Aller au contenu

How "replayable" is this game


40 réponses à ce sujet

#26
Lucciryn

Lucciryn
  • Members
  • 2 messages
Jus curious, will you still be able to run around and do whatever the **** you want after u beat the game?

#27
TheRealIncarnal

TheRealIncarnal
  • Members
  • 475 messages
Yeah, but that's never stopped anyone before.



I'm sure some day someone who's far above us mere mortals will for some odd reason solo it on Nightmare.



Meanwhile, I think I'll be saving Nightmare for my 3rd or 4th playthough.

#28
Madlax27

Madlax27
  • Members
  • 217 messages

Lucciryn wrote...

Jus curious, will you still be able to run around and do whatever the **** you want after u beat the game?


As far as we've heard you get a last save game and the game ends, no running around.

Most Bioware games (in fact all of them) are like this however. It is not a sandbox game after all.

With the last save though we will likely get to import our character into other modules to play that are made by the community

Modifié par Madlax27, 03 novembre 2009 - 03:44 .


#29
Blips

Blips
  • Members
  • 147 messages

Stanley Woo wrote...
5. We've mentioned random encounters before. Some of them are very rare and hard to get to, indeed.


How do you get to something that is random? Must be location specific or something....

#30
Aeshyn Stormsinger

Aeshyn Stormsinger
  • Members
  • 181 messages
It's as replay-able as your imagination/mind prohibits, as is any game, really. It depends on the person as to what values are in a game that would warrant a second experience, for example, people who love to replay Half-Life 2 for it's great action won't necessarily like games that are too open, as they like to be steered to objectives, not to discover them for themselves in an open world. So it all depends on the perspective of the person playing, and what their values in what they play are.



As for my viewpoint, I love a good RPG, getting into the atmosphere of another reality, blending in, and generally immersing myself in every way imaginable. Plus with DA:O and other Bioware games, if you do finish them, you can download player-built or official modules to play, therefore expanding your experience. Add onto that the fact you can build your own modules, you'll have endless replay value for as long as you find enjoyment in devoting time to it.

#31
Treacherously

Treacherously
  • Members
  • 5 messages

Blips wrote...

Stanley Woo wrote...
5. We've mentioned random encounters before. Some of them are very rare and hard to get to, indeed.


How do you get to something that is random? Must be location specific or something....


Or they could just surprise the player and have a final fantasy random battle theme kick in out of nowhere..........just saying.

#32
Treacherously

Treacherously
  • Members
  • 5 messages

Blips wrote...

Stanley Woo wrote...
5. We've mentioned random encounters before. Some of them are very rare and hard to get to, indeed.


How do you get to something that is random? Must be location specific or something....


Or they could just surprise the player and have a final fantasy random battle theme kick in out of nowhere..........just saying.

#33
Treacherously

Treacherously
  • Members
  • 5 messages

Blips wrote...

Stanley Woo wrote...
5. We've mentioned random encounters before. Some of them are very rare and hard to get to, indeed.


How do you get to something that is random? Must be location specific or something....


They could always surprise the player by having some old final fantasy random battle theme kick in out of nowhere....just saying.

#34
Kortok

Kortok
  • Members
  • 103 messages

DadeLeviathan wrote...

TheRealIncarnal wrote...

That is true, they say you can Solo it.

I must admit, I'm curious who the first person is going to be to solo the whole game on Nightmare.


Nobody will be able to solo it on nightmare, i would believe, at least not without cheats or a trainer. Nightmare, according to the devs, has been made murderously hard.


Someone will solo nightmare imo.  Someone solo'd the BGII Ascension mod w/o cheats and I highly doubt this game touches Ascension in terms of difficulty.  Then again, BGII probably has far more items than this game (which allowed the fighter a ton of flexibility) so I may be wrong.  All depends on the depth of items DA offers.

#35
Guest_Johohoho.Ehehehe_*

Guest_Johohoho.Ehehehe_*
  • Guests
In general, I play every RPG at last twice.



The first attempt serves for getting familiar with the game mechanics, the importance of skills / talents / spells and so forth, and it is rarely played to the end. Quite contraty, I find out very soon what I have done wrong and what choices I should have made instead.



The second attempt is usually "the one", the best, the always-remembered. Familiar with the game mechanics but new to the story and the world. Perfect.



If the game is worth it I play it again after some some when I do not remember everything in detail. (I remember that after I finished Fallout 2 and BG 2 I wished to have my memory erased in order to play it again with the same joy of surprise.) The third attempt is usually focused on the big picture: the world, the lore developed by the community, so it is more like reading a book.



At the beginning of this year, I afford a great tour of nostalgy - I played BG 2, and Fallout 1 and 2. I wished to play Bloodlines too, but I still remembered it too well.

#36
Boeresmurf

Boeresmurf
  • Members
  • 486 messages
just think of the difference in game story at the city elf.

female is getting kidnapped and the video from u breaking out so decided for me to play female city elf, although i already decided to play male city elf aswell :)



this game will get alot of replay from me, think same ammount as kotor1 and 2 , at least 12 times ;)

#37
Brokn68

Brokn68
  • Members
  • 4 messages
I plan to try to take every class through the game. :)

#38
Zzyn

Zzyn
  • Members
  • 22 messages
I expect I'll play it many times through. Unlike that recent RPG Risen, which you could maybe squeeze two playthroughs out of. I only got through one.

#39
frylock23

frylock23
  • Members
  • 3 037 messages
Good stories are an addiction for me. I have one book that I love so much I have literally read two copies to death. ME's story was gripping enough for me to replay it dozens of times, and there weren't that many variations in it. A good story that hooks me in is always well worth revisiting and revisiting many times.



If this game grabs me like that, I may be playing and replaying it for a long time especially if all the variations and little things to be discovered about it keep me getting flashes of new content as I replay along.

#40
The Dead Milkman

The Dead Milkman
  • Members
  • 79 messages
This game isn't replayable at all. I can't think of one reason to replay it when you beat your first playthrough. There isn't possibly any other reason. I'm making a human warrior and when I beat it I'm never playing it again.

Or.. You could not be a complete idiot and read even the tiniest amount of info on a game before joining a forum and making threads about stupid crap.

I mean, ONE reason to replay is in the **** title.

#41
Wiz33

Wiz33
  • Members
  • 43 messages
From kotaku



So Many Choices: I've played every major BioWare RPG released so far, and while they all deal with making tough decisions, none have seemed to have nearly as profound an impact as those in Dragon Age: Origins do. I regularly found myself making the sort of decisions that had me realizing that I had just completely altered a major portion of the game. Kingdoms rose and fell and important people lived or died based solely on my whims. This is definitely the kind of game you'll want to play through multiple times, just to see how your actions affect the world.