I do recommend. On of the most sprawling RPG adventures I have ever played. Planescape torment is excellent too.
Well, except for the driving force behind the entire saga being the major plot of BG1, the events of which inform on everyone's reaction to you for the remainder of the story.Silverbeard said:Yes, one can go straight for BG 2 without BG 1. Nothing significant in BG 1 is ever really referenced in BG 2 and the sole take away one gets from BG 1 is an understanding of the party members in BG 2, several of which are repeats from BG 1.ninjaRiv said:EDIT: Do you need to play BG1 for the story or can you just go straight into BG2 without playing it?
Objectively, I agree with just about everything you said, but goddammit, I just love this game too much. Probably has something to do with me first playing it when I was 8, and even today, despite all these issues, I still find it a blast, as long as you're in the right mindset. Which mostly mean letting go of the idea of doing some kind of "iron man" run. If someone dies, just reload the game. It ain't worth the hassle, and you're right, low-level D&D is random as all hell anyway. Even a perfect plan is just one kobold arrow away from a dead wizard. And don't have any qualms about certain kinds of cheesing. So basically:Aurora Firestorm said:No.
I know I'm probably a loner in this regard, but I can't stand Baldur's Gate. It has the same failure modes as D&D that I specifically hate: easy permadeath, shitty performance at low levels so you get killed a lot, and balls-expensive resurrection. You can perma-lose party members easily. On top of that, you have the bitchy problem that if your main character dies, so does everyone else, something I like to call the Persona 3 problem. (This is stupid as a mechanic, I don't care how well your story justifies it.) Also, the open world setup means it's easy to wander into places where your low level will get you instantly killed, so it's just adding insult to injury by offering a big world and then punishing you for going around it. Everyone has absurdly low HP when you start -- I mean single-digits HP -- and I never liked that about D&D.
Basically...if you don't like D&D mechanics, you will hate Baldur's Gate mechanics.
What was the plot of BG 1?Yojoo said:Well, except for the driving force behind the entire saga being the major plot of BG1, the events of which inform on everyone's reaction to you for the remainder of the story.Silverbeard said:Yes, one can go straight for BG 2 without BG 1. Nothing significant in BG 1 is ever really referenced in BG 2 and the sole take away one gets from BG 1 is an understanding of the party members in BG 2, several of which are repeats from BG 1.ninjaRiv said:EDIT: Do you need to play BG1 for the story or can you just go straight into BG2 without playing it?