It’s just science.
Honestly, better to pirate the game because ZA/UM fucked over the original devs and now they don’t get any money from the game’s sales - and it ruined any potential for a sequel.
I don’t normally do this, and I’ll go do some searching of my own, but any chance for a tldw on the video? What’s the background? 2.5 hours is a bit much and the intro was sort of wandering and more or less.just repeated that yes, the game was stolen from them.
A friendly reminder that the creators in the past have asked those interested in the game to pirate it instead, though of course I do not endorse such activities.
Gotcha. I’m definitely not about to fire up qBittorrent right now and use it, because that would be illegal.
I would also definitely not seed anything as well, especially when utilizing a VPN.
Edit: word
I couldn’t get in to this game, myself. Granted, due to that, I’ve only played about an hour of it but this game felt much more like a Visual Novel than an RPG, to me. Stats seemed to have no bearing on anything other than what the narrative decided they have a bearing on. It was therefore, very difficult to figure out who my character was. Otherwise, you’re just clicking on things and reading reams of text.
I get that they were trying to go for a more tabletop version of an RPG but without a DM, I find that near impossible to translate 1:1. I would have preferred a more Baldur’s Gate approach to the game.
Stats are very important and can cause a playthrough to be very different. I can say more about it if you’re interested.
It’s more akin to Planescape: Torment than something like Baldur’s Gate. The game is dense with writing and dialogue, and the majority of it is derived from your stats. Granted, there are a couple of skill checks that you can’t fail due to being story important, but it’s only those two specific instances - everything else is heavily stat-based. There’s also ideologies that the game tracks, so you can be an egotistic superstar cop, a doomsaying apocalypse cop, a normal cop, or even a super-political cop that becomes more drilled down if you want to engage in the fascist, communist, moderate, and/or liberal aspects of the game - and the game does respond to that, including noting how you can be both a communist and a fascist, or some other combination of ideologies.
To help put it in perspective, your stats are, quite literally, your character’s brain. Having low stats doesn’t really impact the game, but you also can become sort of neurotic with high stats - which does have its upsides and downsides (except Encyclopedia, it will drown you in world-building exposition that doesn’t really help and drags out conversations at the higher levels). It’s much more “role-playing” and less “game”.
It felt more like an audiobook than a Visual Novel to me. Visual Novels at least work off of minor bits of motion feedback and expressiveness to combine with the wording, but all expression in DE is through the deep-voiced narrator. For long stretches, the only visual component is the dreary surroundings of your detective.
That’s very enjoyable to some, but I played for several hours and couldn’t really remember laughing at any jokes or enjoying any interactions.
Really sounds like it’s not the game for you. You want combat and big numbers, which isn’t what Disco Elysium is about.
I’m still halfway through a playthrough, but it really is a great RPG, with an interesting narrative.
More like the best $10 I’ve spent when it once went on sale.