L-au încurcat cu Bloodborne, ala e in stoc ;)
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Am dat precomanda acum la Bloodborne si inca nu aparea ca fiind in stoc dar sper sa ai dreptate, tare mi-e pofta de acel joc =D>
Ce-mi plac astea:
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Controller feels superior to keyboard+mouse.
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The extremely annoying doors from The Witcher 2 are gone. Doors are now opened automatically, no button pressing. No loading times for entering buildings either.
Poate la fel de mult cum nu-mi plac astea:Quote:
Geralts beard will grow over time
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Day 1 patch confirmed
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Xbox One resolution will stay at 900p
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They encountered very few bugs
la cum le zice acolo confirma ca jocul este bun, bun :x
tare si asta :)
"Geralts beard will grow over time"
l.e. lol , zis si eu de barba.. am postat in acelasi timp
Xbox One resolution will stay at 900p
And so what? Who give's a sh..t?. Jocul sa fie bun, asta e day one for sure =D> :D
New screenshot:
Nimic nou, știam de faza cu rezoluția de vreo două luni. Îmi place:
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Most impressive dynamic weather system in any game he has ever played
Contrary to BioWare games dialogue options are not good or bad, this you will have to figure out for yourselves.
Conteaza rezolutia doar daca ai ambele console, daca ai doar una nu conteaza.
Nici daca ai ambele console nu conteaza rezolutia. Nu mi-as lua versiunea de PS4 nici sa-mi dea inca 16 DLC-uri gratuit. Prefer Xbox One ca sa-l joc cu un controller calumea, nu jucaria aia de la PS4.
Acum o sa-mi sariti cu totii in cap, dar nu-mi pasa. Controller-ul PS4 este mult sub cel de Xbox One din toate punctele de vedere.
And that concerns The Witcher 3, because....? :))
Eu zic sa va bucurati pentru patch-ul ala day one. Mai bine asa decat sa amane iar jocul.
Damn... inca doua luni de asteptari... Sper sa nu-l amane din nou!
P.S. Sunt de acord cu controllerul... nu exista nicio posibilitate sa-mi conectez pe cel de la Xbox 360 sau Xbox One la PS4? Sa am "the best of both worlds"...
Daca la generatia anterioara X360 avea clar un controller mai bun, acum eu consider diferentele intre cele doua ca fiind foarte mici. Mi se par la fel de confortabile amandoua. Am jucat indeajuns pe One incat sa pot afirma ca diferenta fata de controllerul vechi e mult mai mica decat in cazul evolutiei de la DS3 la DS4. Diferenta aia de la 900p la fullHD pe un TV de 50" se va simti. In alte jocuri am sesizat-o cu usurinta.
Avem noi imagini din The Witcher 3 si cireasa de pe tort: harta (sau mai bine zis, ceva ce pare a fi jumatate din harta)!
informatia am preluat-o de pe CG (forumul "verisor") /topicul dedicat jocului:
"Huge info dump From Gamestar Twitch Q and A #463
Translation courtesy of users on the Witcher 3 official forums:
- Journalist played 10-12 hours, had full access to the game and reached level 7
- Game is already at Sony & MS for admission
- Resolution on Xbox One will definitely stay at 900p in order to offer a stable performance
- Fluid gameplay on 1080p with everything on maximum +nvidia hairworks on GTX 980 -> looks
- Utra settings are impressive, especially the rich vegetation and character models; there can be scenes where difference between high and ultra won't be that noticeable; lighting is impressive: for instance evening light falling on vast flower fields of a parfum-maker
- Looks insanely good for an open world game
- Two big cities with Novigrad and Oxenfurt (which is really big as well)
- You cannot enter every house in Novigrad but it's cleverly masked if you can't enter one
- Novigrad and No man's land are connected, only seperated maps, only loading time between main land and Skellige
- Novigrad+No man's land are much bigger than Skyrim alone
- No button for opening doors anymore, all doors are swinging doors
- Extremely lively interiors, every interior tells a different story
- There are around 25 "villages" in No mans land and Novigrad
- There are towns in the game of the same size of Flotsam
- Cities have a realistic eco-system and surroundings with real suburb parts in which craftsmen are located like in medieval times
- Last active skill-slot (12th) at level 50, level cap could be even higher
- Whole world feels quite realistic and organic
- Combat with gamepad very intuitive and fluid
- Diving is still not optimal in terms of controls, but you can dive everywhere
- Gamepad controls are apparently much better than mouse/keyboard according to the journalist (m/k on TW2 level)
- It's still too easy to rob people, robbing system in general is lacking
- Whole game is consequently open world so pacing could be difficult for some
- Passages with Ciri are like a linear action-adventure, not like a RPG, plays differently and more action-fueled than Geralt's passages (no inventory, no skill tree, depending on the scene Ciri has certain skills)
- Side quests are great and each tells its own story with people actually reacting to Geralt
- Sound and subtitles can be combined freely from different available languages
- There will definitely be a day-one patch
- High grade of visual violence with dismemberments with a higher gore-level than TW1 or TW2, but still feels organic and consistent
- Items can be crafted and decomposed
- Best items in game must be crafted
- Game world can change based on your decisions
- There was indeed no slider or adjustment option for the draw distance/LOD but according to the journalist he was happy with it
- There is the cleverly constructed illusion of a realistic world but traveling is never boring and there is always something to discover
- Even if you disable markers for quest givers on the map the game gives you audio-visual hints like people screaming for help
- The journalist never had the feeling that the world is "empty"
- No sudden changes of environments (e.g. desert to humid regions), organic and consistent world
- "Sandbox elements" and random stuff is limited, so no fights of townpeople against dragons like in Skyrim, you can only influence the world to a certain level
- As far as the journalist has experienced it there will be little to no enemy respawning, enemies haven returned during his two days in the game
- The game is open world but actually almost everything is "controlled" and "planned" by the developers
- The Quests aren't randomly generated, they appear on the same spot
- He did not encounter any simple fetch quests
- Many things are commented by Geralt e.g. when he tracks down leads with the Witcher senses
- Mutagens can be very powerful, like 40% damage enhancer for signs
- Very different enemy types that feel and play differently
- No "clone" NPCs, every NPC in Novigrad for example looks differently
- Every potion and bomb must only brewed/crafted once
- Potions have different quality levels, can be improved, e.g. Swallow can offer more healing and more slots
- Crafting is extensive
- You can for example increase the inventory limitations of your horse by crafting bigger saddle bags but you must actually go to your horse to be able to have access to these bags
- Every region has its own color setting and feel
- Most dynamic/impressive Weather System the reporter has ever seen.
- Clouds cast shadows
- Bad weather like storms can happen everywhere
- Game loading time is extremely short on the high-end PC
- Saving and loading times are also extremely short
- Some huge buildings and story-relevant special areas have loading times, normal buildings do not
- Story branching in quests is excessive and impressive with not always "transparent" or easily visible effects, for example one quest had six "decisive" elements that could have gone down in a different way if the journalist behaved differently
- "It will be impossible to play Witcher 3 two times in exactly the same way"
- Different to Bioware games dialogue options are not "obvious" and every possibility makes kind of sense, no sign whether an answer is "good" or "bad", only quest relevant options are marked (opposite to chatter and non-quest related dialogue options)
- Due to the complex way of story branching it's difficult to find times and locations where "things went wrong" if you want to develop your game in a different way
- Ghwent is awesome according to the journalist, great design and entertaining
- Fist fighting is without QTEs now, it's just like normal fighting with hard and fast strikes and such
- There are now negotiation minigame for quest rewards like bargaining for a monster hunt (before and after quests?)
- There are horseraces similar to RDR, biggest focus on stamina management during races, you can even buy better saddles for horseraces
- Every item you choose is visible on Geralt's ingame model
- Geralts beard will grow. You have to go to a barber after a few days
- You can enter and play whatever region you want but you get hints where to start by your main quest (e.g. search Ciri in Novigrad's surroundings) if you want enemies that are on a similar level to yourself, but it's up to the player how he wants to progress
- Level 24 Wyvern one-shotted level 7 Geralt
- Soundtrack was good, but neither really negative nor outstanding, but dynamic and decent, fits to the situation and location
- Some reactions from NPCs to things you did, but rather small comments, journalist admitted that he didn't play the game long enough for probably bigger reactions
- Tutorials are integrated into the story/progression and worth the effort due to good dialogues
- The game is really immersive and "drags you in", feels and plays a lot more fluidly than the predecessors without being less complex
- There is a chance that they won't be able to hold the level until the end of the game (speculation since two days were surely not enough to get to the end) but the journalist was truly and deeply impressed by what he saw and played
- Potions are quite important, especially on harder difficulty settings
- a lot of customization, including the deactivation of quest-markers and points of interest markers. You can even experience Geralt's adventure completely without any on-screen display
- Geralts beard will grow. You have to go to a barber after a few days
- Bargaining with people about monster- hunting rewards will be done in a minigame. There will be a seperate window, in which you type the gold you want. At the same time you can see how angry the npc is. if you overdo it he/she will cancel the negotiation and you have to accept the minimum reward.
A little more detail from another translator:
- A thing that he really appreciated and I liked very well as well is the importance of logic and consistency of the game world to the developers. This shows in small things like, killing a wolf will never drop a weapon but killing an enemy equiped with an axe has a high chance of dropping an axe as well. Or for instance there is absolutely no limit on where you can dive, even though on some place there is absolutely nothing to dive for but just to keep the consistency you can still dive.
- During his 2 days(not just playing, he also was able to just free fly through the world and things like that) he encountered 3 bugs. One was a savefile that couldn't be loaded but was fixed with a restart of the game. The second was a locked camera during a fight once and the third was a horse that somehow ended up on top of a pillar.
- On the topic of monster hunts. While in itself they are pretty cool a very interesting fact about it was the rewards. In fact you gain mutagens from the big monster hunting quests which can be used in a as it sounded a little bit more complex manner. One way to use them is to increase your skills which can give you at the highest level of combination of skills and mutagens a significant increase of your skills. They are also used in high-tier potions. To conclude, the mutagens are pretty useful and thus the monster hunting quests are more than just cool quests.
- On the topic of sidequests and decisions, Witcher 3 has in contrast to other games no problem of denying you content based on your decisions. For instance in one sidequest you could choose to enter a brawl of soldiers of some sort and if you did not an entire dungeon is completely denied to you for this playthrough. Also very interesting, the decisions and consequences are not as obvious as in Witcher 2 where at the end or the beginning of a chapter you had to choose between one or the other. In the Witcher 3 it is way more integrated into the gameplay and every-day" decisions. As he summarized it: It will be impossible to have the same playthrough twice. "
Se vede diferenta si pe un televizor mai mic daca stai aproape de el. Am observat-o la AC Unity, next gen cica, au distrus Parisul cu rezolutia lor.
Cum sa nu conteze rezolutia. Nu stiu cum e controlerul la X-One deci nu fac comentarii legate de asta dar sa fiu sa aleg sa joc un joc in 900p sau 1080p as merge pe rezolutia cea din urma chiar daca ar fi sa joc jocul controlat cu bete de chibrite.
Felicitari. Eu nu mi-am luat consola ca sa-mi pese de rezolutie ci ca sa ma bucur de jocuri (noi aparitii) ce ruleaza la un framerate stabil.
side quest
o gramada de Q&A pe official forums :http://forums.cdprojektred.com/threa...21#post1574321
Oricum, pentru ca toata lumea o zice, o sa incerc sa gasesc de imprumut versiunea de PS4, chiar si dupa ce-l termin pe Xbox One, doar din pura curiozitate.
Btw. Sunt singurul pe care-l cam sperie partea asta ?
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Looks insanely good for an open world game
The game is open world but actually almost everything is "controlled" and "planned" by the developers
cred ca da
eu am incredere CD Projekt
Da, eu imi imaginez oricum un open world asemanator cu ce am vazut in Inquisition. Adica nu un open world a la Skyrim ci mai limitat din anumite puncte de vedere. Nu il vad oricum ca pe un joc bazat pe explorare ci pe story si gameplay.