Bohemian Rascalry

Good Morning Friends! I’ve been in a bit of a funk of late and been largely unable to stick to a single game for very long. In truth as I have talked about before, I am in a bit of a holding pattern until the start of the new league in Path of Exile. In this interim time, however, I have failed to gain purchase when it comes to actually dive seriously into any game. Over the weekend I started a new venture and so far I am deeply engaged. I’ve talked about imperfect gems before namely in the collected works of the French studio Spiders. I love the Bioware style RPG, but so few studios can really carry it off well and before now I would have ranked Spiders as one of the ONLY ones. Kingdom Come Deliverance is from Czech video game developer Warhorse Studios, and manages to vie for the crown of “Next Best Thing To Bioware”.

Kingdom Come Deliverance is a purely non-fantastical representation of the region of Bohemia in 1403. This region is located in the modern-day Czech Republic and focuses on real-world events surrounding then King Sigismund of Hungary deposing King Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia. This is a time period and destination that I personally am wholly uninformed about, but I figure to the Czech home audience this would be the stuff of legend. The game focuses on Henry the son of the Master Swordsmith currently serving as the town Blacksmith in Skalitz. The tutorial of the game focuses on getting you acquainted with moving around this area before the events kick in that brings this section to a close and ignites the key conflict of the game. From there you have a few main story quests to follow and bring you purpose and a huge number of incidental side quests, very few of which are actually marked on your in-game map.

The game map is fairly huge and magnified by the fact that for a good while you are without a horse, forced to walk/run your way between destinations. There is a fast travel system but the destinations are few and far between and largely just focus on allowing you to hop between major towns. Traversal can be a bit fiddly at times because it can be a bit of a challenge to determine which bushes you can pass through and which will ultimately bar your way. Of note, there is a game mod that removes clipping from all bushes that I might install at some point because it can be infuriating trying to navigate a course at times.

The game is fully voice acted and the acting itself varies from “competent” to “pretty great”. The writing as well is pretty solid and seems to be period appropriate. It is deeply weird to see so much early Christianity in video game form, as I am far more used to made-up religions and deities. Of note and this comes up a few times… this is taking place during the schism in the Catholic church with one Pope in Avignon and another in Rome. There are times when it feels like you are given significant dialog options and other times when there is essentially a predetermined battery of options. There are various skill checks associated with different lines, but unfortunately, these have a hidden value behind them and there is seemingly no way of knowing if you are going to pass the check or not before attempting it. Skill in this game is raised through doing the thing repeatedly, and the same is true for speaking… so it honestly is beneficial to run around talking to everyone as there are also hidden quests that can be uncovered in this way.

Where things start to fall apart for me is when we get to combat in this game. There have been a number of times when a well-intentioned game studio has attempted to improve the basic click-to-attack gameplay present in so many Action focused RPGs. A prime example of this is the horribly fiddly combat of the first Witcher game, which for me at least makes it a completely unplayable experience. Kingdom Come Deliverance comes close to this level of annoyance with its direction “star” based combat system. Essentially when an opponent is attacking you, they will be holding their sword in one of six regions: Head, Upper Left, Upper Right, Lower Left, Lower Right, and then a central neutral position. In order to land attacks you effectively have to be attacking in a quadrant that they are not defending against.

This might work better on a controller, but effectively in order to do this with a Mouse and Keyboard, you have to be moving your mouse in a specific trajectory to get that quadrant of the star to light up. This feels awful and even more frustrating is the fact that the AI is really damned good at blocking, dodging, and abusing any openings in your defenses. Getting ANY damage can quickly become critical and there is no fantastical equivalent of the health potion. Even worse is the non-consensual target locking system that glues your viewpoint to a specific target and forces you to use the mouse scroll wheel to change targets when fighting multiple encounters at the same time. I am sure over time someone could probably get good at this mess, but if I had my druthers I would replace it entirely with a standard hack and slash combat system and be done with it. I mean I don’t really play this sort of game for the combat in the first place, I play it for the story.

Thankfully it is at this point that our old friend Nexus Mods comes through because apparently, Kingdom Come Deliverance has a vibrant modding community. While you can’t completely gut the combat system and replace it with something more standard, you can curb the frustrations a bit by making your enemies less likely to block or parry you. You can remove a lot of the annoyances like the fact that saving in this game requires that you have a stock of a specific kind of schnapps. Instead, I added a mod that removed this entirely and allows me to save as often as I like. You might be saying… “but Bel, that is cheating” and I will say yes it absolutely is. Life is too damned short to deal with the parts of games that annoy you, and if I can mod my way out of them… like completely removing inventory management… I am going to do it every single time. Game developers try really hard but sometimes get hung up on some really stupid ideas at times, and through modding, I can fix these “problems”.

Thanks to mods I have more or less pushed aside any lingering frustrations that I had with the game and have been able to just sit back and enjoy the world and the story surrounding it. At this point, I am around eleven hours into the experience and enjoying myself greatly. That said I also feel like I have barely scratched the surface. There are a number of characters that have some nuance in the way they interact with you when their public face is on the line, and how they behave in private out of the eyes of the court. Dealing with nobility is frustrating, especially given that I am very much a low-born trying to run around in circles that are constantly reminding me of my station in life. That said I have already elevated my status to that of a soldier and in theory, I think by the time this game is done I will have improved that further.

I’ve also started down the formal romance/courtship line towards Theresa a childhood friend who also managed to survive the situation at Skalitz. It is interesting because this more or less is following what I would assume formal courtship would have been like back during this period. Essentially every few days I can ask her out on some sort of a formal date, and if I don’t screw that up… I gain a reputation. I assume at some point this will lead to marriage, and maybe even buying some sort of a home. In a lot of ways, this game reminds me of what it would feel like to play in a first-person adventure through a Crusader Kings game. There are some definitely flaws in the game, but for the moment I appear to be hooked.

Farewell to WoW Mobile

For a while now we have known that Blizzard was working on a game with Net Ease that would translate the World of Warcraft experience to the mobile platform. I think many of us became deeply concerned about what this might look like when Diablo Immortal launched and turned out to be the egregious money grab that it was. Yesterday Bloomberg broke the news that it seems like the partnership between Netease and Blizzard is strained and the World of Warcraft mobile project has been canceled. This game had reportedly been in development for three years and the only reason reported was a “conflict about financial terms”. So this leaves us to speculate exactly what happened and given that I like theorizing things I can see three paths that might have taken place. I have no knowledge if what I am about to say is true, but I am just theory-crafting the downfall of this game.

The Backlash from Diablo Immortal

Giving Blizzard the benefit of the doubt, it is entirely possible that they were caught off guard by the negative reaction towards Diablo Immortal by the traditional gaming audience. It is possible that they thought they were releasing a game that would play by mobile gaming practices and it would have no blowback on their existing franchise. This was wrong and Diablo as a brand has been deeply tarnished by this game. So for theory number one, it could be that folks inside of Blizzard realize this and do not want to do anything to harm the recovery trajectory of World of Warcraft. Interest in Diablo 4 has seemingly fallen as a result of Diablo Immortal, and there is no way that the Warcraft brand can sustain another hit to the player base. So it is entirely possible that WoW Mobile has had the plug pulled on it to stem the bleeding and signal a shift in direction.

NetEase in Hot Water

Anytime you talk about Chinese politics, things get confusing quickly. Right now both NetEase and Tencent seem to be singled out by China as “problem children”. There have been several stories indicating this including one from June where those two publishers were specifically excluded from getting games approved by the regulatory bodies. Video Games in general is getting caught up in a sweep of things being deemed harmful to “cultural unity”, and I do not have enough time to really address this point today. However, if you are curious look up the Tang Ping aka “lying flat” movement, and Bai Lan or “let it rot” movement. Essentially there is a group of disaffected youth that are actively rebelling against the “996” culture or 9 am to 9 pm 6 days a week. As a result video games, take-out food, and social media are being blamed… and the Chinese government has been actively targeting these sectors.

Diablo Immortal was clearly banking on the mobile game spending habits of the Chinese market for success and in order to bring a game into that market, you need to partner with a Chinese company. Generally speaking, this is required to navigate the regulatory red tape in order to get a green light. However, with NetEase already being shunned by these regulators, it is entirely possible that Blizzard is considering this a risky proposition and actively chopping for another company to collaborate with that is not being actively targeted.

Doing It On Their Own

I am certain that part of the equation with NetEase is also that they acted as a springboard to develop a mobile title. Diablo Immortal for example was built using the existing NetEase Messiah engine which likely sped up the development time considerably. Blizzard had released a few mobile apps but never anything to the level of a fully 3D action RPG, and as such, they were able to lean on a company that had released several. In the meantime, Blizzard has seemingly been actively building ArcLight Rumble, which itself is rather impressive graphically and by all accounts runs beautifully on various mobile devices. This appears to either be their own engine or leaning heavily on some tech from King, but whatever the case is not tied to NetEase.

So this makes me wonder if the canceling of WoW Mobile is a signal that they feel like they can do this on their own now. Granted this does nothing to help with the Chinese regulatory hurdles, but it seems as though as a company they are feeling like they may have mastered mobile development. With some experience in building a mobile title, maybe the company views it as a little less daunting. Maybe there are even direct assets that they would want to reuse given that ArcLight Rumble is set in the Warcraft universe. I’ve not personally had a chance to play the game but from what I have heard from friends it really is a solid outing.

Bits and Pieces of the Above

It could be bits and pieces of everything that I just talked about. I would love to think that Diablo Immortal was a bit of a wake-up call that while it quite literally is a machine for printing money, it is also damaging the company as a brand. I do not think Blizzard could survive another fiasco this time centered around the, even more, beloved brand of World of Warcraft. Even if you are not actively playing the game you have nostalgia for it, and that nostalgia can be weaponized if it is handled improperly. I also think that the current state of NetEase in Chinese politics is probably a non-starter as well. There is significant cultural turmoil happening and video games are getting caught up in the mix. Finally, I do think that after ArcLight Rumble, Blizzard as a whole is in a better state to take on their own mobile development. As a result, I would probably bank that it is a little bit of each of the above topics wrapped up into one mix that lead to the cancellation of this project.

Then again… as I said before I know nothing about this situation other than what I have read in the reporting so it could genuinely be none of the above. It could simply be as simple as what was stated that it was a “conflict about financial terms”. Maybe NetEase simply demanded a bigger cut of profits and that was enough to sever the relationship on this project.

Warriors Are Good

Yesterday I really did not have any firm plans for my evening, so when I saw that there was a new Alpha update for Dragonflight I thought I would spend my night testing that. With this update brought the Warrior talent trees, which shifted my focus to spending the evening on a Warrior trying out the current state of protection. At this point I have played through the Dracthyr starter area twice and then Waking Shores twice: Once as a Blood Deathknight and once as a Protection Paladin. As I have said before the game is in a very rough alpha state but I have enjoyed my experiences so far. With the opening of Thaldraszus I also got to spend some time in Valdrakken, the new hub city of the expansion. The above screenshot is from the central area of the city staring up at the seat of the aspects.

As far as cities go, this one feels like a blending of the Shrines from Pandaria and the Guardian Faction Capitol from Rift in that you have a central tower with a bunch of other buildings spread around it forming a larger campus. As far as scale goes think of something about the area of Zuldazar, but this time Dragon Flying helps you zip around various destinations rather quickly. The central tower is accessed through a portal/lift and then can be used as a launchpad to easily use dragon flying to get out to the other zones. So far it seems like a really great hub city, with more than enough room to keep it from feeling terribly cramped as players flood into it.

As far as Warriors go, each expansion seems to be a gamble. There are some times they feel great and other times they feel less so as they sort of vacillating between feeling like a god and feeling like a puny mortal. Right now Protection Warriors feel more on the god-tier spectrum and I had more than enough interesting choices to be made while building out my character. Sadly Gladiator Stance is not bad and my daydreams of returning to being a sword and board dps character have flown out the window. I do however seem to have some of the trappings of that era at least in the form of Shield Charge. Reportedly some of the abilities are currently not replacing other abilities, so I am wondering what the final form will end up feeling like.

Right now it feels like I need way more Hotbars than I currently have easy keybind access to. Essentially I had to spend quite a bit of time setting up macros to put shield charge and charge on the same button or to have a modifier swap between thunderclap and shockwave. That is maybe not optimal because I firmly believe that the core of every class should be able to function on a single Hotbar. Maybe this is my great experience with action RPG-style combat flavoring my opinions, but it would be great if your spec narrowed the number of buttons you needed more than it currently does. Essentially I want one Hotbar for active abilities and maybe a second Hotbar for cooldowns… and that is it.

Have you ever heard about a sculptor talking about being able to see the outline of their figure buried deep within the stone? I feel like that with the Dragonflight expansion. There is a lot of rough here currently because it is in this “very alpha” state, but I can see greatness lying there just under the surface. The Thaldraszus zone is legitimately great. I mean I would stack this zone up with some of the better zones that the World of Warcraft team has ever created in the past. I really enjoyed the story… or what I got to see of it in its very unfinished form. I think this is setting up some interesting conflicts for this expansion.

It also seems to be doing a better job of teeing up the first raid than most final zones have done to this point. Sadly there was no party with Captain Placeholder and a bunch of monkeys… but instead, the Thaldraszus quest just sorta died out at the gates of the first raid area. I am very interested in seeing how these zones play out with full cutscenes and dialog included. Right now we are in a state where you are essentially having to talk to Captain Exposition each time you finish a major quest chain that would have had a cutscene sequence in order to get the necessary quest flags to move on to the next step. Like I said “very alpha” but the raw stuff that I am seeing and what I can imagine being there in the final polished version… looks promising.

December is not a very long way off, and that is still the piece of this equation that concerns me. There is so much work that will have to be finished before this expansion ships. However after two “bad” expansions… it feels like maybe just maybe Blizzard is going to pull this one off. If things continue to progress along at the pace that they seem to be… I think Dragonflight might be ushering in a new era for World of Warcraft. I’ve said it before that I was honestly surprised that I was in this alpha given that I have been pretty hard on this game in the past. However, I do think this is a step in the right direction and might be something heralded as the next great expansion. There is so much work to be done but for the first time in a very long time, I have hope about this game.

Reluctant Enforcer

Good Morning Friends! I spent another night roaming around the countryside in Red Dead Redemption II. This is something that I have been told by friends who have played the game… but this world is damned gorgeous. Once I managed to slow down my own pace of only tackling a single quest at a time, the entire pace of the world seemingly slowed as well. I sat down to play this and before I knew it three hours had passed and it felt like minutes. This is really only something that happens to me in a large way when I get into the “just one more turn” cycle of a 4x game. There are so many times that I am on my way to do one thing, and a side event will pop up that catches my attention. I lifted a horse off a lady and took her back to town for example. I dig the way that the game gives you temporary waypoints for these activities without completely removing what was your previously tracked waypoint.

When I first started the game over a year ago, it was after playing Witcher 3. As a result, when it came time to name my horse I named it Roach since that horse was such a reliable companion. So far this Roach also seems to be an overwhelmingly reliable companion. Similarly, Roach seems to always be tied up nearby whenever I need a ride. I got waylayed by the O’Driscoll gang that just happened to have a stagecoach. After dispatching my assailants I hid their bodies and took the Stage Coach off to the fence to get a little pocket money. I wondered exactly how this would work, but after parking the Coach in the barn… my trusty Roach was tied up on the fence line waiting for me. It seems like I picked a fitting name.

The other thing that I have noticed is that while I am a bandit… I tend to make the good guy choices more often than not. I did not like being an enforcer for a money lender, and quite honestly wish I had an option to just give them some of my money as a result. It seems like I make more than enough money killing O’Driscolls who are constantly hunting me it seems. I made the mistake of riding into Blackwater the other night when the waypoint system went nuts and tried to take me through there. It is disturbing just how fast the roaming bands of lawmen found me. I’ve got someone down in that area that the game is pointing me towards and I am not really sure how best to get to them.

All in all this game is acting as the perfect diversion to keep me from burning out on Path of Exile. The new season dates have been announced and I know in a few weeks I will be grinding up an entirely new set of characters. I am pretty set on playing the Inquisitor, and as a result, I am cool to taper off my playtime for the moment and dive into something completely single-player. It is funny how for me at least I have to be in the right frame of mind to attach to a game. This was true for Guild Wars 2 and Path of Exile that I bounced off so many times, and has been true so far with Red Dead Redemption II. I have to be in the mood for a specific sort of game experience to really open up to it. I think this is why the whole AggroChat Gameclub thing galled me so much in the past, is that it forced me to play a game that I wasn’t necessarily into it at that exact moment… and wound up ruining the experience of playing those games because my brain viewed it as homework.