Less Repetitive ARPG Keybinds

Good Morning Friends! If you have read my blog for any length of time you will understand that I truly and deeply love Diablo-style Action Roleplaying Games, or ARPGs as the genre tends to be collectively referred to. Even a good deal of my current love of Guild Wars 2 is rooted in the fact that for the most part, it owes way more lineage to Diablo than it does World of Warcraft. The only problem with all of this is that the older I have gotten, the less forgiving the deeply repetitive process of clicking to move and attack has become on my hands. At this point, I am on the late side of 40 sliding over forward towards 50, and after decades of heavy computer usage, I just can’t handle spamming the mouse button in quite the same way that I used to. For many, this has meant a shift to controller gaming for their ARPG fix which tends to be considerably more forgiving. However for me… I still deeply prefer the mouse and keyboard experience and have landed on a control scheme that works for me. I thought this morning I would share some of this wisdom for anyone looking for a way to play these games without killing your hands in the process.

Generally speaking, the ARPG is a genre that allows for quite a bit of customization of your keybinds. So far I have figured out a way to configure pretty much every game I have played in this manner. I can’t take full credit for this because my good friend Ace set me on this path some years back, but I have adapted their processes and made them my own over the course of adapting them to several different games. Essentially to understand this process you need to understand two common concepts within ARPGs.

  • Force Move – This keybind will be called different things in different games, for example in Last Epoch that I have been playing most recently it is just called “Move”. Conceptually what this does is start your character moving to a point defined by where your mouse cursor is sitting on the screen. So if you drag your mouse all the way to the other side of the screen and tap force move, your character will path in a straight line to your cursor.
  • Force Attack – This keybind is the opposite of force move, and it will stop all motion and cause you to execute a basic attack regardless of whatever movement inputs were in progress. While I am not actively using it, it can be important to know what this keybind is for the game you are playing in case you need to immediately stop executing a movement command.

One of the quirks of Force Move is if you hold the button down it will be constantly executing a move command toward wherever your mouse cursor is pointing. So effectively it is like your character’s movement is tied to the heading of your mouse cursor allowing you to “steer” the character by moving your mouse. In truth, once you have started doing this it feels way more intuitive than it sounds because your character goes where your mouse cursor goes, and once you are comfortable with it can execute some tight turns as a result.

Because my fingers are already very comfortable in the traditional WASD configuration, I opt for using W as my “Force Move” key allowing me to place my fingers in that orientation and then map other important buttons to be comfortably pressed within the orbit of the W key. There might be some variance between games depending on what is supported but effectively I tend to follow the same configuration setup when possible. It will depend slightly upon the abilities you have access to on a given “class”/build but my standard process follows something like this:

  • W Force Move – The button I am holding pretty much at all times to allow me to steer my character with my mouse.
  • Right MousePrimary Attack – This is the button that I bind my primary attack to that I am executing the most often.
  • Spacebar Movement Ability – This is the key that I will tap when I need to execute whatever movement ability my character has. If it has no movement abilities I tend to bind a reactional ability to it that I might need to hit on a moment’s notice.
  • ESecondary Attack – This one is going to vary quite a bit, but if I need to hit an ability periodically other than my primary attack it is going to go on this key. For example, if I am placing totems or mines or something of the sort, it goes on this key because I find it most comfortable to press while holding W.
  • QPrimary Cooldown – This one also varies quite a bit, but if I have some sort of a survival cooldown I generally put it on this key. This is in part because Diablo III trained this to be my potion hotkey so mentally I associate it with survival.
  • R Situational Attack/Cooldown – Since this key is further away, I tend to place whatever I need to use that infrequently.
  • 1-5Potions – You can blame Path of Exile for this shift, but effectively if there is a health potion button I place it on 1, and if there are other kinds of potions I place them on 2-5. I am very used to reaching up to hit 1 when things are going poorly at this point.
  • Left ShiftForce Attack – If the game offers some sort of force attack key, I tend to put it on left shift so that when I press it, my movement will be canceled for the moment. This is useful for situations where you might need to pause on a moment’s notice to avoid getting into an area effect for a trap.

I’ve pretty much been able to adapt every game I have played over the last handful of years to some version of this keybinding system. You might have to dig around a bit, but almost every game seems to have some version of “Force Move”. In Path of Exile unfortunately I have to sacrifice a possible keybind, because they do not have a separate button that I could bind to it independent of the hotbar. The only game that I have not been able to configure in this manner was Lost Ark, which is probably in part why I never spent much time playing that game. That game had some very specific opinions on what you should be doing gameplay-wise with your keys. I don’t feel like I am losing much of anything though because there are other things about that game that did not exactly jive with me either.

So as we approach the early access testing period of Diablo IV, the very first thing I will be doing is configuring my keybinds to match something akin to the process I just highlighted above. This is what works for me personally, but I suggest it as a less damaging alternative to spamming your mouse click constantly to keep registering a movement input. I had a copy of the game gifted to me, so I will be checking it out along with everyone else when the early access period opens. I am not entirely certain it is going to be my jam, but I am willing to give it a shot. At the moment, however, I am very much enjoying my time in Last Epoch. I am sure tomorrow I will have a post talking about my experience playing it with friends.

Mander of Catte

Good Morning Friends! Sometimes I get a dumb idea stuck in my head and can’t shake it loose. One of these recently is that I decided I wanted to pick up a commander tag. I’ve dipped my toes into trying to start groups in the group finder, and one challenge is the inability of someone without a Commander Tag to create groups larger than 10 players. Technically you can make strikes work but can do nothing to create subgroups and arrange people. Then there is the problem that technically a group without a commander means that anyone can tag up and effectively take control of your group away from you. I’ve heard anecdotes of folks going into the strikes section… merging groups and then telling everyone that they are now doing raids instead. Even if that does not happen… gating the ability to control a group properly behind a hefty price tag is not exactly great.

However, of my friend group, I am definitely the most “wealthy” because last year I hit the jackpot in opening a black lion crate and getting a permanent banker. Instead of keeping this, I opted to sell it and have been living on the proceeds ever since. So while 300 gold is a heck of a lot of money, it was something that I could afford and figured would definitely make group activities go a little bit more smoothly. The normal commander tag is pretty easy to get and I believe you can purchase it from a vendor in every major city. When you purchase the commander tag… you get a choice of one of these icons floating over your head.

I mean this is perfectly fine and functional… but would be the incorrect choice. There is however a semi-hidden system that allows you to get the “catmander” tag granting you access to these much better symbols floating over your head.

If I was going to spend 300 gold on something so frivolous, I was at a minimum going to get the arguably better version. So this began my quest and planted a seed in my head a few weeks back that I could not seemingly remove.

The problem with this mission however is that the Catmander requires you to do one of three jumping puzzles located in the World vs World borderlands. So not only do you have to be comfortable enough with WvW in general, but also be able to complete some of the most annoying jumping puzzles I have experienced thus far. The problem with these is that they are not so much jumping puzzles… but falling puzzles. The final leg of each of them involves falling gracefully from a perch and trying to land on a shelf below that will ultimately allow you to jump into the opening to the cave where the Catmander is located. After spending an entire afternoon making an untold number of tries, I stumbled upon the above video. Effectively I could use a druid staff ability to catapult myself to the ledge with the Catmander and skip the jumping puzzle entirely… or at least most of the hard bits.

Just like that, on my first attempt doing the above method… I landed on the ledge and made my way to the Catmander’s chamber. I ultimately went after the Blue Catmander, because the quirks of WvW meant that it was functionally easier for me to get to that chamber this week. Inside you are greeted with a delightful sight as the Catmander is obviously training some recruits… with kittens working on training dummies while a lieutenant cat supervises. This scene alone is worth the price of admission honestly.

One of the cute quirks of Guild Wars 2 is that you have a form of player housing called the “Home Instance”. This is used as part of the early story quests and is something that you can collect things for over the course of the game. One of the things you can collect is a series of cats that live in your instance with you. Effectively around the world are various cats and if you have a specific item in your inventory you will be given a prompt to interact with them and feed them that “food”. It seems that you can do this with the three Catmanders as well. The Blue one for example wants a Gift of Battle, aka something that you farm up for legendary weapons and is a rewards track in WvW. So of course I am now farming up another Gift of Battle so I can collect that cat. Thankfully the Yellow Catmander requests something more sensible and wants a Can of Spicy Meat Chili. That would leave only Penelope the Unconquerable in Armistice Bastion… but she resides at the end of a pretty traumatic jumping puzzle and that zone requires paid access so it might be a while before I collect that Catmander.

As much as I love World Boss Trains… I am uncertain if I am going to be finding myself leading them. It seems like a lot of effort, and while I applaud the commanders that go from zone to zone leading the troops… I figure I will probably keep my tag in my back pocket for when I need to arrange instanced content. I just feel like I am maybe not comfortable enough leading most content… that is other than Tequatl. I can do “Taco” in my sleep and have collected many spoons in the process. I guess if you find yourself in need of a commander for something, hit me up.

Last Epoch Stabilizes

Good Morning Friends! When we last talked on Friday I spoke of how Eleventh Hour Games was struggling a bit under the crush of new players attempting to explore the multiplayer update. This morning I can safely say that for the most part from Friday onwards, the servers were exceptionally stable. I close out the weekend just shy of 50 on my Paladin build and have loose plans to start trying some dungeons and monoliths multiplayer on Tuesday. In truth, there are still some residual issues, like movement abilities often causing rubberbanding where the server and your game client disagree on the location of your character. However, these have lessened significantly over the weekend and for the most part, you can just log in and play whenever you want.

I think it is important to take that statement into context because over the weekend the game saw staggering growth. Prior to the launch on Thursday, the highest number of concurrent players Last Epoch had ever seen was just a bit over 5,000 in September of 2021. Sunday afternoon around 3 pm the game was seeing just over 40,000 concurrent players and at that point, the game was rock solid. Whatever they did to scale the servers has seemingly worked, and my hats are off to the team for certain. Sure Last Epoch had tested its multiplayer functionality in a number of waves, but you never really get a true test until it is under a real load. I would say that once they sorted out the queue thing late Thursday night, they effectively solved most of the issues players were having.

The other thing that I find interesting is just how many streamers have been swapping over to Last Epoch. Really this patch lands at the ideal time, and it was something that they could not really have planned for. Path of Exile is winding down the Sanctum league, Diablo III just had a great season 28… but again most players have finished up that process… and Diablo IV is a few days away. This leaves a vacuum of games that feel relevant at the moment and as a result, every Path of Exile streamer is actively playing Last Epoch and honestly saying a lot of good things about their experience. The above screenshot was taken around 6:30 am CST… and there were still over 10,000 viewers actively watching Path of Exile. I wish I had thought to take some numbers from yesterday when I saw effectively every ARPG streamer of note playing the game. If they start breaking into more mainstream streamers, I think we are going to continue to see those concurrent numbers rise.

As far as the game itself, I likely would have made it significantly further were it not for my dealing with a production issue yesterday at work. Needing to hop on calls periodically limited just how engaged I could be, but I still have reached around the same spot in the story I left off in testing with my Necromancer. I’ve noticed that I am starting to get into territory where resistance is beginning to matter a bit. When I was going through the ice area, I noticed that several of the maps could chunk my health significantly and this largely resolved itself once I threw in a few points of cold resistance. It does make me wonder what I am going to need as far as a resistance profile for the end game. Coming from Path of Exile I am used to needing to cap my resists and honestly, at this point, I have no clue what capping would even look like in Last Epoch.

One other thing that I did over the weekend was creating a Last Epoch page in my “Game Tools” menu. With this, I am going to be trying to collect the various bits of information I am using about the game and the resources that I am relying on. Another thing that I am adding that I have not done on other pages, is a section devoted to the builds that I am playing with video/guide links for each. I figure when the next Path of Exile league lands, I will do the same for that game going forward. These pages are as much for my benefit as they are for yours because I find them a useful way of collecting resources that I might be relying on. I realize after my very trade league in POE, I need to update that page with some of the resources that I used for selling items.

I am really enjoying the game and the build I am playing, but I also don’t exactly feel like I am in a rush. There is no season journey that I am necessarily taking, so there are no objectives I am trying to tick off as quickly as possible. I think my initial goal is to get all the way through the monolith so that I can hopefully experience empowered monolith maps. Like I said before Ace and I have tentatively planned on doing some serious group content on Tuesday night, so it will be interesting to see what the monolith and dungeons are like with friends. I’ve been extremely impressed with how quickly Eleventh Hour Games recovered from the server crush on Thursday and just how stable the game has been. Honestly, I’ve had fewer issues with Last Epoch than I do during a normal Diablo III Season Journey.

If you were waiting in the wings to see if it was stable… then I would say the coast is clear. Come on in the water is fine.

AggroChat #426 – Victim of Success

Featuring: Ammosart, Ashgar, Belghast, Grace, Kodra, Tamrielo, and Thalen

Good Morning Folks! We start off the show with some random talk about Rick Astley and the history of Rickrolling.  From there Bel talks about getting a Commander tag and going for the obvious best choice…  that Catmander.  Kodra talks about beating Axiom Verge and his struggles with M.A.S.S. Builder not quite being detailed enough.  From there we talk about the launch of the Last Epoch Multiplayer patch and the struggles of instant 8X growth.  We talk a bit about the challenge of a game launch and scaling servers without overbooking capacity.  Then we finish out with some discussion from Tam about the Star Citizen 3.18 patch and its own server capacity issues.

Featuring:

  • Superfluous Rickrolling
  • Bel is a Catmander in GW2
  • Axiom Verge
  • M.A.S.S. Builder
  • Last Epoch
    • Servers Hugged to Death
    • Various Discussions of the new patch
  • Server Scaling and Massive Updates
  • Star Citizen 3.18
    • Persistent Entity Streaming