Reply 6060 of 6850, by newtmonkey
- Rank
- Oldbie
Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire
It's been a little while since I've played some computer games. It's now summer in the newtmonkey caves, so I've been spending my evenings in the living area, which is well ventilated and cool at night, rather than the computer area, which builds up heat during the day and doesn't cool down until late at night. That means I've been playing console games lately, though I don't talk about those here (I've been playing a lot of Final Fantasy IX).
Anyway, it suddenly got very cool again, so I'm back to playing PoEII, and it's still great. One thing that would normally annoy me but actually is very cool is that the game ranks the difficulty of every quest and side quest based on, I guess, your average party level. You can bring up the quest log, and either go around completing stuff that's easy until you bring the difficulty level of the main quest down, or attempt the main quest even though you are "underleveled." Because there's so much involved with the game, you can often handily clear quests ranked above your level through good use of tactics and abilities. In other words, all this does is just save you from wasting time throwing yourself at something difficult if you don't want to deal with it, and yet allows you to do so if you want the challenge. It's genius.
Even though the game is very modern with regard to how it plays and looks, it's still got the classic RPG loop of exploring, leveling up, finding loot, and returning to town to sell stuff and buy better stuff. It just also adds a bunch of faction stuff and truly nonlinear open-world sailing exploration. It's just full of stuff to do, and so far, all of it is good.
Every modern Baldur's Gate "clone" has some weird minigame or something, and in PoEII it's sailing. This requires resources, and you need to keep your crew fed and happy. What I did was buy 500 units of the cheapest food and drink first chance I got, so I wouldn't have to worry about it. Crew morale will drop with this stuff, but it's fine at first because you can increase morale by boarding enemy ships and sharing spoils. Once you start making decent money a few hours in, you can buy better food and drink for your crew, which will increase morale each day. It's something that will doom you if you don't pay attention to it, but if you take care of it early on, you don't really have to worry much about it.