Is there any tutorial for newbie to play this game step by step
How to Play Dragon Age Inquisition
#1
Posté 17 décembre 2015 - 02:04
#2
Posté 17 décembre 2015 - 08:21
There isn't, but there are some pop-up tutorials at the start of the game.
Here are some tips.
If you are brand new to this genre, choose casual difficulty. After you create your character, save the game immediately. Then save the game again in a second save slot. This way you have a save right at the beginning of the game and you won't risk saving over it accidentally.
Save often. You never know when you might want (or need) to go back to before you made an in-game choice.
Turn off most of the tactics for each character. Save the game after doing this. Only activate certain talents or spells that the character would commonly use to do damage. Anything that would stun, freeze, or knock down (this is called rooting) an enemy is something you should not let the computer control for you since it won't use it well. The except being the warrior, since that character will do most of the battling anyway.
Get used to the tactical camera as much as you can before going into the first major battle.
Crafting is not that useful at the beginning except as a method of roleplaying. Stat-wise it doesn't help much. Only later in the game will this matter.
Whenever you loot chests or packs, try to leave the least valuable thing in. This way the chest will respawn loot when you leave that map and come back. The exception is of course maps that you only visit once in the main quests, so you can loot those completely.
When leveling up, try to fill your skill slots as quickly as possible. This means picking actual attacks, not passive abilities. For example, a mage should get barrier, fade step, energy barrage, flashfire, winter's grasp, lightning bolt, inferno, etc. Get the attacking abilities first indicated by a diamond shape in the skill trees before you get the passives, indicated by a circle, or before upgrading any of the attacks.
Don't get chain lightning. It sucks. Especially if you have friendly fire on, which you shouldn't if you're just starting out. Or, use the tactician's renewal amulet to take it out and put the skill point toward something better.
As for what kind of character you want to be, I would say that male human mage fits the storyline best. Followed by perhaps female Dalish mage. Though male human warrior is good too for a traditional feel. But mages have the most options open to them, and in my opinion fit better with the events of the game.
- MidnightWolf et Aeris1172 aiment ceci
#3
Posté 17 décembre 2015 - 11:51
- Beerfish, almasy87 et Aeris1172 aiment ceci
#4
Posté 18 décembre 2015 - 12:13
#5
Posté 18 décembre 2015 - 09:32
It's probably not the advice you want, but I would just suggest to play the game. Talk to people, go where the main quests tell you to go, and just absorb stuff along the way. If you follow the main quests you shouldn't get too bored with some of the side content, unless that's your thing.
If you like the game, you can always play again a second time with the knowledge of your first play to tailor the experience for your second.
Make frequent hard saves. That is, go to the menu and actually hit "Save," rather than quicksave.
- Shechinah, sjsharp2011 et MidnightWolf aiment ceci
#6
Posté 18 décembre 2015 - 08:49
I'm stuck in the hinterlands, how do I dergen H?
#7
Posté 19 décembre 2015 - 05:21
- Open Origin
- Right click on Dragon Age Inquisition
- Select Uninstall
- Done
#8
Posté 19 décembre 2015 - 05:32
Whenever you loot chests or packs, try to leave the least valuable thing in. This way the chest will respawn loot when you leave that map and come back. The exception is of course maps that you only visit once in the main quests, so you can loot those completely.
I'm not sure this one is a good idea. There aren't very many chests and packs that I've found myself returning to. One of the pitfalls of an open design like DAI's is that you can get bogged down in trivia, and there's enough loot in the game without farming it. I think you're better off looting and forgetting.
- DarkAmaranth1966 et sjsharp2011 aiment ceci
#9
Posté 20 décembre 2015 - 08:28
Point and click. Kill everything in sight. ![]()
#10
Posté 20 décembre 2015 - 12:30
Just be sure to aim your shotgun in its general direction but never directly at your console or television, you may need those later.
If you do decide to follow through on your threat make sure to remove the disk first.
Alternatively you could use a controller to follow the advice above its apparently easier than a KB on PC.
#11
Posté 20 décembre 2015 - 02:43
Honestly, if you are used to KB+M in RPG fantasy, semi medieval games, DAI is not that bad on KB+M. It is obvious that the controls were designed for consoles first but, still, it isn't that terrible on KB+M if you are far more comfortable with that than a controller.
Beyond that, if you can interact with an object, do it. If it's loot, take it- sell it if you can't use it. Talk to your companions every time you return to your base, they have interesting things to say and, have personal quests they might give you. Don't get too anxious to kill your first dragon the first time you play the game. Wait until you get to Skyhold at least the first time. Be sure to take Iron Bull and Sera for dragon killing if you want to gain approval with them and, talk to Bull after the first one you kill because, drunk Inquisitor is a laugh.
Other than that, explore, experiment, try to get lost, jsut have fun and, kill anything that attacks you.
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#12
Posté 20 décembre 2015 - 05:08
#13
Posté 20 décembre 2015 - 07:26
Yeah. If you can play a melee character in Skyrim with KB/M, you should be good in DA:I.
Really?
Which springs the question: Have you played a "melee character" in Skyrim, and have you played a melee character in DA:I? On a PC and KB/M?
#14
Posté 20 décembre 2015 - 08:34
I'm not sure this one is a good idea. There aren't very many chests and packs that I've found myself returning to. One of the pitfalls of an open design like DAI's is that you can get bogged down in trivia, and there's enough loot in the game without farming it. I think you're better off looting and forgetting.
I disagree. Many chests hold schematics. This is a first time player. He won't benefit from the Golden Nug until he starts his second playthrough. So farming chests for better items and schematics is recommended at this point in time. I still do this. And the tactic is always going to be useful on loot dropped from closing rifts.
#15
Posté 21 décembre 2015 - 10:11
Yeah. If you can play a melee character in Skyrim with KB/M, you should be good in DA:I.
Really?
Which springs the question: Have you played a "melee character" in Skyrim, and have you played a melee character in DA:I? On a PC and KB/M?
I thought the comparison was odd as well. I don't know about dagger rogues, but I did play an SnS warrior in Skyrim, and I play an SnS warrior in DAI. There are no actual skills that you use in Skyrim as a melee person**, aside from the dragon shouts, which take a bit to cooldown, so you're not going to be using them all the time. You can also move and swing simultaneously in Skyrim, whereas in DAI you cannot.
Other than using WSAD to move, it's a different style of play.
** Well, that is if you don't want to use magic while being melee. I generally prefer to play as a straight melee or a straight magic type.
#16
Posté 21 décembre 2015 - 01:21
Yeah, odd comparrison but, I play both ranged and melle in DAI on KB+M as i do in Skyrim, Rift, the Fouth Coming and any other semi medieval RPG that offers such classes (and all of them do.)
Yes, if you are new to gaming the WASD dance takes a bit to learn to do well and, it helps to remap some other keys so you have more on your right hand, but that isn't hard to manage in most games, DAI included.
I prefer DW rogues for melee, and that's a dance to keep flanking the enemy and, a lot of fun, and beautiful to watch when it's done right (still fail now an again but, who doesn't at that one?)
#17
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 03:14
Yes, to both; the Skyrim character does a lot of bow combat too, but that just clears out the mooks. Not much different except for the camera angle, as far as I can see. WASD movement, and stick enemies with the pointy end when in range. Though you've got a couple more toys to play with in DAI.Really?
Which springs the question: Have you played a "melee character" in Skyrim, and have you played a melee character in DA:I? On a PC and KB/M?
I take it your experience is different?
#18
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 03:33
I disagree. Many chests hold schematics. This is a first time player. He won't benefit from the Golden Nug until he starts his second playthrough. So farming chests for better items and schematics is recommended at this point in time. I still do this. And the tactic is always going to be useful on loot dropped from closing rifts.
I still don't see it. How many more schematics will he get this way, and at what cost in boredom?
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#19
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 07:43
I still don't see it. How many more schematics will he get this way, and at what cost in boredom?
I agree one of the great things for me about playing games like DAI is learning new things over a number of playthroughs not try to learn them all in one. Otherwise what's the point in coming back again as a different character to go through the game again if you've already found everything.. I'm pretty sure I've not found everything there is to find and I've already done 5 runs of the game but then that's also why I keep coming back to it to see if I do find and learn something new. Sometimes I do find new things other times I don't but the point is you never know. But personally I find the game more fun this way.
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#20
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 07:58
I agree one of the great things for me about playing games like DAI is learning new things over a number of playthroughs not try to learn them all in one. Otherwise what's the point in coming back again as a different character to go through the game again if you've already found everything.. I'm pretty sure I've not found everything there is to find and I've already done 5 runs of the game but then that's also why I keep coming back to it to see if I do find and learn something new. Sometimes I do find new things other times I don't but the point is you never know. But personally I find the game more fun this way.
I agree, I never farmed chests. Even now, I ocassionally find a new item that I have neot seen before, even with using THE Nug and, that's what keeps the game worth exploring. If I knew 100% that there was nothing more I could find, i'd be blazing through the game like a bull in a china closet with a cow in estrus at the other side and not exporing, looking in every nook, cranny and alcove, etc...
Nothing left to discover if you have it all. Best to use The Nug and let a few discoveries wait for the next time you run a new character.
#21
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 10:25
#22
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 10:32
I agree, I never farmed chests. Even now, I ocassionally find a new item that I have neot seen before, even with using THE Nug and, that's what keeps the game worth exploring. If I knew 100% that there was nothing more I could find, i'd be blazing through the game like a bull in a china closet with a cow in estrus at the other side and not exporing, looking in every nook, cranny and alcove, etc...
Nothing left to discover if you have it all. Best to use The Nug and let a few discoveries wait for the next time you run a new character.
Well I farm chests but I sell off things I don't need next ttime I visit a merchant so that I can get things I do plan on using. Ultimately I tend to take everything unless my inventory is close to full. In those instances I'll only take what I think I will end up using. But that depends on how full my inventory at that time is though
#23
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 11:07
I agree, I never farmed chests. Even now, I ocassionally find a new item that I have neot seen before, even with using THE Nug and, that's what keeps the game worth exploring. If I knew 100% that there was nothing more I could find, i'd be blazing through the game like a bull in a china closet with a cow in estrus at the other side and not exporing, looking in every nook, cranny and alcove, etc...
Nothing left to discover if you have it all. Best to use The Nug and let a few discoveries wait for the next time you run a new character.
Bulls do not break anything in china shops or closets.
Proven by the Mythbusters. (P.S. THEY broke the shop)
#24
Posté 24 décembre 2015 - 11:27
The Nug strikes me as being awfully unbalancing. Or is that the point?
It's a reward for players who play the game again. Most people will only play the game once. Many people will not finish the game at all. The players like those of us on the forums who have multiple PTs with multiple characters to try out all of the options are in the minority. The Golden Nug is basically a reward for those players, and also an incentive to play again because you would still be able to use that nice rare schematic you farmed for.
Yes, PC players can download saves from people who have everything and load up their Golden Nug with all of those. But not all PC players are willing to do that -- I'm not. But those same PC players already had access to Cheat Engine to give them everything anyway, which is what I did long before the Golden Nug was added in. Or mods that change the content of stores.
#25
Posté 25 décembre 2015 - 01:35
Practice the combat and Tac-Cam in early hours of the game.
Sell anything with the Berserker effect.





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