar for the kith), and you (and Eder contributes with his own chatter) are able demand an explanation from Eothas. Really helps flesh out Eder as a real character in the world, and even if you get to call all the shots as the player, he seems much more of an active participant in his personal quest as well. edit - one of my favorite narrative tools I've learned (from a Red Letter Media review of Phantom Menace) is to try to describe a character without referencing their appearance, actions in the story, or their job - basically explain the character to someone who has never even gotten near an RPG or Pillars before - and that basically gives you an idea of how well you've developed the character (the review puts this to comical effect by asking people who have seen Star Wars to do this about Han Solo (lots of answers) and then like Queen Amidala (stumped silences)). I think this might be a better test than "does a character change or have an arc" since this is a game where you call the shots and not a novel. I think using this rule, I could tell you all about the different characters in PoE1, but would really struggle with some companions in Deadfire (Maia - she's... a stoic soldier? [buzzer rings, reference to job]); I think I can only comfortably do this test with Tekehu and Eder (Aloth and Pallegina I feel like I have to lean on PoE1 for their characters). Ironically I think I could do way better with some of the sidekicks (Fassina, Vatnir) than with even Maia.
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in particular spells are frequently balanced by the fact that you are limited to a few tier X casts per encounter. this is an artifact of the conscious decision of trying to make spells of any tier useful throughout the game. (go try a blood mage) from a game design perspective, freedom of choice is not always better. for example, some people like classless designs, some people don't (count me in the latter). "freedom" of any kind is its own game design constraint, even if it seems invisible to you. form a real life perspective, freedom of choice is also not always better, depending on what you define as "better". A good, quick primer on the topic: https://www.amazon.com/Paradox-Choice-Why-More-Less/dp/149151423X (the canonical example is that a store selling one kind of jam will have more jam sales than a store that sells many many types of jams. poorly handled, choice induces anxiety... call it FOMO or whatnot. it's also probably why trader joe's and costco have such high throughput on sales compared to similar stores (both heavily stock items of one brand, frequently their own))
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depends on your definition of "meaningful" I guess. possible spoilers (all these assume you actually do their quests): 1. Grieving Mother, yes, significantly. 2. Durance, hell yes, significantly. probably no coincidence that both GM and Durance have companion quests that largely run through conversation with them. they're basically short stories. 3. Maneha, yes, but in a "cheat" sense (i.e. basically amnesia) 4. Devil of Caroc, yes 5. Zahua - honestly I didn't even know he had a quest (I thought he was basically a "sidekick") until Deadfire came out and I was building a custom history to import and saw decisions to make about Zahua's fate. whoops. shows how you could play for hundreds of hours and still miss something obvious. 6. Hiravias - yes 7. Kana Rua - eh, not really. this is more of an "ending slides" kind of character arc which is a cheat. 8. Eder - I would actually consider him also a "not really" and more an "ending slides" change. Though in this case I thought the lack of resolution and change in his quest to be the point of his narrative. 9. Sagani - yes, potentially a lot depending on how you resolve her quest 10. Aloth - yes (but also heavily weighted towards ending slides). edit - Yoshimo? Really? He dies! edit 2 - are you talking about "meaningful" from a gameplay perspective (both Viconia and Sarevok can change alignment, so can Anomen (and iirc Anomen can also lose or gain stats)? Then no, unless you count importing effects into Deadfire. Personally I think real gameplay impact from character arcs to be suboptimal, because then that encourages metagaming personal quests for particular outcomes. which doesn't seem great
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People don't necessarily change, but characters do. I think it's pretty crucial to see a way in which a character is affected by the decisions we've made and the things they've done through their own personal quests and they way they've interacted with the story and game in general. This is a fundamental aspect in storytelling and character design, whether or not it alligns with psychology studies on real human beings. yeah, like lesson #1 about storytelling is having a character arc. you can try to make a point in a story by having a character with no arc, but that pretty much has to be the point, otherwise it's a story with no meaningful impact or progression. we as real people may change far less than we might hope, but ahem this is why people also like to participate in storytelling and mythmaking.
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I think the amount at least was a very conscious decision, given how a dungeon crawl has pretty much become a cliche of the genre. I for one definitely enjoyed the fact that there was no biggie of a dungeon in the game (unless the last DLC contains one -- I haven't visited that area yet). As for the quality, I'm not too sure. I very much enjoyed the Undercity, because some of the encounters there were nicely planned. There's one where you initially come across a set of enemies and then, some time later, additional enemies surface (literally) and attack you. I thought that was a brilliant move and required some off-the-cuff readjustment of my strategy. Od Nua was a lovely idea in PoE, and some of it was really good, but quite frankly there were a couple of levels where you noticed the developers had run out of ideas and just had to come up with something (the one with the spiky floor room, the one with the confusion-inducing critters, at least). Forgotten Sanctum is basically one dungeon crawl. I loved it. It reminds me of the Severed Hand-type dungeon of Icewind Dales 1/2... not quite as big, but full of encounters, traps, but also occasional non-hostile NPCs to interact with. (Also I loved actually being able to sneak around to fulfill a quest objective - sneaking is still woefully undersupported in this game.) Reflecting again, objectively Deadfire didn't have that much less than PoE1 in terms of dungeoneering as PoE1. Poko Kohara, Oathbreaker's Sanctum, Old City were all decent multi-level dungeons; there was also Ashen Maw (though I'm inclined to exclude "dungeons" where you can make/keep everyone friendly). I think my perception is skewed by many of the island encounters where it's just basically one room with a couple encounters. In total I'm sure it's a roughly similar amount of content in total, but you don't really get a chance to really get *into* the dungeoneering experience if you're already out within 30 minutes (like with the many Fampyr/vessel crypt areas).
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With that comp, you'll cover most of the bases. I'm a bit concerned about PEN since you're playing on PoTD: you'll probably want to spec Tekehu as a Druid/Chanter for the Hel Hyraf's Invocation (-2 AR) and give Xoti Champion's Boon (+5 MIG, +2 PEN). Later on, when money and resources aren't a big deal, you can also eat Hot Razor Skewers or Crusted Swordfish for PEN bonuses to physical attacks and spells, respectively. On that note, you might get better mileage as an Assassin/Evoker for the +2 PL bonus to Evocation spells. Blood Mages generally have low MIG (for less sacrifice damage) and focus on CC and Afflictions. an assassin/blood mage can learn expose vulnerabilities for -2 AR or any perception affliction for -1 AR. Not quite as good as Hel-Hyraf's upgrade (The Shield Breaks basically has no expiration in any decent fight), but does mean that they don't *need* it enough to roll a theurge. (also a blood mage can keep spamming expose vulnerabilities until it connects) remember that a blood mage with blood sacrifice will almost constnatly have a +1 PL bonus, which is half way to a subclass bonus, except you also have no excluded schools or recovery time penalties. (no echo chance, but i'll take spell regen at-will over random evocation echo)
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This sounds like a driver crash. Do you get any other wattman notes? Any custom settings? I have an undervolted/overclocked Vega 64 and on any other game it's fine (my go to examples are maxed out HDR assassin's creed odyssey or 4k high settings shadow of the tomb raider), but until I really amped up the fans *only* in Deadfire would I get "safe temps exceeded" errors in wattman, so "usually does not run into problems" doesn't appear to be a good enough criteria because Deadfire's engine is unusually heavy-hitting.