New Light and Shadowkeep

Later today something really cool is about to happen. Firstly the new expansion for Destiny 2 is launching and Shadowkeep will be playable on all platforms around 10 am CST. There is a complicated release matrix that is available , but alas for me I will be at work and won’t get to play until this evening. The other cool thing that is happening is that Destiny is launching its Free to Play experience. So this morning I am going to do a bit of an informational post for new players and players who maybe have not followed any of the happenings of the last few months.

What is New Light?

New Light represents a re-imagining of the new player experience for Destiny 2. Instead of throwing you in the middle of the Red War Campaign, it sort of eases the player in a bit slower with doing various activities associated with the destinations and guiding the players through that experience. Additionally and most importantly it is completely free for anyone to download regardless of platform, and includes a shocking amount of content. You are essentially getting all of the Destiny 2 “Year One” content, aka the base game (Red War), Curse of Osiris expansion, and Warmind expansion.

This also gives you access to all of the core activities like Strikes, Crucible, The Leviathan Raid and various reoccurring events like the Iron Banner. You also apparently get access to some of the year two content like the Black Armory Forges, Gambit/Gambit Prime and The Menagerie which is sorta like the LFR version of Destiny 2 raid content. In addition to all of this… you can be viable to hop in and play with you friends in content on day one minute one. They have changed the way the world scales and you could hop in and do a strike moments after you first create your character.

You can get New Light on the following platforms:

  • Steam
  • Playstation 4
  • Xbox One

Destiny Moved to Steam?

Yes as part of the divorce from Activision, Bungie is no longer going to be available through the Battle.net client. For me this was largely a positive since the vast majority of the games that I own and or play are through the Steam launcher. For some people however this might be a negative as I found out from one of my friends yesterday. Of the various platforms that Destiny could have moved to, I feel like Steam was probably the best option. There would be way more gnashing of teeth had it moved to the Epic Games Store for example, or insisted that we install yet another game store client on our machines.

At the time of writing this all of the Bungie systems are offline for maintenance. However if you played on Battle.net and are wanting to continue playing that character you will still be able to move after the systems come back online later today. You need to go to Bungie.net/PCMove to initiate the process. However as the above advisement states it will not be an instant process and there may be some lag time before your character shows up on steam. Ultimately the process requires you to log into your Battle.net account and then into your Steam account and it creates a mapping and starts the character move process. If you did this prior to the systems going offline, then your Steam character should be sitting there waiting on you when you install either the New Light client or Shadowkeep.

What is Cross Save?

Again the systems are offline, but when they come back online later today you will be able to configure Cross Save. Essentially if you have played Destiny 2 on any platform in the past, you can keep your characters and move them forward with you if you choose to swap platforms. For example I had characters on both the PC and the PS4 and once everything was linked up, I was able to choose which set of characters would be my “Cross Save” and available on all platforms. Since then I picked up Forsaken when it was on sale on the Xbox One and have been able to play the same characters on all three platforms seamlessly.

To make it work all you need to do is go to the Bungie.net/CrossSave page and associate the accounts for each platform with your Bungie.net account. It will then ask you to select which account you are going to promote to your cross save. Now these other accounts won’t actually “go away” but will instead be suppressed as the characters from your chosen platform loads. You could in theory go back and reverse the decision at any point and play different characters on each of the separate platforms. My hope is at some point in the future they give us full cross play as I have friends that choose to play on each of the platforms, but my chosen platform is the PC. I could however load up any of the clients but I am limited to only that group of friends on a given client.

How do I Convert Heroic Events?

One of the most common activities in Destiny 2 is that of the public event. Some activity will spawn in on your destination and you can get good experience and some gear by completing it. However you get significantly better experience and loot if you manage to convert it to the heroic version. At times the process of converting it is directly in competition with actually completing the event, and as a “KinderGuardian” you can frustrate players by not knowing how to transform the event. As such I feel like one of the more important steps is learning what you need to do to convert each activity. I wrote up a post some time ago, but since then a bunch of new event types have been released. Thankfully Mesa Sean released a video today walking through the process of converting every single event.

I Feel Like I Am Missing Some Lore

There is a lot of story to Destiny, and sadly most of it is not told through the natural flow of in game narratives. It is instead told through things you interact with in the world, side quests, items that drop and add notes to your grimoire, and some of the higher end content like raids. Additionally there is a wealth of knowledge that never transitioned over from Destiny 1, and as a result you can feel like you are at a massive debt of knowledge as you enter this world.

Destiny 2 is not really a narrative experience. It is a game about excellent gunplay and fun activities that you can complete with your friends. That however does not mean there is not a mountain of interesting lore behind the game. As such I once again am pimping this excellent video from Byf, that outlines everything we currently know about the lore of Destiny. It is a four hour long video that outlines the origins of the various factions and Guardian doesn’t even factor into it until around the 2 hour mark. If you want to understand what came before… then watching the first 2 hours and 56 minutes is well worth your time as that takes you up through the beginning of Destiny 2.

State Fair Disappointments

This morning you are about to suffer through an “Old Man Bel” post, as I complain about something that very few of you will have experienced. Growing up in rural Oklahoma, one of the highlights of our year was the two week run of the Tulsa State Fair. This is not to be confused with the Oklahoma State Fair that happens in Oklahoma City a few weeks prior. It always straddles the border between September and October, and generally speaking Oklahoma starts to get cold at some point during that second weekend. However the first weekend generally is lovely in the high 60s to mid 70s.

I was in a service club called 4-H which was something I had largely been forced into by my mother who had fond memories of it. As such I traditionally had a bunch of exhibits that were entered at the local county fair in woodworking, photography, art or whatever happened to seem reasonable that year. If you won at your local county fair, it trickled up into the nearest State Fair of which ours was Tulsa roughly an hour away from the town I grew up in. As such we would religiously make a trip to the Tulsa State Fair on the second weekend to see how my exhibits had placed in the larger show.

The state fair was magical for a bunch of reasons, but the main one were all of the exhibits. Growing up in rural Oklahoma, you didn’t exactly have a lot of access to things throughout the year. The exhibit halls featured vendors selling pretty much anything imaginable, including merch for all of those bands that I was into as a kid. I remember I got a bunch of metal band patches for my jean jacket at the fair. Even earlier though I remember various booths selling pewter figurines that would serve for years as my first miniatures in various table top gaming sessions.

The other aspect of the fair was that it ended up showing off whatever trends were about to hit the mainstream. Given its place in early October it sort of set the pace for whatever would be the hot new thing for that Christmas, and often was the first time I encountered a bunch of new things. I remember I saw my very first Robotech figures at the Tulsa State Fair, or the year that the Micro RC cars were super popular… there were a dozen or so booths that had them in the early 2000s. In part seeing what was about to be a big deal was a huge part of the fair experience.

We have not be regular attendees of the fair, and it had probably been six or seven years since we last went. Last year my wife decided she wanted to go, and then we were ultimately turned away by the mess that was parking. So this year I wanted to make sure we made it, so that she didn’t have regrets. As such we got up and out the door fairly early and were parked and waiting for about twenty minutes for them to open the doors. The problem is… the State Fair ain’t quite what it used to be for a bunch of reasons.

Firstly the whole trend setting aspect has fallen apart thanks to the internet. I now know the various things that might interest me, months ahead of them actually being available. The thing this year seemed to be them trying to sell bootleg Nintendo Classic consoles or the bigger Pandora’s Box Arcade console in a fighting stick systems. The first seemed like it was maybe a few years too late to really cash in on the craze of the Nintendo Classic. The second seems like it is too expensive to really be the sort of thing that fair goers purchase as an impulse buy as they retail around $150-$200. Both of which I have seen various incarnations of available on Chinese import sites.

Everything else seemed to be the same things that we have seen for years. During the 80s and 90s it seemed like every trip to the fair promised some new innovation of home care. Now we just see recycled versions of the same items that came from that era. I saw no less than five booths trying to sell the same sticky gel lint roller product that I first saw in the mid 80s… but this time the color is green instead of purple or orange and has some sort of a pet attachment. I am not going to roll that thing on my cat, no matter how safe you tell me it is.

The other thing that became clear is that the livestock barns have ultimately pushed out what was exhibitor space. Originally there was the main building, a long skinny row of five buildings called the Exchange Center that spanned the vertical length of the fairgrounds map, and a larger building roughly where the Exchange Center is marked on the map above that housed a theater and exhibit space behind it. We spent some time trying to figure out if it was just that we had gotten older… or if the fair itself was much smaller. Long gone is Bell’s Amusement park, and replaced is an area full of Kiddie Rides.

The midway area itself seemed to be significantly smaller than it used to. I remember during my childhood there would be multiple versions of the same ride, all in the hopes of trying to catch the attention of folks as they walked between buildings. While I couldn’t find a great picture of it, we were completely unable to find any of what was my personal favorite “game of chance” the Coin Pusher. Generally speaking during the 90’s when we were regularly playing it, there would be three or four different kiosks set up with the same coin pusher game each with different prizes. Everything just felt downsized from the splendor that the fair used to be.

Honestly the most impressive thing at the fair was something I tweeted out on Saturday. We have this large statue called the Golden Driller at the fairgrounds. The Tulsa Pop group created a Lego Mini-figure looking version of it. The only disappointing thing is that there was no Lego-ized Oil Derrick to go along with it. There were folks sculpting sand and others sculpting cheese… but honestly after seeing a cheese or butter sculpture at every State Fair since the 80s… it loses some of its novelty. Basically it is a little depressing to see the magic gone from this experience. Again I may just be old and jaded at this point, but the Tulsa State fair aint what it used to be.

The other aspect that made the day frustrating is that generally speaking in September we are as I said before in the high 60s to mid 70s. On Saturday was had a heat index in the 100s with an actual temperature in the 90s. I am not sure about you but when I am hot and sweaty, the last thing I want to partake of us fair food. So we passed up the cheese curds, the spiral potato and the red velvet funnel cakes and didn’t end up buying anything while we were there. We made our way through the booths and then decided to just head home because it was fairly miserable on a large concrete lot with a ton of people. Octoberfest will have a lot of the same vendors, so I figure if we are still craving fair food we can go there in a few weeks.

As far as the State Fair… I think we are good for another six or seven years until we get the urge to go again.

AggroChat #270 – Anser Answers

Featuring: Ammo, Ashgar, Belghast, Kodra, Tamrielo and Thalen

Tonight we talk Untitled Goose Game, Link’s Awakening, some more WoW Classic Discussion and Bel makes a heartfelt plea to get folks to watch a 4 hour long video.

Topics Discussed:

  • Untitled Goose Game
    • Ode to Classic Stealth Gameplay
  • Link’s Awakening
  • Random Tells in WoW Classic
    • General Discussion of Classic as a Whole
  • The Complete Story of Destiny by Byf
    • Yes really watch this 4 hour long video

Original Blog Post on AggroChat.com

Green and Orange

This morning I am struggling to come up with anything worth writing. Allergies are killing me and I am in sorta a histamine daze. We have a very lovely screenshot of what it looks like to be in Swamp of Sorrows… where everything is either orange or green. Were it not for my glowing eyes you would have trouble making out my facial details. This is an era in the game where objects don’t really throw off proper lighting, and as a result the campfire that I am standing beside is doing nothing to illuminate the scene.

Last night I more or less finished Badlands, minus all of the quests that involve Uldaman, which we still need to run. There are some quests in zone that I could do but they were higher level than was efficient for me to grind out, and also in a super dense and dangerous area of the zone. As a result I hopped a flight to Stonard and have been whittling through the quests that I had in Swamp of Sorrows. They also are largely higher level, but the zone as a whole is pretty spread out allowing you to keep from getting a bunch of multi-pulls.

That all may change as I am about to start hunting the murlocs along the eastern coastline, and we all know how they love to chain pull. In theory I really need to gather up a group of people and make an attempt at Uldaman, to knock out a bunch of the quests there. That might be an objective of this evening but the biggest challenge is the time zone thing. Last night was just a case of people logging in within a very staggered manner never quite giving us a party of five until Tam/Ash/Kodra had already committed to running some Wailing Caverns on their alts.

Forty really is about the halfway point in the leveling process not 2/3rds as the numbers would make it seem. Things have really slowed down significantly and each level seems to take way more effort than the previous one. I think this is around the point where I started to lose focus in the initial game launch, because I never quite made it to 60 at launch. I think I got to somewhere in the 50-55 range before wandering off originally and going to play Everquest II with some friends for awhile. I then came back and pushed through the rest of the levels and started the traditional level 60 activities.

I know next week my attention is going to start being split, and this weekend is the Tulsa State Fair, which means I am not going to get much leveling done on Saturday. The hope is on Sunday I can pour on a few more levels so I have a shot in hell of keeping up. Destiny 2 Shadowkeep launches on October 1st and I know I will start spending a bit of time each night in that as well. There is also Monster Hunter World Iceborne that I have yet to really touch. I don’t want to lose focus but we have officially entered the doldrums where that becomes a challenge.