joethekoeller post=326.68515.631593 said:
Of course you get the hang of the controls, but I wouldn't still wouldn't call them good. Drinking potions mid-battle can only be done after you run away and if you're capable of scrolling trough your inventory very fast.
So you're saying it's bad that you can't sort through your inventory and drink a few potions in mid combat?
And while enemies that would have got hit by your strike do jump away, they only get hurt if your actually focusing on them, which can be a pain, especially when fighting goblins, when the auto-focusing insists that i fight against the very first goblins dropped club instead of the rest of them.
Yes, the inability to hit more than one opponent with melee weapons is definitely an issue, but the game adjusts to this by having a damage calculation system that makes group of weaker fighters a much smaller threat than a single strong opponent.
Might be that I have never mastered the Gothic controls to the degree you have, but judging by my experience with other games, I am not bad at games in general. Even though I never got the hang of blocking during fights I acquired a somewhat effective straitforward fighting style that allowed me to clear the entirety of the sleeper temple with ease and up until the fight against the crazy baal and his crazy followers, where I got my ass kicked several times.
Unfortunately, blocking is pretty much useless in G1, but it's very important in G2.
And the endfight is supposed to be the most difficult part of the whole game after all, and while it's very challenging, it's by now means undoable.
I did play gothic 1 and 2 vanilla and I still had problems. After I had finished gothic 2 once again ( twohanded swordfighter paladin with 254 strength if your interested), I thought that I may be ready to finish NotR, well turned out I wasn't. This is not just my problem, a friend of mine, who happens to be able to finish gothic one in under five hours by now and wh o got the orc weapon the blacksmith demands by actually fighting an orc rather than taking the one which is lying in some cave, even though an orc kills you with one hit at that time (Oh yeah he's that good)
While your friend certainly knows what he's doing, finishing G1 in 5 hours or killing an orc at a low level are not exactly amazing feats.
could also not kill the first dragon, because he regenerated health faster than he could hurt him with constant fireball bombardment.
Well, then your friend does not understand how amazing it is to use ridiculously powerful scrolls for just 5 mana.
Which btw is also the greatest flaw in NotR: with the right scrolls, any fight is easy as hell, regardless of how weak your character is. So the really tough fights are actually the easiest part, while the routine opponents pose a much bigger challenge since the number of powerful scrolls is of course limited.
But to be honest I didn't try very long to adapt to the challenge of NotR, might give it a try again once I ran out of other games. I think even though you have apparently mastered the Gothic games, I think we can still agree that they are not easy, and that NotR is significantly more difficult than just Gothic 2.
Yes, the Gothic games actually require you to think, unlike many other RPGs were you just run around killing every opponent that stands in your way wihtout every having to resort to clever tricks or tactics.