One of the major choices I made for myself this go-round was to suck it up and play on the highest difficulty level--the somewhat aptly named "death march." As the name suggests, there is much dying, but not as much as I thought--maybe that's just the 475 hours of gameplay talking. The name is very intimidating, but it's not vastly different mechanics than at the other easier levels. Enemies hit harder--quite a bit harder, even the low-level ones like drowners and wolves--which means that your block/dodge game needs to be on point. They also travel in much larger packs--you might have seen a pack of three drowners in normal, but now there's five or seven. Contract critters really pack a punch and it's vital to be prepared to use signs, oil up your blade, chug a decoction, and be ready to throw a bomb or gulp down a healing potion. Overall, I'm enjoying the challenge of learning and adjusting to fights where I could just rely on taking a few pops from the baddie at a lower difficulty setting.
The Wolf Set of Witcher Gear. I'm not sure that I'm digging it. |
The armor design in The Witcher 2 and The Witcher 3 has been some of my favorite. I love the fact that the items look functional and that there are details that make them seem real. You can see where something ties or where buckles are located. This may sound dumb, but I can almost imagine how it would feel--how the leather in the Griffin set would be hard but also provide some protection or how the padded jacket in the Wolf set would be lighter and springy. I don't have those kinds of thoughts about other games--I just daftly believe that it makes sense (those crotch plates in Mass Effect look really uncomfortable).
Despite my loathing of trying to explore every single smuggler's cache or spoils of war marker in Skellige, I am forcing myself to loot them all. Pimping out Geralt's gear ain't cheap--there's a runewright to pay for fancy new enchantments and getting your fancy Witcher gear to the grandmaster level will leave poor Geralt grovelling for a few coins. So it's time to sail and reduce the population of sirens in the waters of Skellige. I've only managed to sink one boat so far--which is a serious win.
Geralt will prevail in his quest to throw together enough cash to pay for all those expensive upgrades!
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