Dwarven Realms Alpha Thoughts

Good Morning Folks! If you follow any of the ARPG YouTubers or Streamers you will have probably heard of Dwarven Realms. This game is a very indie very alpha passion project from two brothers, that wanted to do something new for the ARPG genre. Essentially the game is this blend of Vampire Survivors mixed with the controls of what sort of feels like an action combat World of Warcraft. The graphics in general and the model work are nothing to write home about, but the gameplay falls in the “big dumb fun” category. For scale expectations… the game recently hit a peak concurrency of 780 players so this is still very much a niche thing but something that I’ve been playing around a bit with. I had so much fun that I bought copies for all of the AggroChat crew over the weekend when the price was dropped from $5 to $3.74 on a promotion that lasts until the 21st of March.
The setup of the game is pretty straightforward. You have a home camp that over time gains some crafting benches and other resources that you can access. The most important aspect of the home camp is the big green portal, which gives you access to the ruptures which are the core gameplay loop of the game. I’ve been told that the first 34 Ruptures unlock all of the side systems of the game, and then after that point, it is just an endless mechanical loop to see how high you can push up your level and how many ruptures you can clear.
Each Rupture starts out pretty slowly as you are placed on a map with some sparse destructible terrain and some monster spawns themed to that area. However, every few seconds more waves of monsters spawn eventually reaching a point where you are completely surrounded by spawns. Each Rupture has a time limit in the upper left corner showing you how much time you have left, and after killing a fixed amount of monsters you will be notified that you can unlock the boss chamber to finish out the Rupture. I keep wanting to call these Rifts because they remind me quite a bit of the Greater Rifts from Diablo III, so if I slip up and swap terms in the middle of this post hopefully you can reason what I meant. Killing monsters grants essence that you can then use to unlock objectives that spawn into the map and give you resources or gear. Additionally, all of the things you kill will have a chance of spawning loot that goes directly into your inventory.
Once you enter the Bosses Arena the door will lock behind you. This point of no return has led me to spend a good deal of time farming the map before moving on to the boss just to get a good deal more resources. The bosses are pretty straightforward and have some sort of pattern to them. Canuckmeat the Boar for example will charge you and knock you back, with the real danger coming when it knocks you into the lava that surrounds the arena. Others may attack in a fixed pattern that you need to avoid while dealing as much damage as you can. After you unlock your dragon companion that follows you around green circles will spawn throughout the map allowing you to regenerate your life and stamina, so most of the fights become a matter of avoiding the bad circles while standing in the good ones.
There are a lot of different weapons that you can unlock and an entire magic system that I have spent zero time exploring. Staves and Wands allow you to cast spells, Bows allow you to fire off arrow volleys, and all of the martial weapons have some form of bit sweep attack that takes out multiple things at once. I’ve lately been using the two-handed maul quite a bit and I’ve managed to get a unique version of that weapon with a bunch of stats and abilities associated with it. The game pretty much has every mechanic that you would expect from an ARPG, for example I have been trying to focus on LIfe Steal so that I can regen some health while dealing damage and increasing my chance of survival when surrounded.
Using a specific weapon type will begin to unlock various traits. The first few will be active abilities tied to either your Q or R button and then after that they are passive bonuses that increase your effectiveness in combat. This feels a little odd at first because when you swap weapons you will go back down to only having the default attack tied to your Left Mouse Click. However, it does not seem to take very long before you open up the first few abilities and can start taking out large groups of enemies at a time.
There are magic items that you can equip in totem slots that will cause your attacks to spawn specific behaviors. For example, I have an item that causes a rain of meteors that will deal damage to everything around me. I have another item that causes totems to spawn around me that explode whenever I or the enemies walk over them. These magic items honestly deal most of the damage during combat allowing me to sort of kite the enemies around until I have a giant pack and then explode them all at once.
As you level up you get skill points to improve your base stats and talent points to spend on a skill tree. I’ve been working on buffing my survival, damage output, and have decided to pour a bunch of my resources into fire damage to buff my magic items of choice. I figured it was probably beneficial to limit my scope to a single element, but this does mean I am passing up some seemingly powerful items that might cast lightning bolts or something like that instead. For such a simple game… it really does seem to have a lot of interesting nuances. It is nothing like a Last Epoch or Path of Exile, but still allows you some leverage in how you want to build your character.
When you first launch the game you are greeted with this screen that is a note from the developers. It is very important to keep this in mind as you play the game because it is pretty janky at times. However that said I have had a heck of a lot of fun making things explode and I think if you limit your expectations you will as well. I’ve played a lot of $100 games that were nowhere near as much fun as this simple $5 one, so if anything I have said interests you in the least… throw them a few bucks and check it out for yourself.
There is a hardcore mode that might interest those who are into such things. I am largely a “softcore” player, but given how easy it is to get started and how random the items you end up getting are… I could see hardcore being enjoyable. There are leaderboards that track progress, but honestly… I am never likely to mainline this game hard enough to get on them. I am impressed though at how generally fleshed out the game is for this early in development. The initial release date was December of 2022 and it already feels like it is a fairly substantial game. Legitimately I am not sure I can describe it any better than I did at the start of this post. Dwarven Realms is Big Dumb Fun. The post Dwarven Realms Alpha Thoughts appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

Misery and NDAs

Broken

Misery and NDAs
Game Is Still Pretty

Over the last few days I have felt run down, and I am grasping at straws to figure out exactly why.  There seems to be something going around the office, but so far I am not really showing any signs of whatever it is other than simply being exhausted.  Last night I largely struggled with a Migraine that kept me in a pseudo hibernation state, but this morning as I sit down to the keyboard and attempt to drink my coffee I am just feeling generally lousy.  One of my co-workers has been out for three days with something, so I am hoping I am not coming down with whatever that was.  Last night was the night of restless gaming.  I attempted to log in and be present in Final Fantasy XIV but only wound up AFKing outside the guild hall.  It made me appreciate just how much I love our free company house.  It really is in just about the perfect location that seems to be close to just about everything in The Mists neighborhood.  The only problem is… it is small.  We have talked for a bit about potentially trying to pool our resources and getting a bigger house, but the problem there is we would have to move and likely out of our neighborhood.

One of the things that I like the most about where we are situated is that we actually know a large chunk of the neighbors surrounding us.  While it has not been nearly as busy since the launch of Heavensward as everyone has fallen into this pre 3.1 lull…  it is still nice feeling like you are part of something larger.  While idling in FFXIV I attempted to play some Destiny and managed to complete a few bounties.  However my aim was constantly wonky, and I knew I should not be attempting anything serious.  As the night wore on the headache got worse and ultimately I ended up retiring to bed for awhile… the finally ending up on the Sofa.  I hate those days where you have the will to play something…  but cannot struggle through the “bad feels” in order to actually make any headway.

NDAs are Back

Misery and NDAs

I am using Trove as the screenshot for this little section because it was one of the first “who needs an NDA” alpha games that I can remember playing.  Everything about that game process was so out in the open that development discussions were openly happening on Reddit.  For a period of time it seemed like every new game coming down the pipe was sans NDA so that folks could stream it freely and generate buzz.  I was shocked when I managed to get into the Warlords of Draenor friends and family alpha for example… and was told that I could talk about it freely.  The problem being… this open transparency bit more than a few games in the ass.  Development is a messy time and as things are changing…  you end up with features in “partially finished” states that look like a finished product to the gamer.  The big problem with open and “pay to join” Alphas is that they no longer feel like testing.  Instead you have simply released a broken game.

As a result lately I’ve noticed a significant number of games bringing back the NDA.  Hell some of them seem to be almost unwilling to let the NDA go, as they have been in fairly prolific testing for a couple of years.  As of right now I am in a handful of NDA bound alpha processes, and each of them seems to be trying to return to the era when Alphas were actually that.  The problem with this is, I am finding myself far less interested in playing something that I can’t actually talk about on my blog.  So generally speaking I install the Alpha client and play every now and then, but I am not actually playing enough to be a proper tester.  I feel bad for this because I have always been the type to bug note the hell out of things as I see them.  While I think it is probably a good thing for Alpha processes to regain some of their previous closed nature, I also feel far less invested in a game until it is actually hatched and ready for public consumption.  So many things over the last years have blurred the lines between finished product and testing, and the current era of incessant and constant “early access” games just makes me leery to invest too much of myself in a game until I know that it is nearing its finished state.