POE2 Free Weekend and Thorns Sentinel

Good Morning Folks. This weekend is the launch of Path of Exile II 0.3 aka The Third Edict and I have had every intent to just start playing whenever the hell I felt like it. Last Epoch Season 3 launched this past weekend and with how close these two things seem to always be now… I feel like we are always going to be courted towards one or the other. Last Epoch got the win last go round with the combination of a pretty frustrating 0.2 patch in POE2 combined with Last Epoch pushing back their seasonal start so that players frustrated by one game could bounce to the next. The thing about The Third Edict is that nothing about the patch really excites me except for the new asynchronous trade system. I have been wanting a more automated trading system in Path of Exile since I first started playing it, and I am pumped as hell that they have already announced a version of this is coming to the superior game… Path of Exile 1.

What raised my excitement level however is that yesterday Grinding Gear Games announced that there will now be an in game version of the trade website browser. I am pretty freaking pumped about this, because while sure… power traders will likely keep using the trade website on a second monitor, this makes trade in general much more approachable for players and a much better option for those who play on console. Sure the whole concept of having to teleport into a hideout to buy your items is a bit kludgy, but this is so much better than anything we have had access to. It will also present some interesting situations to make bulk selling items more reasonable, because when someone teleports in to buy one sanctum book for example, it is likely they will just hoover up all of the books at the same price. Our very own community Saint, Sir Gog released a video this morning as a bit of a warning though, outlining several different scams that he can see working under the new system. It will kill several that are notorious in both POE1 and 2, but offers up some new ones for folks who are in a hurry to get their currency deleted.

What has changed for my equation of playing this in a few weeks… is that they are running an event the first weekend where they are giving away a few MTX for anyone who has cleared Act 1. I am a sucker for MTX… and as a result I am very much likely going to be firing up a character and at a minimum clearing through Count Geonor. Right now I am looking to play a version of the character that I rolled late in 0.2 that is some sort of a Warrior playing with Crossbows, and namely Incendiary Shot with Armor Explosion support. More than likely I am going to be doing a Titan and then stacking small passives to inflate the damage and survival of the build. I have no clue what order I am going to take my ascendancy points… probably do Crushing Impact first and then when I get my second ascendancy done, swap the points into Hulking Form given that the bag is a waste of a point until you can go two points in. Everything that Crushing Impact is doing, I can get with support gems, but it will be handy once I am able to pick up a fourth ascendancy and get 50% more multiplier against heavy stunned enemies.

The other thing of note about the Path of Exile II 0.3 release weekend is that they are opening it up for all players to try out the game for free. Starting at 1pm PDT on August 29th and ending at 1pm PDT September 1st… anyone is going to be able to go to the platform of their choice and download the game for free and play it. This likely means that the servers are going to be heavily congested. However it sounds as though the free players will not be able to start the download until that 1pm deadline ticks over, giving anyone who already has the full client a bit of a head start in the process. I hope it works out for them and does not lead to a massive quagmire over a holiday weekend. The last league launched over Easter Weekend and caused all manner of issues with them updating bugs… and I realize that Labor Day is not a thing outside of the United States… but I really hope they are prepared for the onslaught of players. If you’ve ever been curious about the game then I suggest you give it a shot and check it out. If nothing else… Path of Exile II is a great gateway drug to the real goodness of Path of Exile 1.

Over in Last Epoch I am slowly progressing on my Zoo Necromancer build, but I am starting to hit my first opposition as I begin raising corruption. This is probably something that levels could resolve, either that or trying to perfect my passive tree and go with the Abomination build. Mostly I am now through two harbingers and need to actually begin raising corruption to keep progressing. The big problem that I am having is that even though I have better general survival while mapping… I still can easily get one shot by bosses. I struggled to get through Gaspar in The Last Ruin timeline, because I just kept dying to the rotating beam phase once there was more shit on the ground that I needed to avoid. Once I beat Gaspar, actually downing the Harbinger was more tedious than anything. I’ve been focusing on some of the harder timelines to knock those out for these first few Harbingers so that I can do some of the easier ones later once the difficulty increases.

I’m also being tempted away by another build. Ash had already signaled to me that there was the possibility of some thorns shenanigans with the new primordial chest called Thicket of Blinding Light. He was thinking about this as a build on the Primalist tree, but I think I am more comfortable with the Sentinel tree overall and its general survival options. Yesterday the algorithm fed me this video doing exactly that thing… and now I want to give it a try. Last night I started a brand new character and have been leveling it with Shield Throw converted to fire damage. I had never really played around with Shield Throw in this game and it is a heck of a lot of fun. I basically leveled with Hammer Throw until I unlocked it and then when I had enough points into Shield Throw I dropped Hammer Throw entirely. Right now I am trying to pick up the Paladin tree points so I can start speccing out the abilities needed from there before dumping more points into Forge Guard.

I think tonight Ace and I might run around on our Necros and try and do some nonsense. I am not super feeling the current state of that build so I might try and tweak it a bit over lunch today. That is of course pending I am doing better by tonight. I essentially breathed in some fumes over the weekend and they have thrashed my lungs a bit… and I am having quite a bit of trouble breathing today. It is one of those days where I can work remotely just fine, but today is supposed to be an in office day and there is no way I can do that. So as a result I will likely be taking a sick day.

Helena Steps Up

Hey Folks. Yesterday was a massive reveal for Path of Exile II, and there is a lot of interesting stuff there happening in that game. I am actually excited to give it a shot once Last Epoch Season 3 (which starts today at 11 am CDT) has run its course for me. All of that said, the most exciting change that happened yesterday… did not happen in Path of Exile II but instead was thrown in as part of a Path of Exile 1 patch that added the new MTX sets. Helena has now gained the ability that Sin and Doryani have in Path of Exile II, where she will identify everything that is in your inventory. Better yet it has the same Ctl+Click shortcut that exists in Path of Exile II, so now when I finish a map my first step is to walk over and have her bulk identify everything. Unfortunately that means that Lily is no longer my vendor character and Helena just got elevated in her location in my hideout significantly. I moved Lily over to the side a bit because I still feel like the ability to buy gems is a pretty huge role.

If you have not seen the presentation I highly suggest giving it a watch because it goes in depth as to the massive design changes that are a foot in that game. The full patch notes are also available if that is more your speed and you do not feel like watching an over hour long presentation. The biggest take away that I had is it seems like they are genuinely trying to make the game feel less clunky and then highlighted a bunch of ways they are trying to achieve this. Namely things like weapon swaps no longer having an animation lock, shield charge dropping its cool-down so you can spam it, and the addition of a sprint key to speed your way across large empty chunks of map seem like they will improve the flow of game-play. More important than all of this… they are introducing the first step at an asynchronous trade system that works somewhat similar to how the brokerage system worked in Everquest II. You post items on a vendor and then people come to your hideout to buy those items, all without you needing to be online.

It is going to take a bit for the changes to really sink in, and since I am not likely to start on the 29th I will be able to know whatever is busted before rolling my character. However I think I am probably going to try and revisit something I did this league where I played a Warrior archetype with Crossbows and leaned heavily into Armor Explosion stacked on Explosive Shot and then used Blueflame Bracers to convert that damage to cold so that I could also freeze things. The biggest change will be that since I can use the same support gems on all of my abilities, I can really lean into the armor break and armor explosion mechanics, while also dipping into some of the nodes that they highlighted in the warrior starting area that do fun things with armor break and fire damage. I still think there is probably a build here, and that it should also have more survival since you can now get the ability for armor to apply to elemental damage on gear.

My tree was somewhat of a mess but once the build sites get updated for the new information I will probably sit down and plan something out so I am not winging it every time I place a point. I still feel like the two handed and armor break nodes are really key to rush towards at first, but after that I sort of lost focus and went all over the place. Since I can throw attack speed gems on every node that should improve the feel of the crossbow abilities a bit, given they already feel a bit sluggish. There is a new support gem that they previewed that shows your crossbow reloading every time you break armor, and since that is my entire focus… so that I can make things explode based on broken armor… it should have a lot of synergy with what I am trying to do. I am just hoping that this build type goes under the radar enough to still be functional by the time I start a character.

I’m actually excited to play some Path of Exile II at some point, and that is the first time since the pre-release client came out and I saw what the game played like. I’ve been pretty down on this game, and I know that is disheartening for some folks who really like the changes it made over the Path of Exile formula. I will likely always love Path of Exile more, because I have spent over 2000 hours playing the damned game at this point. However getting into Titans Quest 2 made me appreciate a slower pace, and I played some of my crossbow dude last night and it felt better than I remember it feeling. I never beat the campaign on this character, but I did get another character to 85 during the Dawn of the Hunt league. I just did not enjoy the game enough to push any further, even though I was having more fun with crossbows than I was with Twohander and Shield Smith of Kitava. I still hate the way that characters ascend and find that entire process miserable, so I am definitely going ranged for the upcoming league to make Sanctum more tolerable.

However that is not what today is about. Today is hype for Last Epoch Beneath Ancient Skies, and you can check out the full patch notes here. I am going to be rolling a Necromancer of some sort and will likely wing it through the campaign and then build something more seriously after that. The ancient area has long been my favorite part of Last Epoch, so I am pumped to explore more of it. Mostly I am trying really hard not to fall back on Warpath Sentinel that I have played so many times in the past. The Judgement build ate a bunch of nerfs so I am hoping Necromancer can reach a point where I can at least do the endgame bosses. More than anything I am looking forward to hanging out with Ace and doing some group play over the weekend. I have plans for Saturday during the day but Thursday, Friday, and Sunday I am hoping to group up and do some nonsense. More than anything I am on the hunt for the Tyrant’s Skull so I can have a TRex minion.

I hope to see you all in Last Epoch today, and then eventually in a few weeks Path of Exile II.

Illusive Mollie Snuggles

One of the strange occurrences that I have wanted so bad to message my wife about… is the changed behavior in Mollie our most skittish cat. She can be an extremely sweet cat, but also runs like hell at the slightest unexpected motion. She has been forcefully snuggling with me when I first crawl into bed, and gripes at me when I am not already in place when she expects me to be so. She runs away when Gracie decides it is time to come to bed, but for about thirty minutes at the start of every sleep cycle, she is there with me while I am fiddling around on my phone and doing dailies in the few mobile games that I play. I’ve attempted to get a photo of this, and so far this is the best one not only because I am laying down and attempting to take it… but also because the lights are off and the only light is from the television. It has only taken a decade to get this far… but she will headbutt me so freaking hard before she eventually settles down snuggling up against my side.

I did not join in the reindeer games in Guild Wars 2 last night because I was emotionally exhausted. I had a good therapy session, but it was a tiring one and after finishing that up… and doing the various nightly processes I just was out of it and fighting sleepytime. I stayed up until around 9:30 which is my normal bedtime, but was way too out of it to have joined in on any group activities. Instead I did some Audiobook and Path of Exile time as I started on Dead Country by Max Gladstone which is a new series with the flagship character of the Craft Sequence that I read over the last few years. There were six books in that series and I highly suggest all of them. What is awkward about those books is that they collected the first five into a single volume… then I guess Max decided to write a sixth book, and it makes my eye twitch that the artwork does not match the first five books at all which have a similar theme. Anyways looking forward to this new trilogy of which I think only two books are out.

One of the things that is not really being talked about right now in Path of Exile is how profitable Delve has been this league. It is a combination of the fact that there is no league specific crafting mechanic, and that the return of Kingsmarch has made gold fairly valuable because people want to run those big shipments for a shot at getting back mirror shards. Delve, Heist, and other second any secondary non-mapping content provides a pitiful amount of gold compared to juicy mapping. The common wisdom has been to focus on mapping and as a result… everything that comes from other mechanics has gone up in value. I put up a bunch of rare fossils for sale last night before I logged out to go to bed, and decided to take a screenshot when they had all sold showing you the sort of money I can pull in quickly. Divine Orbs are also really weak right now and only trading for 130 Chaos, meaning that converting up from Chaos is really valuable. I spent a lot of currency kitting out my Toxic Rain character and have made most of it back.

That said I spent a ton of currency this morning buying Awakened gems and 21/20% gems for the things that I could afford. I will likely never buy an Awakened Greater Multiple Projectiles as those go for like 300 Divines, but I did bump up everything that I could. Making this swap is always immediately noticeable in the speed at which you clear, and this was no difference because t16 mapping now feels extremely trivial. Mostly I am still in the process of pouring on levels so that I can get the passive points to finish out with a medium cluster and then unlock all of the jewel sockets that I have available to me so that I can start putting life and chaos damage over time multiplier in all of those slots. I have my health over 4000 which gives me a bit of a buffer and usually enough time to hit my life potion in time to keep from taking a death when my evasion fails me. I am still not great at keeping a life pot running at all times to mimic the effects of leech or regeneration. This is essentially the strength of a Pathfinder but I am bad at hitting the button all of the time.

The Mercs league had already slowed down considerably, but it is about to grind to a halt as Path of Exile II spoiler season has officially started. SirGog released a video this morning about the above spoiler posted on Twitter, and I mostly agree with him that this feels Harbinger Adjacent. I just hope they do not screw the mechanic up and make it worse… like they have for other mechanics implemented in Path of Exile II style. I am still not hugely supportive of the direction this sequel has gone so far, but I also know that large swaths of the community care about it and it will begin to drain attention from Path of Exile. Path of Exile II drops on the 29th, but it will have to wait until I have burned through the content in Last Epoch which drops before that on the 21st.

The Hardcore Filter Problem

Good Morning Folks. This weekend on the AggroChat podcast, Tam brought up a topic that sort of went in a bunch of different directions. The idea basically was a discussion around how he as a game designer, could build a communications system in an MMORPG that encouraged players to interact with each other. We know that forced voice chat does not work, and in the games that have open voice chat… the first thing I do is disable that option. We also know that pushing players of wildly different skill levels into the same content only leads to toxicity. We also know that across the board… MMORPGs are struggling. While Steam only represents a tiny slice of the FFXIV player base… it has seen a 78% drop in players since its all time peak in June of 2024. While again not representative of the totality of the player base… Steam does tend to allow for viewing trends and if it is happening there… it is usually also happening in the larger pool of stand alone client players.

I think one of the challenges of MMORPGs is that they are effectively being driven off a cliff by the most hardcore and as a result vocal player base. Here is a hard truth that we need to understand. If you use gaming forums, reddit, discord, or post about video games on social media… you are already among the most hardcore players in a given fandom. If you are regularly engaging in raid or other challenge content… you are further filtering your bias down to the needle point of the most serious of players, and they cannot survive with only your support. The challenge for developers is that as a whole, the feedback they have been getting is that the content needs to be harder in order to cater to the most dedicated players. However doing so… continues to push things out of bounds for the most casual players to a point where they feel like they can no longer justify that $15 per month in order to log in and do some busy work each day. When you lose casual players… you lose staff and money to make significant improvements to the game.

I think in part, Classic World of Warcraft has been so popular because it hearkens back to an earlier game design ethos. Molten Core and Blackwing Lair are masterpieces of zone design, and in both case… the fights were not actually that challenging. You needed 20%-30% of the raid that had a clue what was going on… and the rest could more or less be populated with warm bodies that were pushing buttons, and also getting to experience content they might not be able to otherwise. I started out as one of those warm bodies, and then eventually over the course of years of raiding developed the skills necessary to lead and function at a high enough level of get recruited into more hardcore groups. The thing is though… the golden age for me were those first raids. We had fun. It was a party atmosphere with comms filled with bad jokes and even worse stories… as we all fail-boated our way through the content to eventually get shiny loot. When these games got super serious focus time… they just stopped being all that enjoyable.

If a game exists in this mode, where it is being driven by the most dedicated players… eventually it starts to shrink in size and with it comes downsizing of the studios. You can look back at all of the games that I used to play fairly seriously… and eventually dipped out of because of cost cutting and lower frequency of content. I played the heck out of Destiny 1 and 2, and got frustrated when they started vaulting content… in part because they did not have the resources to keep updating it. I played the heck out of Rift but eventually bailed because it could not consistently keep a player base interested in the game in order to do much of anything. Wildstar was amazing… but its raid content was way the hell too complicated for most players and the casual content while great… just did not have enough meat on its bones to keep people engaged. Both Guild Wars 2 and Final Fantasy XIV were driven by decade long story arcs… and both began to flounder a bit when they lacked the story chops to keep people coming back for more.

In truth… I shifted my focus away from MMORPGs and began devoting the majority of my time to ARPGs where I could group up with friends if I wanted to… but the majority of my time was spent soloing. Other games have similarly become way more solo focused, like Elder Scrolls Online which churns through regularly story content updates… all of which can be completed in their entirety without the help of other players. We’ve lost this whole era where doing group content was a heck of a lot of fun, and I believe it is in large part because the players driving the narrative are the players craving challenge in their games. This also coincides with the birth of Streamer culture, and the focus on showing off how good you are at games in a public manner. If you are not doing something on the hardest of hardcore difficulty modes… then you are wasting your time… or at least that has become the prevailing public sentiment. However none of this takes into account the fun factor. Players who get their satisfaction by doing the sweatiest content ever… are a minority in the total player pie.

What you don’t hear publicly talked about is the number of players who bounce because they realize that none of the content is actually designed for them. The majority of folks don’t storm out the front door raging about how bad the game is. Instead they simply slip out a side door, cancel their subscription, uninstall the game… and then gravitate towards games that are giving them a better experience for their limited game time. There is a reason why Gacha games have seen this massive rise in popularity over the years, because they really hone in on the feeling of giving the players power… without actually increasing the difficulty terribly much. It is very easy to busily chase a bunch of objectives and feel like you are doing important things… regardless of whether or not the game is largely playing itself. They feel just connected enough so that you know you have friends who are also playing… but unfortunately there is no real meaningful multiplayer experiences.

I feel like for the most part Guild Wars 2 has done a pretty good job of catering content correctly, however there are still numerous cases where they drank the hardcore Kool-Aid and it shows. With the most recently expansion Janthir Wilds, they introduced a zone meta that is quite honestly… not capable of being completed without a large number of ringers in zone participating. As a result it is pretty rare that you actually find a group doing it, and succeeding at it. Similarly Dragon’s End to this day still fails more often than not. Contrast this with old classics like Tequatl, Octovine, or Chak Gerent that pretty much succeed damned near 100% of the time… and have full zones of players showing up every time they are run. The events that are being completed are just better designed, and it does not matter how much the “hardcores” turn their nose up at them… the participation proves it. People will come out of the woodwork for something that is chill, fun, and rewarding… and honestly does not ask that much of them.

Ultimately my theory is that MMORPGs have been struggling and shrinking… because they have been listening to the wrong voices. They lost sight of the inclusive content design that made their best zones great… and have leaned into chasing and ever shrinking piece of the player-base. World of Warcraft was a game changer. The number of people that I knew that had never really played another game seriously before that… was pretty freaking massive. However as the content kept getting more and more finely focused… the folks who did it for fun and did not have the time to devote to all of the prep work… quietly faded away. Essentially there are two paths to take… either you make it so that class design exists in a way that the difference between the most hardcore player and the most brain dead casual is about 10% efficiency… or you make the content designed in a way that you only need about 20% of the player base to be really paying attention to complete it. The best content tends to follow that second path. I am not saying do not put the double mythic extra plus hardcore content into your game… but make it for bragging rights only, and in no way connected to the flow of necessarily content.

Granted take everything I just said with a grain of salt. The fact that I have a gaming blog… already puts me on the narrow end of the “cares about games” spectrum. However I am very much a burnt out ex-raider who used to take this shit super seriously… until I realized that I would just be happier if I did not give a fuck about passing arbitrary skill checks in the games that I am playing. I mostly play ARPGs like Path of Exile and Last Epoch, where I only have to care about myself and my actions in order to complete them, and that reset on a regular enough basis that I can ignore a season/league if my devotion is elsewhere. That said… the whole conversation this weekend… did make me miss those glory days of raiding and a lot of the nonsense that used to happen on voice chat. To some extent I am getting some of this back with my small group shenanigans in Guild Wars 2, and I hope maybe we gather enough mass to be able to do some strikes at some point. I miss us progressing through Binding Coil in FFXIV and quite honestly… that was the last time when raiding with a large-ish group of people was super enjoyable for me. I had a blast learning the Arcadion with the release of Dawntrail, but that was pretty short lived.

Mostly I think we would be better of if games were designed to allow more casual players… to ride all the rides. I think the bar for entry for a lot of content has just gotten too high in order to keep the masses engaged anymore. That is the problem with the MMORPG design model… you need everyone bought in for them to succeed. We’ve spent the last decade filtering out who can reasonably play them… and they are going to keep shrinking unless that line of thinking changes. I say this as someone who has only one foot left in the genre… and could probably happily cancel the few subscriptions I have remaining without seriously impacting my enjoyment. If I am almost out the door… someone who is already well into the more serious end of the community… you’ve got problems.