Larian’s Baldur’s Gate 3 is poised to be one of the biggest cinematic role-playing games in years & many devs are criticizing the scale/scope of it!

Interesting video describing various developers’ take on the game. Is it a genre-defining game or not?

  • CIWS-30
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    361 year ago

    Nobody really expects RPG’s to be as big and deep as BG3, they just want a complete game that works without shitty microtransactions everywhere and always online for no reason. Plus, having interesting characters and storylines, quests that can be solved in more than one way, and gameplay that’s actually formed by taking player feedback and listening to it is what people reacted well to, among other things. Baldur’s Gate 3 doesn’t even have Denuvo!

    If there’s one thing that I hope competitors learn from Larian and BG3, it’s that respecting your players and giving them what they want leads to success. Similar to Elden Ring and from software, like that video mentioned. Now compare BG3 to Diablo 4 and Immortal, or the upcoming Starfield and you’ll see why people love it. It’s not about specs or scope, it’s about designing a game to be actually FUN.

    • ripcord
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      51 year ago

      Wait, what’s wrong with the upcoming Starfield?

    • @pory
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      51 year ago

      Denuvo nothing. Baldurs Gate 3 doesn’t have DRM. You can play online without any form of crack. The GOG installer doesn’t need any form of account to play, not even a GOG one.

    • Goronmon
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      21 year ago

      Nobody really expects RPG’s to be as big and deep as BG3…

      Just to warn you, you will now be quoted in a future video about “Social media viciously attacks Larian for games that are too big and too deep!”

    • TheRazorX
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      1 year ago

      It’s not about specs or scope, it’s about designing a game to be actually FUN.

      This is the key point that these publishers and studios are trying to avoid.

      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on designing microtransaction psychologically manipulative money sinks (dark designs)?
      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on creating addiction in the player-base so that they keep playing the game (and spending money)?
      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on bullshit DLC (not actual new content)?
      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on bullshit to satisfy shareholders?
      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on shit the devs don’t want, but executives do?
      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on bullshit padding for marketing purposes?
      • How much of most AAA budgets are spent on bullshit DRM?

      And keep in mind, by budgets here, I mean both the dollar amount AND time spent by devs that could be spent elsewhere (which is part of the dollar amount since salaries, but I wanted to make it clear that time spent is also important).

      Some of the absolute best games in the industry have literally none of that, and people still want to play and buy them years after release because gasp they’re actually fun, but these publishers and devs don’t want to compare to those, because they WANT the industry to be a bunch of “GAAS” bullshit that’s basically a vacuum pushed into people’s wallets, cause hey, if it worked for Candy Crush…