Exploring Playnite

Hey Folks! This is going to be a bit of a niche topic, but I guess in truth pretty much everything that I talk about is a niche topic. Most people do not give a shit about the minutiae of whatever build I happen to be working on in an ARPG that I have spent over 2000 hours playing. Anyways… some years back there was a dream proposed by GOG of having a single interface to interact with all of your games. The problem with that was that GOG Galaxy was a bit of a mess. It consumed a ton of resources and regularly disconnected from all of the platforms you were capable of connecting it to… never quite living up to the promise of giving you a single interface to view and launch all of your games through a single application. A few months ago I heard about an open-source project called Playnite that is attempting to actually make good on this dream and yesterday I finally got around to installing it and checking it out.

The base install of Playnite supports Amazon Games, Battle.net, EA App, Epic, GOG, Humble Bundle, Itch.io, Steam, Ubisoft Connect, and Xbox Gamepass. There are also a wide number of community-supported addons that grant further access to other game libraries. For example, I am contemplating installing the XCLoud integration that would add all of the games that I have access to via a web browser and Microsoft Gamepass on XCloud to the interface. There are also addons for platforms like Nintendo or Playstation that just give visualization into your total game library without actually allowing you to launch them. There is apparently fairly robust support for emulators and launching the game titles that you have sitting in rom/iso form on your system, which is something I will likely explore at a later date.

One of the aspects that I dig so far is that there is extremely robust support for filtering and grouping your games. Right now I am using the most simplistic grouping of “installed” versus “not installed” but I could easily do it based on genre or any number of other elements and also include any sort of sorting parameters that I might want as well. All of this seems to only take around 100 meg of memory and negligible system resources. I will say though getting everything set up initially required some manual intervention and several minutes of downloading media assets. Especially when it came to humble bundle I had to do a good deal of searching to find the specific game that was being referenced, and also a fair bit of hiding things that were not actually games. It was worth the hour or so that I spent to get things streamlined a bit.

The end result is a nice single dashboard giving you access to all of the games you have installed on your system. You can manually add games or have it search specific locations and then decide which games you are going to add manually. For Final Fantasy XIV I use the default launcher, so I had to manually add it. The only negative of all of this however is that many of the addons require you to have the official platform client installed somewhere on your system in order for the integration to work. I ran into this for example with Itch.io a client that I have never had installed before. That said the launching still works fairly seamless despite still requiring you to have the storefront-specific launchers installed on your system.

I think more than anything the thing that I enjoy the most so far is how fast I can rapidly switch between views of the games I have available. For example, I have all of these games that Twitch Prime has been giving me for years… that more or less were invisible to me. I was never going to install a dedicated client in order to play them, but thanks to Playnite and the Explorer view I can see everything that is being granted to my account by Amazon in a single location. There seems to be some weirdness with Humble Bundle though because I know for a fact that there are way more games that I have access to that are not showing up. I did notice a hide third-party games option that I probably need to tick off in order to get the rest of the humble stuff to load given that a lot of that was either tied to Steam or Origin.

I mean it isn’t perfect but it is a step closer to having a single launcher for all of the games that I have on various platforms. It also makes me realize how many games I have “entitlements” to on multiple platforms largely due to giveaways from Epic Game Store, Amazon, etc. For those with a massive backlog and that are seized by analysis paralysis… there is a random game button. That way when you are having one of those “nothing to play” moments the launcher will choose for you. It is worth a look if you were interested in GOG Galaxy but annoyed by its poor performance.

Dwarven Realms Alpha Thoughts

Good Morning Folks! If you follow any of the ARPG YouTubers or Streamers you will have probably heard of Dwarven Realms. This game is a very indie very alpha passion project from two brothers, that wanted to do something new for the ARPG genre. Essentially the game is this blend of Vampire Survivors mixed with the controls of what sort of feels like an action combat World of Warcraft. The graphics in general and the model work are nothing to write home about, but the gameplay falls in the “big dumb fun” category. For scale expectations… the game recently hit a peak concurrency of 780 players so this is still very much a niche thing but something that I’ve been playing around a bit with. I had so much fun that I bought copies for all of the AggroChat crew over the weekend when the price was dropped from $5 to $3.74 on a promotion that lasts until the 21st of March.

The setup of the game is pretty straightforward. You have a home camp that over time gains some crafting benches and other resources that you can access. The most important aspect of the home camp is the big green portal, which gives you access to the ruptures which are the core gameplay loop of the game. I’ve been told that the first 34 Ruptures unlock all of the side systems of the game, and then after that point, it is just an endless mechanical loop to see how high you can push up your level and how many ruptures you can clear.

Each Rupture starts out pretty slowly as you are placed on a map with some sparse destructible terrain and some monster spawns themed to that area. However, every few seconds more waves of monsters spawn eventually reaching a point where you are completely surrounded by spawns. Each Rupture has a time limit in the upper left corner showing you how much time you have left, and after killing a fixed amount of monsters you will be notified that you can unlock the boss chamber to finish out the Rupture. I keep wanting to call these Rifts because they remind me quite a bit of the Greater Rifts from Diablo III, so if I slip up and swap terms in the middle of this post hopefully you can reason what I meant. Killing monsters grants essence that you can then use to unlock objectives that spawn into the map and give you resources or gear. Additionally, all of the things you kill will have a chance of spawning loot that goes directly into your inventory.

Once you enter the Bosses Arena the door will lock behind you. This point of no return has led me to spend a good deal of time farming the map before moving on to the boss just to get a good deal more resources. The bosses are pretty straightforward and have some sort of pattern to them. Canuckmeat the Boar for example will charge you and knock you back, with the real danger coming when it knocks you into the lava that surrounds the arena. Others may attack in a fixed pattern that you need to avoid while dealing as much damage as you can. After you unlock your dragon companion that follows you around green circles will spawn throughout the map allowing you to regenerate your life and stamina, so most of the fights become a matter of avoiding the bad circles while standing in the good ones.

There are a lot of different weapons that you can unlock and an entire magic system that I have spent zero time exploring. Staves and Wands allow you to cast spells, Bows allow you to fire off arrow volleys, and all of the martial weapons have some form of bit sweep attack that takes out multiple things at once. I’ve lately been using the two-handed maul quite a bit and I’ve managed to get a unique version of that weapon with a bunch of stats and abilities associated with it. The game pretty much has every mechanic that you would expect from an ARPG, for example I have been trying to focus on LIfe Steal so that I can regen some health while dealing damage and increasing my chance of survival when surrounded.

Using a specific weapon type will begin to unlock various traits. The first few will be active abilities tied to either your Q or R button and then after that they are passive bonuses that increase your effectiveness in combat. This feels a little odd at first because when you swap weapons you will go back down to only having the default attack tied to your Left Mouse Click. However, it does not seem to take very long before you open up the first few abilities and can start taking out large groups of enemies at a time.

There are magic items that you can equip in totem slots that will cause your attacks to spawn specific behaviors. For example, I have an item that causes a rain of meteors that will deal damage to everything around me. I have another item that causes totems to spawn around me that explode whenever I or the enemies walk over them. These magic items honestly deal most of the damage during combat allowing me to sort of kite the enemies around until I have a giant pack and then explode them all at once.

As you level up you get skill points to improve your base stats and talent points to spend on a skill tree. I’ve been working on buffing my survival, damage output, and have decided to pour a bunch of my resources into fire damage to buff my magic items of choice. I figured it was probably beneficial to limit my scope to a single element, but this does mean I am passing up some seemingly powerful items that might cast lightning bolts or something like that instead. For such a simple game… it really does seem to have a lot of interesting nuances. It is nothing like a Last Epoch or Path of Exile, but still allows you some leverage in how you want to build your character.

When you first launch the game you are greeted with this screen that is a note from the developers. It is very important to keep this in mind as you play the game because it is pretty janky at times. However that said I have had a heck of a lot of fun making things explode and I think if you limit your expectations you will as well. I’ve played a lot of $100 games that were nowhere near as much fun as this simple $5 one, so if anything I have said interests you in the least… throw them a few bucks and check it out for yourself.

There is a hardcore mode that might interest those who are into such things. I am largely a “softcore” player, but given how easy it is to get started and how random the items you end up getting are… I could see hardcore being enjoyable. There are leaderboards that track progress, but honestly… I am never likely to mainline this game hard enough to get on them. I am impressed though at how generally fleshed out the game is for this early in development. The initial release date was December of 2022 and it already feels like it is a fairly substantial game. Legitimately I am not sure I can describe it any better than I did at the start of this post. Dwarven Realms is Big Dumb Fun.

AggroChat #470 – The Impact of Epoch

Hey Folks we’re back! Sorry for the week off but we return with a full docket of topics.  We start off with some more discussion of Last Epoch and how everyone is still enjoying the game.  Bel dinged 100 for the first time and we talked a bit about buildcraft and approachability.  From there Bel talks about Dwarven Realms an ARPG of a sort that has gained traction this week amongst some of the streamers that is just “big dumb fun”. From there Ash goes down a list of Roguelikes that he has been enjoying lately namely Astral Ascent, Spiritfall, and Balatro. Tam revisits his topic surrounding the ambitious process of remaking Final Fantasy VII and his thoughts after having played a good deal of the second part.  Finally, Bel uses volatile reversal and brings us back to the topic of Last Epoch and namely the impact it seems to be having on the ARPG genre as a whole.

Topics Discussed:

  • Last Epoch
    • Bel Dings 100
    • Buildcraft Discussion
    • Approachability
  • Dwarven Realms
    • So Dumb So Good
  • Roguelike Lightning Round
    • Astral Ascent
    • Spiritfall
    • Balatro
  • Final Fantasy VII Remake Thoughts
    • Entirely remaking a classic
  • The Impact of Last Epoch

Third Time More Burny

Friends… sometimes I get something stuck in my head that I cannot seem to forcibly dislodge. I’ve also been sick the last few days so apologies for the lack of any semblance of a post yesterday. Anyways… a while back I wrote a post talking about my attempt at creating something that feels like Righteous Fire in Last Epoch and it was great… up until the point that it was not. The build sort of just fell apart when I entered the level 100 Empowered Monoliths because I was not dealing enough damage and did not have enough survival… so basically could not keep moving forward with it. I attempted to resurrect the build and got it to a point where it felt “aggressively fine” but also not exactly what I was going for in the first place.

I had this entirely different plan and created a Paladin that I was going to do some Healing Hands nonsense with… but before long found myself leveling again with a Firestarter’s Torch and Warpath. Which led me down the path of trying to figure out how Paladin was better suited to the burnination of my dreams. It turns out yes… yes it is. However, I held off on talking about the build until I reached empowered monoliths because I did not want to prematurely share my nonsense before I knew if the wheels were going to stay on the bus this time. Today despite my generally lousy “sickboy” status… I wanted to share what I had been up to. Apologies for the thrashed state of my voice in the above video where I talk about the build and show off some empowered monolith gameplay.

So the idea is not at all dissimilar from the previous build… where I went all in on making Warpath do the fire damage things. I’m trying to do a few new things, namely since I am throwing in Judgment occasionally for more damage which causes me to stop spinning… I’ve taken Giant Splitter which does a bit AOE attack each time I stop channeling. I will likely shift around these points a bit before I land on the final configuration of the build. However, the concept is straight forward… convert all bleed to ignite and convert Warpath to fire damage so that I can scale it and the ignite damage at the same time. Also, this is what makes the build feel thematically like Righteous Fire so it is a hill I am willing to die on.

The big thing that is making the build function a little better… and is the reason why I care about it being Paladin is Holy Aura. This is the unique ability for the Paladin mastery and is just sort of a build-your-own-buff aura system. I’ve found nowhere in the game that properly shows all of the buffs that the aura is granting me so I pasted the above list from the build planner. Largely I am throwing points in fire damage, attack speed, and an ability that will proc a fire explosion whenever I have hit something 6 times in a row. I am not entirely certain if that last bit is worth it because it currently costs me 7 points to get there… and I am wondering if I would not be better off just taking flat damage scaling instead. This also serves as a burn button because when I activate the ability it increases how much of these buffs it is providing.

The thing I dig about the Last Epoch Tools Build Planner is that it collates all of the stats and gives you nice numerical rollups that don’t really exist in the game. Based on the stats in the planner I just linked it shows that I am dealing 832% increased fire damage and have 204% chance to ignite on hit… not factoring in that I have other abilities that Judgement that also have their own baked-in 200% additional chance to ignite on hit with that ability. On top of that for survival purposes, I have 18% melee leech and 7% leech off the additional damage that I am dealing over time with ignite. If I can swap some of my gear around and get more void resistance, I can throw on a shield that will generate a good deal more fire damage over time and ignite chance.

All things considered, I am pretty happy with the state of the build currently. There are a number of levers that I could pull to keep tweaking the damage while leveling the rest of the way to 100. Am I happier with it than I am with my Void Knight? Honestly, I am not sure. However, I am very happy that I did not give up on this concept and was finally able to see it the rest of the way to something viable for empowered monoliths. Would I suggest playing this build? Sure if you like burning things and want to track down either the items I am using or something that gives a similar amount of ignite chance and fire damage scaling. It is a heck of a lot of fun and offers a fairly chill playstyle which is ultimately the aspect of Righteous Fire that I loved so much. Throw on a movie or like I have recently… an audio book… and just grind out some chill monoliths for tasty loot. That really is my happy place.