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Dragon Age - Preview @ Eurogamer
Oli Welsh writes up his not so impressed with Dragon Age preview.
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This preview echoes my own feelings somewhat. I can't help but shake the feeling that Dragon Age is so much "by the numbers" that it's not going to excite. Been there, done that. The Bioware formula is starting to get a bit old, no matter how they dress it up.
Shame, as I'd love a decent BG-style romp. I just want the setting, plot and character to not feel like they've been transplanted from various other Bioware RPGs. |
The Bioware formula is most certainly not getting old or uninteresting in my view. Judging a game by a demo can work fine for action-based games which rely on graphics and wow but for a Bioware game it's the story/quests and the way everything is so well implemented which is a main strength and that can't be captured in any sort of demo.
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Eurogamer: A site that gave 10/10 to Oblivion.
'Nuff said. |
I wonder what this paragraph meant
"NPC party-members are controlled by autonomous AI in real-time, but once controlled offer up their own limited action bars, providing some variety and tactical flexibility." Hm, is he implying that, unlike BG/Kotor, you *can't* control every character as fully as the "hero"? I hope not - that would be crap (one of the things I hated about NWN). I do understand the undertone of cynicism - but I liked the old party-based BG formula and I'd love to see it updated for the new millenium. Of course, it would have been even better to see something new and daring, but I ddn't really expect that. I hope more details will be forthcoming about how closely this game really implements the party dynamic - I don't give a toss about "coordinating shield bashes" etc. I want tactical combat, that I can control completely (well, as completely as I could in the old BG titles). |
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I enjoyed the preview for two reasons.
First, and the smaller of the two, because it was well written. Second, because here's someone who is not simply toeing the line at which all other media are standing, lauding the game and all that is Bioware with a unified chorus. The reality is that turn-based, tactical combat has already been done and done very very well. We know (and love, right?) pioneer games like Pools of Radiance, BG and Silent Storm which allow you to participate in every aspect of combat. There's obviously a lack of games of this time, so much so that even NWN2 is trying to capture this (admittedly small) target market with the world map in its new expansion pack. Where have the tactical turn based games gone? Simple: it is no longer financially viable to produce such games. We're in the world of FPSs and genres that have "action" prefixed to them (ARPG) and everyone wants eye candy and gore and action and adrenaline. Sitting back and thinking for minutes on end (oh no, not minutes!) about the next turn is becoming (or has already become) the province of the stodgy curmudgeons that are the older gamer generation. While they may be numerous and have the disposable income to fund such games, they no longer have the time to commit to them … certainly not in volumes that accompany the halcyon days of the younger generation. |
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Anyway, I can think of no happier fantasy. But classic PC gamers have to be hardened realists by now (or at least had ought to be), and we recognize that a fantasy is just a fantasy. There's been a new generation, far more numerous, who don't object to swords and Orks and fireballs; but they do find it hard to understand why that particular band of Orks stays frozen in absolute stasis for the 10 seconds it presumably takes the mage to cast his fireball spell, or why that fighter stands perfectly still while another group of Orks advance one at a time to a square next to him, and take exactly one swing each. Turn-based gameplay is an abstraction, it's a game mechanism that's heavy on the game, and as computers have gotten mightier, the trend in ALL things is towards more "realism". I know, we're talking about Orks and fireballs, but one of the key differences between us (the Western world) and the Japanese is that we (as a game-buying public) are only willing to suspend our disbelief so far. We can imagine a world of Orks and fireballs, but a world of turns? This is just to say that while I cherish and prefer turn-based tactical combat, I can also see the (majority?) viewpoint that turn-based gaming was an abstraction that was tolerated only because PCs lacked the power to render believable combat in real time. And now that the power is there, real-time is the only acceptible mechanism; exactly the way people feel about 2-D v 3-D. To that viewopint, turn-based's time has passed, and they say, 'good riddance'. What can ya do? |
The thing I like about turn based games is that I can control and see every aspect of the combat. In real time strategies control often become chaotic and you miss many cool things that happen in the combat (special moves,spells,"heroic actions" that saved the party, etc ) because you have only one pair of eyes. But I think real time games can be good too if you can control every unit and you can slow down the speed of the realtime. Som RTS games (C&C?) had a speed meter which enabled you to slow down the game to a level where it could as well be a turnbased game.
Guild wars npc are autonomous but most of the time I have no idea what they are doing, because I have hands full controlling my own character and there is no speed meter in the game. The only thing Im barely able to keep up is whether the ai healer keeps the party alive. Allthough somtimes Im not able to do that even and som fool runs away just to get himself killed. The thing that worries me is the special stuff that happens in the dragon age. In the video characters cast neat spells, jump on monsters, etc. It all looks amazing but if the game is realtime and you cant slow it down I dont have any time to enjoy watching such actions - I will miss most of them because my eyes were somwhere else. |
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I too am puzzled every time I hear developers talk about "realism" and "immersion" when talking about games that take place in totally unrealistic settings. All the excuses against turn-based, are just that, excuses. It's just a matter of what the majority is used to : people want immediate action, no thoughts, no planning, just rush in and bash away. The result of a generation fed with the Diablo series, Half Life and Unreal engine games I guess. It's like automatic vs manual cars, try selling a manual car in the USA, it just won't sell to the masses, and it won't matter if you explain it gives more control and "tactical" possibilities, they're just used to automatic so will only buy that. |
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http://www.giantitp.com/comics/erf0001.html |
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… Then, I'm thinking of talking like this : "Oh, my these mindless games nowadays … Couldn't there be something more fleshed out ? All these action titles … There's nothing more than mindless action titles out there …" "No. It's too late now. Back then, 10 years ago, you all voted with your money and said : This kind of gaming is good. Make more of this ! You could've changed the future by voting with your money differently. But now it's too late. You got what you voted for." Quote:
By feeding them with what they thought they wanted, the industryshaped and grew its own kind of customers. Like in a farm : An animal will eat what it is fed with. At one point, it develops kind of custom / habit (out of this). Like the dog of Pavlov. To me, it's a two-sides thing. |
It's highly probable that more people played real-time games in what's know as the 'good ol days' as well.
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What I've seen of Dragon Age doesn't show off very well. The first trailer that came out was crap. The Gameplay videos that have come out since then look good but not spectacular. They showed some combat and it was okay, but they didn't show off any use of tactics.
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Well, nobody is showing off much of their mechanics early on, not even Blizzard with a game like Diablo 3 so I'm guessing this is an advertising tactic. I've done a little study in advertising but nothing to do with building momentum to release. More on the denotation/connotation of adverts themselves - magazines, TV and the like. It's all so dull and contrived.
Edit: While I'm on this it's one thing I really like about The Watch is that you can come here and not be bombarded with the dross that seems to be killing my Firefox. |
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better the rpgs started to transform into realtime (did they try to attract the realtime gamers?). Nowadays theres no turn based rpgs left at all anymore - except from indies. |
Nope, but if Interplay were still going today (or should I say making games today) would even they be doing turn based now? - I'm not so sure. The Bard's Tale publishers last release was what? Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance II?
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Bioware have never even done what people call a turn-based game, they arrived with real-time with pause so I don't see how you can even expect one from them.
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They showed a few skills in motion but no skill trees, stats, or leveling. What they showed I see as game-play.
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To me, Bioware has been doing a great job in showing us (and yes, marketing to us) a game that harkens back to the days of Baldur's Gate. The devs. have said on numerous occasion as have the good doctors (Ray & Greg) that you can control all your characters, even in combat.
When we look at how combat is meant to be done in BG1+BG2 it is meant to be done by hitting the pause button, telling your charachers including your own, the pc, what to do - then you release the pause button and the action flows. Not in realtime, since every one is still on their individual rounds (that's last for 6 seconds in BG1+BG2 while a turn last for 60 seconds) that is based in the D&D ruleset. To me, this action bar?, just shows me that the game will play similar to BG1+BG2 in combat. You pause the game, you can order your team mates what to do, then unpause, then they do it. In realtime (almost). Have any of you though that (maybe) the 'offering up their own actions bars" could actually mean that NPCs, and you, have action points?? I do hope this does not mean that when we're not in combat we can't control our characters? It sounds like this since the controls (for the player's characters) are using the WSAD system. From the demo, I got the distinct impression that you could click on the ground and the party would play 'follow the leader'. Bu maybe I got some messages crossed?? |
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I generally think of the underlining rules as the mechanics and using them the game play. So they are intrinsically linked, blurred even at times. We can take a fairly good guess at what a Diablo game and a party based game will generally play like. From what the producer said at E3 DA will have 1v1 battles and your party v many battles. How much of each? Who knows.
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You can control all your characters in combat, just like in BG games. This time the combat is actual realtime, not turnbased simulated as realtime. The WASD moving is for exploration, but I guess you could use it in combat, if you wanted to for some reason. Also you can play pretty much the whole game from the bird's eye view if you don't want zoom close and move with the WASD.
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From what I remember F1&2 were similarly round-based, but without BGs option to run the rounds together. |
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No.
In a "true" turn-based system -- say ToEE, for example -- the combat queue is critical. If my puny mage is caught standing beside the giant ogre - and the queue is rogue -> ogre -> mage, then the rogue better do something creative because the ogre is going to smash my mage before he does anything at all. This creates tension, atmosphere and tactics that are different to running everyone on simultaneous, individual initiative rounds. In BG, I'm simply going to move my mage away while getting everyone else to target the ogre…completely different scenario, I'm sorry. It might only be a minor change in mechanics on paper but the effect is quite different. Now, that isn't to saw RT doesn't have its own appeal. May I hazard a guess you aren't a real fan of sequential TB systems? |
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That's fine, but I'd suggest that's why it's easy to dismiss RTwP and TB as practically the same. For those of us who really love sequential TB systems, there is quite a difference.
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In a game like Dragon Age where they are designing the whole ruleset to be exclusively experienced on a computer then I'm glad it's not round based at all. There is no Dragon Age tabletop game which I'm trying to emulate. |
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Your example from above is just one example of an "execution order" (double sense in here, too). But just imagine an order of hero1 -> enemy1 -> hero2 -> enemy2 etc. . This would force the player to develop just another kind of tactics … Ideal would be a game which is so "open" that one could change the execution order in the options menu … Not during a fight, of course. ;) |
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Can't comment on the DA system, because I know nothing about it. |
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It's not real time with pause because the entire mechanics are still based around a round and what you can do within that. Even NWN 1& 2 still have an internal (though asynchronous, unlike BG) round mechanic which you have to use custom heartbeats to get around. RTwP would be something like Dungeon Siege. |
I'll just post this thread
http://dragonage.bioware.com/forums/…2635&forum=135 where Georg Zoeller, senior technical designer at Bioware, states that Bioware made the ruleset for DA from scratch; reason being they wanted to have absolute control over the creative proces. The ruleset for DA was made with the computer in mind. There's no D&D ruleset being used, but Georg Zoeller wrote: Quote:
Then the thread sort of made it it techie-land, but as it was 1:30 AM over here in Europe…I went to :sleep: instead… |
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So what ? |
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