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2019-06-27, 01:27 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Nov 2013
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Congratulations, you have achieved enlightenment.
That's pretty much the experience I had with the game (and I've heard others on this forum and elsewhere are the same). The combat is a very different experience from the Souls games and you will absolutely suck at it at first. But when it clicks...
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2019-06-27, 02:39 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Oct 2006
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Mostly for lack of a better place to ask and not being worth it's own thread, is Civ 5 with expansions or Civ 6 a better choice?
I've got the base for 5, but none of the expansions, but the expansions are the same price as 6 right now thanks to the Steam sale.
Normally I would assume that any major improvements for the previous game and expansions would be incorporated into the newest game, but I know there are things from Civ 4 that weren't in Civ 5 until the expansions. So I'm not sure if getting the base Civ 6 is going to have those improvements or not (off-hand it is things like spies, religion, more diplomatic choices, other ways of spreading cultural influence, better ability to protect weak units)
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2019-06-27, 04:28 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I killed the general guarding the door to the main tower in Ashina castle on my second try. The blue quick draw guy probably took me well over 10 times, but being such a very short fight, it didn't feel like much trouble at all. With that fight I felt that it was totally stupid, but with the respawn point right in front of the door I actually had a lot of fun with it.
Genichiro still lives, but I got him to the third lifebar on my second try, and the third one doesn't seem that much harder. With this one, I actually got the impression that he's really easy. I still might take more than 10 tries, but with these games that's not saying much.
I think there's really three things to know:
1. You can block almost everything.
2. While you have your sword in block, your posture bar resests very quickly.
3. Attack, attack, attack!
Lady Butterfly took me forever, though it didn't feel frustrating because I felt I knew what I was doing. I just had to get better at avoiding getting hit while slowly hacking away her entire health bar. But fights get so much easier when you keep attacking as fast as possible because you can interrupt most of the enemies strongest attacks. When I beat Lady Butterfly, she didn't even get to summon her illusions at all. And I still had three healing and a resurrection left.
I thought after having completed Demon's Souls, DS1, DS3, and Bloodborne, I thought I could play this game completely blind without looking up anything. Might not have been the best game to pick for that. I think my main problem was that I didn't have any confidence in being able to block Lady Butterfly's ranged attacks or anything by the horse rider. That you can even block that giant with his giant halberd charging you on his giant was probably the one hint I needed to get a grasp of boss fights. Holding block to get your posture back is also a very neat feature, that I don't remember the game telling me. At least there is now a combat trainer in the hub for practice. That really helped a lot.
At first I thought that there wouldn't be much fantasy stuff in this kung fu game. The giant snake was cool, but seemed like a random special effect. But now it starts to look like there is more coming. Already been to the Dungeon and went a bit into the Temple. At one point I was wondering if all the monks I was stealth killing were really that evil, but then I took a closer look at what the three monks in the first gatehouse are praying too. Stabbing it is! Stab everyone! Then set everything on fire!
What I think is really cool is the pop culture references that I am spotting. There is soo much stuff that looks like taken straight from Akira Kurosawa. I mean, Wolf himself looks like he's a Toshiro Mifune character. The bandits seem to be straight out of Seven Samurai. Not just the outfits, but even the animations. A few times I saw some of them kicking up dirt at my face and I know I saw that exact movement in one of the movies. Though Wolf also reminds me of Auron from Final Fantasy X.
Though my favorite so far is probably the cannon gunners. Those guys are the leper gunsmiths from Princess Mononoke.We are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2019-06-27, 04:51 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jun 2010
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- Porto Alegre, Brazil
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I have both Civ V and base Civ VI and I've quite liked the new things that VI does. Well, for starters VI has some of the improvements you've listed (spies and many religion choices incluiding religious victory are in the base game). Spies have more functinality compared with V (they can sabotage enemies' districts). VI's expansion I think adds more diplomatic options (incluiding diplomatic victory in a similar fashion as V) with the governors, I think. Cultural victory is achieved through tourism like V's expansion, but they've separated the great artists into separate entities (based on writing, painting and song) that I think is different from V, at least (it has been a while since I've played V).
The main thing VI does differently is having districs and wonders occupy a spot on the map, so it makes picking cities' locations more relevant and it prevents you from spamming every building on every city and most of your wonders on your starting city. That, however, means that VI has a bigger bias towards wide empires when compared with V.
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2019-06-27, 05:12 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jan 2012
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- Secret Lair on Sol c
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Last edited by Sian; 2019-06-27 at 05:12 PM.
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2019-06-27, 06:08 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Aug 2018
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- Between SEA and PDX.
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Been playing a lot of Spiderman on the PS4.
I found out a particularly broken combo involving the Web Bomb. See, when an enemy is webbed, any contact with a wall is enough to "KO" them. This makes Webs + Knockback effects especially powerful.
Well, one of the most powerful knockback effects in the game is the Rock Out suit power, which has Spiderman blast a powerchord that knocks enemies back a massive distance, and the knockback itself has good range while making you invulnerable during the animation.
So Web Bomb first, to web all enemies within a decent radius, then knock them all back, and instantly get several KO's. You can take out about 5 guys in 5 seconds doing it. Sometimes the enemies don't hit a wall so they're still able to get back up and break free from the web, but they're so scattered (and temporarily webbed) so that they aren't even a threat by the time they all break free (as you generally KO about 2 of them by the time they start breaking free, and there aren't many left after your combo in the first place).
Kind of a shame, really, as I like aerial combat and there's nothing nearly as powerful for that kind of gameplay.
Also, Point Launch (Pressing X as you land after using the triggers to launch yourself to a particular point) is definitely the best way to traverse around. The amount of speed it grants you when you nail it is stupid.
5th Edition Homebrewery
Prestige Options, changing primary attributes to open a world of new multiclassing.
Adrenaline Surge, fitting Short Rests into combat to fix bosses/Short Rest Classes.
Pain, using Exhaustion to make tactical martial combatants.
Fate Sorcery, lucky winner of the 5e D&D Subclass Contest VII!
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2019-06-27, 06:19 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Oct 2009
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- In my library
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Maybe when I've finished this run, unfortunately with Pillars of Eternity I know that the engine T:ToN uses is very much a case of 'if I fiddle with the graphics options I can get a framerate mostly in the 15-18 range'. Certainly playable for a CRPG, but compared to Torment running at a crisp thirty (potentially more, but I want it as close to te original as possible) it's just not going to be as enjoyable.
Plus, honestly, I like the personal and confined nature of the original Torment's story. You're not out to save the world, or even to explore it, you're trying to solve your memory problems and potentially make up for what some of your earlier incarnations did (but even if you're staying away from evil it's actually somewhat hard not to slide into 'manipulative ****** territory). And unlike every other game I've played with the amnesia plot hook it all comes back to it and the plot hooks it links to (regaining your mortality, how your past selves have utterly messed up the lives of others, and dealing with the consequences of past lives working against each other). The thing that struck me just playing it now is that, despite the amnesia story, the Nameless One is not a blank slate with no personality. Besides from the predefined motivation the dialogue options are definitely slanted, with your character's mental stats essentially determining exact where TNO falls.
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2019-06-27, 06:21 PM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- May 2009
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Civ V, at least with all expansions, has Great Artists, Writers, and Musicians as separate entities. All can produce great works that make culture and tourism over time; Artists can also start a golden age, Writers can give you a bunch of culture at once, and Musicians can give you a bunch of influence with a single other civ.
ithilanor on Steam.
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2019-06-27, 11:25 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Nov 2008
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
So, I have no landed this move on real people a few times. And discovered that I was wrong about it punishable on block - because it turns out that it's unblockable. The answer to it is to jump over her while she's winding up the punch so she misses completely. Do anything else, and you get hit for 70%. And judging by what I've seen, a lot of people playing the game right now don't know this.
Yeah, it is pretty fun to be fighting someone, have them think they've just gained a serious upper hand by disarming you, and then just one shot them with that thing. It's still pretty much asking to die if you try to do it to someone who knows what's up, but damn it's satisfying to just melt someone's life bar like that when they don't know.Toph Pony avatar by Dirtytabs. Thanks!
"When I was ten, I read fairy tales in secret and would have been ashamed if I had been found doing so. Now that I am fifty, I read them openly. When I became a man, I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up." -C.S. Lewis
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2019-06-28, 06:54 AM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
3 is more like "attack, parry, attack", but you're thematically correct.
I'm very well into the game, and I still forget that point from time to time. Just yesterday I was doing pretty poorly and down to my last drink against Vilehand, when I just went "screw this, if I'm going to die anyway, I'm going to try a riposte for every parry". Totally turned the battle upside down.
It's really ingrained in us as players to wait for "proper openings", and it's not from just FromSoft games. It's pretty clever to go almost defiantly against that general rule.
As people said above, just get 6. 6 picks it up almost where 5 and all of its expansions dropped it, and it has some improvements as well, like the handling of districts and wonders as already mentioned. If you can get a good discount, try to eventually get the expansions as well. They are pretty good.
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2019-06-28, 07:37 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I'm currently fighting Genichiro. Mostly he is pretty easy, but somehow my counter to his jump attack-perilous attack combo only works two out of three times. Apparently he has different perilous attacks, but it's impossible to see what he's doing while he's in the air. His black cloak also does a really good job of making it hard to see which perilous attack he is charging up on the ground. So it basically comes down to luck.
We are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2019-06-28, 08:22 AM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Dec 2008
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Hmm that doesn’t sound right. I’ve beaten the game a few times now and at this point I usually can beat Genichiro taking little to no damage. I’d offer advise but I honestly can’t think of the move you’re describing. But as a general rule for perilous attacks if the sword is pointing toward you it’s going to be a thrust. If the sword is pointed to the side it’s a sweep. If they let go of their weapon it’s a strike or grab. And if you’re still having trouble with him just keep running around him in a big circle.
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2019-06-28, 08:45 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Practice. Lady Butterfly is also super easy, but it still took me a couple of hours.
Not quite sure where I want to go now. Next thing I have to do is either fight the boss on top of the castle, the boss on the bridge at the temple, the headless boss, the other purple boss in the dungeons, or the mini-boss with the gun in the valley. The game is really fun when it's not a boss.We are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2019-06-28, 09:19 AM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
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2019-06-28, 10:05 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2007
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- Manchester, UK
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2019-06-28, 12:38 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
10 times for a boss is not that unusual for these games.
40 times just means I really suck at this one.We are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2019-06-28, 02:36 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Aug 2018
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- Between SEA and PDX.
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I think it took me about 6 hours to beat the Ereshkigal on Hard Mode in FF:LR. So...many...reloads...
Personally, I like it when games implement hard bosses well. Not sure how Sekiro plays, but I didn't particularly enjoy Dark Souls bosses for the fact that it was hard to tell exactly what you did wrong, and how to fix it. Anyone got suggestions for games with enemies that DON'T do that?
5th Edition Homebrewery
Prestige Options, changing primary attributes to open a world of new multiclassing.
Adrenaline Surge, fitting Short Rests into combat to fix bosses/Short Rest Classes.
Pain, using Exhaustion to make tactical martial combatants.
Fate Sorcery, lucky winner of the 5e D&D Subclass Contest VII!
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2019-06-28, 02:37 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Oct 2006
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I picked up Civ 6 last night, one of the packs with the first expansion and something like a dozen new leaders.
Didn't get too much time to actually play. Really early impressions is that the UI is less intuitive than 5 (and having only recently actually started playing 5, it isn't like I was really entrenched with it or forgot what it was like not knowing it). I also found it rather annoying that they removed the city's ability to attack close by units, especially since barbarians seem to be much more numerous and much more active.
Having set the tips to "new to Civ 6" it really hasn't told me anything about many of the things that have changed. I think with the assumption that I knew all the expansions of Civ 5, which had similar things. The workers seem to function quite a bit differently, like everything is instant build? If that is the case, and especially with roads auto-building with caravans, I couldn't see much of a need to ever have more than one worker unless your empire gets huge.
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2019-06-28, 02:52 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jun 2010
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- Porto Alegre, Brazil
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
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2019-06-28, 03:06 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Sep 2007
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Also, cities now gain the ability to attack when you build City Walls. Usually it's nice to hold to some cash and then instantly "buy" the walls when you really need it.
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2019-06-28, 04:46 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Oct 2006
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Ah, that would be why they mysteriously disappeared. So nice of them to make that clear...
Ah, putting the ability behind an upgrade does make sense, but if they actually told me that anywhere I missed it.
It seems like early game now almost requires pretty heavy investment in troops to contend with barbarians. Maybe that was the case in the harder difficulties of 5 too, but I was used to having a bit of time to upgrade before having to deal with them. So far the distance between empires seems to be a lot more too, which seems nice.
Early resource tiles also seem to be less important than before, but still too early to know how that really plays out. Getting a mine or farm out early didn't seem to be much of a boost.
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2019-06-28, 06:04 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2008
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
See this seems odd to me, because I’ve always felt From games do a very good job of telegraphing what you need to do to beat just about every boss that isn’t named Bed of Chaos. The boss does a start up animation on its attack, learn the pose to figure out which direction the attack will go, when the start up animation finishes perform the defense of choice, then attack once or twice and wait for the next start up animation. Some of the bosses attacks are chains so there might not be a window to attack until after the last move of the chain, but usually after this the boss has a longer finishing animation so you can punish them with a stronger move.
I’m curious, what boss confused you?
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2019-06-28, 06:16 PM (ISO 8601)
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- May 2007
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2019-06-28, 06:28 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Aug 2018
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- Between SEA and PDX.
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I it was Dark Souls 2, in this grey fort with TONS of undead. You enter this box room that's being guarded by about 12 undead (they kinda just congo line out of the place as you get close), and there are these 3 bosses that gang up on you when you fall into this grey cube-like room. I was a Darkness/Light Cleric, I think, using the binoculars to destroy most things at long range, or using some other gimmicks (like the lure spell that creates an orb that minions are compelled to attack) to mow through a lot of areas. But when I encountered the three in that grey box, I decided to take a break for a while. Never had the time to come back to it. Rather, never made time.
Last edited by Man_Over_Game; 2019-06-28 at 06:29 PM.
5th Edition Homebrewery
Prestige Options, changing primary attributes to open a world of new multiclassing.
Adrenaline Surge, fitting Short Rests into combat to fix bosses/Short Rest Classes.
Pain, using Exhaustion to make tactical martial combatants.
Fate Sorcery, lucky winner of the 5e D&D Subclass Contest VII!
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2019-06-29, 12:31 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Feb 2007
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- Manchester, UK
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Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
My opinion matches Yahtzee (Zero Punctuation) on this--if I've performed the arcane series of actions you intend me to do in order to defeat the boss, then I should only need to repeat that 2 or 3 times to prove I know what I'm doing (because the first time might have been a fluke). I shouldn't have to keep doing it for minutes on end in order to whittle the boss's enormous health bar down, that's just making things tedious.
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2019-06-29, 01:41 AM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Nov 2013
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
That is the case with Dark Souls bosses typically. If you know the counters and are reasonably statted you should be able to melt their HP bar. The difficulty is in learning the counters.
For instance, the boss Yora is stuck on - it took me a similar amount of time to be able to beat him, and whenever I come back to him there is a period of "re-learning" how to fight him. For a pro player or a speedrunner though? It's about 30 seconds of bullying the poor guy, and it's only that long because he has different phases.
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2019-06-29, 02:58 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I think it's very easy to find one way that can damage a boss but is very difficult to pull off, and then focusing on mastering it while not trying to find diferent ways that are much easier.
It seems that you found the solution and so you keep doing that thing over and over without discovering much faster ways.
I think the problem is that enemies can kill you very fast and you really don't want to to go through the loading screen and running all the way back to the boss from the respawn point, which really strongly incentivises you to not try anything fancy or risky.
In Sekiro, you at least spawn very close to the bosses and can reach them in 10-20 seconds, from what I've been seeing so far. But still the game reloads the entire area from scratch, instead of just resetting the boss and your character, which gets quite annoying. In Demon's Souls, the respawn was always at the start of the level and the boss at the end. Getting back to the boss without getting killed by enemies or falls could take a considerable amount of time.We are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2019-06-29, 03:31 AM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Oct 2009
- Location
- In my library
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
You see, I've come to see any boss that requires 'an arcane series of actions' in order to damage as bad design. A boss should be vulnerable to basic moves, they should just be aggressive enough and with a larger variety of moves and thus a larger variety of tells to learn.
Dark Souls is somewhat like that. You have to deal with the sometimes incredibly long health bars, but most of the difficulty comes from learning tells. Although that doesn't keep it from cheap shots on occasion (Capra Demon anyone?)
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2019-06-29, 01:31 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2009
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- Germany
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
Everyone can clearly see that all Lost Izalith was still in an early Alpha stage when the game was released, which includes the boss.
But those two dogs with the Capra Demon have absolutely no excuse to exist. The rest of the fight with the demon itself is really not that bad, even considering the tiny arena. All the frustration comes purely from surviving the first five seconds when you get jumped by the dogs at the same time. How that ever made it into the game I can never understand.We are not standing on the shoulders of giants, but on very tall tower of other dwarves.
Spriggan's Den Heroic Fantasy Roleplaying
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2019-06-29, 02:38 PM (ISO 8601)
- Join Date
- Oct 2009
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- In my library
Re: What Are You Playing Right Now, Part 2: Daggerfall
I think the fight is meant to be yet more subtle tutorial, meant to teach you how to control a fight against multiple enemies. The problem is, such fights have already appeared and taught tactics that don't quite work due to the area design, makinng it hard to adjust to. Plus all three enemies are very fast, meaning that if you don't get away from the door and take out the dogs quickly you'll be staring at 'You Died'.
On the other hand, once the two dogs are gone it's a very fun fight. Would probably beat the Bell Gargoyles for 'best Dark Souls boss I've actually beaten' if the dogs weren't there, and it proves that the bosses don't have to be four times your size to be fun fights. It's like how the best boss fights in DMC3 weren't against the giant demons, but the fast and aggressive Vergil.