There are maybe one or two quests that are actually urgently time sensitive. Don't be afraid to rest, the game will warn you if you're going to mess up a quest before it happens. Resting is also how you get a lot of important camp scenes with the companions.
Also, short rests will never mess up a quest. Do one after nearly every fight.
I need to swap Gale out on my evil run but I just can't give up that sweet, sweet fireball.
Subnautica legitimately made me stop and stare at my screen with mouth agape at the wonder and terror of a glowing undersea behemoth. I've never had a game provoke pure awe like it does.
755 hours in Total War: Warhammer 2.
I will miss this spell being more OP than it had any right to be.
I just want to be friends with all the companions but every single one of them keeps expecting me to kiss them. ):
"Watch the Irishman Suffer" is practically it's own genre of Star Trek episode. Chief O'Brien needs a break, he's just a regular dude who has witnessed his own death too many times.
Hello from Spokane, where we were literally off the chart yesterday! (AQI of 511 out of 500!) I went outside for five minutes to water the garden and my eyes were stinging and teary for a while afterwards.
But nobody gives a shit unless it's the east coast, because this has happened nearly every year for the past 5 years. At least I can see the sky today.
Act 2 has some awesome chances to bypass boss fights entirely... if you can pass multiple conversation checks in a row. My rogue almost won the bar conversation, but when you need to succeed 6 times in a row, luck is just not on your side.
I've savescummed a couple checks... like the point where you meet Lae'zel. If you're a Paladin, you get a special Deception check to make the tieflings leave. Except, if you fail this check, there's no option to rescue Lae'zel without killing the tieflings, which causes you to break your oath.
Yoko Shimomura is my favorite Square Enix composer, hands down.
Yeah, there are important plot reasons that the tadpoles in this game don't function quite how the lore implies they should.
While I was playing Act 2 I kept having to take breaks every hour or so because the crippling decision paralysis was making me too stressed to continue.
Concerning Act 2 Shadowheart
If she destroys the Nightsong, she gets a full set of unique Dark Justiciar armor (boots, gloves, helm, breastplate) and a Spear of Night upgrade. I think they have a bunch of powers that activate while you're in dim light. There's also a cutscene where Shar gives her orders to kill Ketheric Thorm.
It's cool but nothing game-breaking. I'm sure you get equivalent rewards for the opposite decision.
Oh, yes, I'm not sure about the stat consequences if you attack with the status on. I just mean the notification that your stats will be lowered, which goes away if a character kills their own double.
Missing gear has never been a worry for me. The game floods you with so much loot no matter what you do.
There is serious FOMO with story decisions, though. There are certain paths that can cause companions to permanently die or leave the party, cause entire factions to aggro on you at once, or kill off important NPCs. Some of these decisions also hinge on die rolls. You have to be prepared to let it go or embrace the save scum.
The debuff for attacking other characters' doubles also goes away once you kill your own double, leaving you free to focus fire. It's not too difficult to do the fight straight up, especially since PC HP scales at a different rate than enemy HP.
The sweating means I'm enjoying it. I don't want a curry unless it makes my nose start running.
A welcome change from Skyrim bandits shouting "Never should have come here!" while you're rocking around in a full set of Daedric armor.
If you talk to Minthara, you can bait her into
assaulting the grove, at which point you can help the tieflings defend it.
You're also a bit under-leveled and should have a full party by now! Do some more exploring and don't try to rush the main quest, even if the game makes it sound super urgent.
I am desperate to discuss this game, it's possibly one of my top 3 Final Fantasy games.
The combat feels pretty great, I don't mind it being a Devil May Cry action system. It's really satisfying to chain together evades and teleports and blow up the screen with particle effects. The game really opens up as you get more abilities but it does take a while to get into the full scope of combat.
The sense of spectacle is amazing, I am a huge fan of kaiju movies, so I am all on board for 50 foot monster battles.
And the story and characters are so good! It's so refreshing to get a story where the protagonists want to make the world a better place by throwing down oppressive authority and are actually allowed to do so. Clive has a strong sense of honor and a very endearing dorky streak wrapped up behind all his emotional trauma and he's a great sympathetic protagonist. Cid is possibly one of the best Cids of all time (where did they find the absolute mutant that voices him?). Jill is a perfect complement to Clive, they are possibly the only two people who can fully understand each other.
Additional marks for letting everyone say "Fuck."
Please mark spoilers!
This spider got into my house this morning and I had to put it back out before the cat got it. It's about a half inch long and very fuzzy and cute.