AggroChat #425 – Check Your Filter

Featuring: Ashgar, Belghast, Grace, Kodra, Tamrielo, and Thalen
Tonight we start off with some light discussion about Guild Wars 2 and more specifically the new patch that dropped on the 28th including a brand new map called Gyala Delve.  We talk briefly about wrapping up Diablo 3 Season 28 and looking forward to the Last Epoch Multiplayer patch landing next Thursday.  We talk a bit about Microsoft getting to subpoena Sony for records about their practice of paying companies to keep games from GamePass.  We also talk about the practice of corporate write-downs and how Wizards of the Coast and Funko have gotten caught throwing massive amounts of product in landfills recently.  From there we have a sort of rapid-fire discussion of a bunch of mech names, namely Mechwarrior Online, the upcoming Armored Core game, and Mass Builder.

Topics Discussed:

  • Guild Wars 2
    • Gyala Delve Content Drop
  • Diablo 3 Season 28 Finished
  • Last Epoch Multiplayer Patch on 3/9
  • Phantom Brigade
  • Beating Wagon World
  • Microsoft gets to Supoena Sony
  • Wizards and Funko Land Fill Disposals
  • Mechwarrior Online
  • Armored Core
  • Mass Builder
The post AggroChat #425 – Check Your Filter appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

What Lies Beneath

Good Morning Friends! This is a pretty exciting week on top of wrapping up Diablo III Season 28, we had the first content drop from Guild Wars 2 after the “roadmap” and “vision” for the game going forward were announced on the 13th. This new content patch came out on the 28th, but much to my chagrin I realized that I had a library book that was going to be due on the 1st… so instead of really playing any of the new content I pushed my way through the second book in the Gentleman Bastards series by Scott Lynch. That meant last night I was entirely focused on getting into the game on my Necromancer and trying out some of the new content.
For the last few weeks, there has been a certain amount of consternation from the community stalwarts about what exactly Guild Wars 2 looks like in a “post-living-world” environment. The pattern of things in the past has been that there would be a paid expansion followed by a sizeable gap while the content was being worked on with a living world season released and then another gap until either another living world season or the release of another paid expansion. The “roadmap” instead seemed to indicate that we would begin to see smaller expansions followed by quarterly content drops leading up to another paid expansion in a semi-yearly cycle. I think in the grand scheme of things this sort of release cadence is best for growing a population of active players, but I also think the quality and detail of each single map drop needs to be significant. Not all expansion maps in Guild Wars 2 are created equal so would this be a Bloodstone Fen that folks rarely revisit or something more akin to a Drizzlewood Coast and becomes an active pillar of the community?
Last night I finished the story as it exists currently, finishing with the “Deep Trouble” mission. Something of note, I have never played Guild Wars 2 current content ever. I’ve never been caught up enough with the game to play “Living World” content as it was being doled out, so I have no real frame of reference for what to expect. What is currently in the game seems to be four story missions that lead you down into the Gyala Delve, and introduce you to the situation that is happening there. My gut feeling is that I am waiting on some sort of timer before the next set of quests drops, but in reality, I might be waiting a few months given that the next content drop is expected “before summer” whatever that means for a timeframe. I enjoyed hanging around with Gorrick, Rama, and Yao and want more of the “Best Friends Detective Agency”.
So while the story left me somewhat wanting… the zone is absolutely phenomenal. If this is the sort of expansion map that we can expect to be seeing every three months or so, I think the community is going to be extremely pleased. Effectively the map unfolds over the course of four subregions, the first of which is above ground… and then the next three regions going deeper under the jade sea into a mining pit of a sort. The further down you get the more sinister things to end up being. There is a void haze mechanic that requires you to keep renewing a Jadebot Filtration system at each outpost. Being down in the complex of caverns and tunnels eventually will use up your filter requiring you to get a new one or risk taking damage over time from the haze. Visually everything is stunning, with probably my favorite bit being that you can see aquatic life frozen in the jade walls, for example, this big whale shadowed in the distance.
What I spent most of my night doing was doing bits and pieces of the meta event that spans the zone. Essentially this reminds me of a weird mix of Drizzlewood Coast and the Chalk Gerent meta. You are following Gorrick, Rama, and Yao as they retake sections of the cave complex and in doing so make them safe from the incursion of the haze and corrupted Jade Brotherhood members. Essentially you follow the red events and they will take you through the sequence as you leave the “safe” camp up top and head to various points on the map retaking them. During each sequence, there are a number of side bosses that spawn and a big battle to take back a base. Along the way, each encounter will spawn a number of Gyala Delve Mining Caches that you can open with Jade Miner’s Keycards.
The final phase of the event involves fighting three bosses on three different platforms, so you ultimately have to split your group in order to deal with all of them. I am uncertain how this is supposed to work, but in my experience so far everyone keeps killing their boss until everyone else has killed theirs as well. I assume there is supposed to be some measure of coordination, but it feels like right now we are largely brute-forcing this mechanic until we find out something better. Over time the community will learn the best way to do this, and I have a feeling this entire sequence is going to be popular for farming the Gyala loot boxes. I managed to pull one of the unique items from the loot boxes, a Mini Void Emberknight. Completing the final event also seems to reward you with two Luxon Hunter’s Weapon Caches which include brand new jade item appearances and drop with the Ritualist’s prefix.
All told I had a lot of fun doing the meta a few times, but realistically I need to get my Ranger caught up because I think I would rather do these metas on that character as opposed to my Necromancer. The Necro is a content soloing god, but it feels like I do a much better job at being a team player on my Soulbeast Longbow Ranger. So more than likely I am going to fall back to working on catching that character up through the story. I might pop my head into Gyala once a night and try and ride the meta for a single completion or something, but I would rather be there with a different character long term. In truth, I want to get the Ranger up because it seems like a better option for ALL team content in the long run. I mean I could always respec to a more group-friendly Necromancer build… but then I would not be as good at soloing content as I am now.
Now that I have finished with the story as it stands currently, I am going to venture forth today and check out some of the community opinions about how successful “What Lies Beneath” and Gyala Delve have been received. Until I completed the story I was staying entirely away from any content about the game because I wanted to experience it all with fresh eyes. I personally think this is a good course forward with the game and I look forward to more of these content drops if this is the quality of content we are going to get. The new meta is really fun and feels extremely rewarding. The only thing that would be better is if there was an albeit rare chance of getting ascended drops. I mean that might be the case but the wiki pages for Ravenous Wanderer are not filled out yet, so I am not sure we know the full drop table yet. Have you dipped your toes into the new story content drop? What were your feelings about it? Drop me a line below. The post What Lies Beneath appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

The Last Season

Good Morning Friends! I am going to warn you that this post is going to be a bit on the melancholy side. Yesterday over lunch I finished up Diablo III Season 28 or at least finished the Guardian step in the journey. There is still a ton that I have left to unlock on the Altar of Sacrifice, but I largely plan on doing that at my leisure over the coming months. While this was not the easiest season ever, it was definitely on the easier scale. Ace finished their season I believe on Sunday, so I was lagging a bit behind. My goal is to help Thalen and maybe Byx if she wants it… finish up their seasons and largely chill out doing low-key content for awhile. I feel like I have three pretty powerful builds on the Demon Hunter having crafted the Gears of Dreadlands Haedrigs set, the Unhallowed Essence Multishot set, and then a Marauder set yesterday for the purpose of the set dungeon.
Shocking to no one who has been with me for very long in my Diablo journey, saved the set dungeon for the very last thing. It always feels really weird to have completed almost all of the harder achievements with this relatively simple one sitting there holding up the process. I hate set dungeons because I have a mental block about being timed while being expected to accomplish a certain set of tasks. This is deeply rooted in my brain and dates back to some third-grade trauma. While I fully understand WHY it exists, I have never truly been able to remove it entirely. I always make the set dungeon out to be this epic obstacle, then like yesterday end up one-shotting the damned thing. I specifically built a Marauder set because, for a Demon Hunter, it is probably the easiest option especially now that the damned worms are marked with a skull on the map.
While this was an enjoyable season… there is just something about it that feels hollow. I think it dawned on me WHY it feels weird. The entire community is treating this like this is the end of Diablo III. Raxxanterax for example has been a pillar of the content creation community, and yesterday announced that the video for Challenge Rift 297 would be the very last of those guides that he released. Even between Ace and I, we largely wanted to make sure that we were going to finish this season because we thought that with the impending release of Diablo IV, this might be the last opportunity to rekindle the old fun. It seems like everyone seems to have that same idea and I am seeing folks returning from the Path of Exile community that had not played the game in years. This feels like a send-off for a beloved friend, but also… is exceptionally depressing.
Diablo III has meant so much to me on a deeply personal level. Sure I have always loved Diablo since I first got into testing for the original game back in college. Diablo III however set the pace of a reoccurring destination event surrounding its seasons. Ace and I would do this late-night leveling thing on Friday they released, and while we’ve made less progress over the years as we have gotten more used to sleep… it was still this thing I think we both looked forward to. It felt like an MMORPG launch happening every three or four months like clockwork, and no matter what else we were playing it would bring a handful of us together for this destination event. While the magic also lasted a shorter period of time as we got better at the time, often finishing the season before the end of the first season… it was still something that I set my calendars by and made sure I was ready to go without distractions.
I think part of the struggle we’ve gone through over the last few years is that Diablo was severely tainted by the events surrounding the shitstorm that is Blizzard Entertainment. We’ve struggled at length to find another game that triggered the same sort of mental joy that Diablo III Season Journey did, and have failed. While I love Path of Exile as the ugly child that it is, it really feels bad to play with friends. We’ve tried Wolcen, Torchlight III, Torchlight Infinite, and hell even some Grim Dawn and none of them have managed to rekindle the magic surrounding our quarterly destination event. It is my hope that maybe just maybe Last Epoch releasing its multiplayer update on the 9th of March will give us the first real viable option. I’ve played enough of it to know that I enjoy it quite a bit, but it is really going to take us all playing it together to determine if it feels “right”.
Due to some lucky circumstances… I got gifted a copy of Diablo IV so I will be poking my head into it when it releases and the upcoming beta periods. However I have enough friends that are simply not willing to give Blizzard any more money, so I figure it is going to be a pretty hollow experience. I am also not entirely certain that it would capture the magic of Diablo III. When the third game was released, there were large parts of the broader Diablo community that hated it. Diablo IV feels very much like a play to bring them back into the fold and maybe make a dent in the popularity of Path of Exile. That means it is very unlikely to be the big dumb fun that a Diablo III season is, and will be more focused on a more grimdark hardcore audience. Diablo Immortal was probably the true spiritual successor, but given that it wound up being a shit sandwich of truly evil monetizations… that one is off the table.
I guess even if Diablo III fades away, I have all of the memories of me and Ace doing dumb things together for fun and profit. This is one of the oldest images I found on WordPress of us doing a greater rift together. I’m hoping that Last Epoch can become the next game that we shift our quarterly nonsense to. Path of Exile worked great for me, but never really became a good-feeling group activity. Last Epoch is going to be starting their seasons I believe around the launch of 1.0 and calling them “Cycles”. It sounds like at least with the start they are going to be relatively simplistic outings without a lot of extra mechanics going on. I think I am mostly okay with that because there is a thin line between doing next to nothing with early Diablo III seasons, and the wild feature bloat that is Path of Exile leagues. Basically, I feel like a good friend is moving away, and that there isn’t much I can do about that. I fully expect when Diablo IV launches that what community existed around Diablo III will slowly fade away. So in many ways, this probably legitimately is the “Last Season” and I am going to try and be okay with that. The post The Last Season appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

Beetle Racing Time

Good Morning Friends! I am exceptionally excited that today we are getting the first drop in the new content that follows End of Dragons over in Guild Wars 2. I had the sudden realization yesterday that this was a thing, and not only coming soon… but today. I am nowhere even close to catching up on the story with my Ranger, so I will be venturing back to my Necromancer to experience the tasty new content. I think more than anything I am interested in seeing the sort of content drops we should come to expect from the loose roadmap posted on the 13th. In theory, the content we are getting today should be representative of the drops we will be getting each quarter. There has been much speculation on what exactly this roadmap and shift away from full expansion and full living world season means for the game, but I am interested in arriving at a more predictable release cadence. I guess my hope is that we see something akin to either Season 4 or 5 maps with lots of stuff going on in the game, vendors selling useful things to plug holes in your gearing process, and maybe even a really good meta or world boss.
After completing my Skyscale I set my sights on getting my racing beetle. This honestly was a pretty quick quest at least compared to what I went through with collecting scales and eggs. This chain of meta-achievements is almost entirely focused on the Domain of Kourma. Once again I employed BlishHUD to mark the locations of the various bits and bobs required for the quest. The piece I struggled with the most was the event centered around the invasion of the Moon Temple. I kept popping into the zone periodically while working on things with my Ranger, and almost without fail, I would arrive after the event had just finished. On Sunday I managed to catch the event just starting and pushed my way through the sequence of events and finally was able to break the plague beetle jars required to get the final component in the Beetle Feed quest.
So now I am the proud owner of Petey the amazing Roller Beetle. In theory, I should be able to use this to pick up a few Mastery points that I am missing that required breaking down walls with this little guy. I’ve not spent a lot of time on this, because given that I have a Skyscale… I am using it most often. I did however spend about fifteen minutes just zooming around the zone immediately following the quest. It feels very F-Zero when zooming about and less like the Mario Kart experience I was sort of expecting. I need to go try some of the racing tracks. Ultimately my focus has been on getting mounts because they are very much something that you immediately feel account-wide. I spent some time on my Guardian last night and having access to the Skyscale just drastically improved the experience of roaming around and poking away at map completion.
More than a fair amount of my time is honestly just exploring the world on the back of my Skyscale since getting it. It is extremely shocking how much detail has gone into this world. For example these tarps hanging up in Divinity’s Reach. Prior to the existence of the Skyscale, there was no way in hell you would ever be able to get this close. There are little subtle details that you barely notice from the ground, like all the guy wires attached to the surrounding buildings. This was an almost unneeded level of detail at the time this game was released and is just eating up resources that few people would even have a good enough setup to notice them. However the fact that they are there is interesting to me. Sure there are a few that sort of jut off into infinity and never make contact with anything, but the vast majority look like they would legitimately hold tension.
The World has always been the most interesting character in Guild Wars 2. It is such an intricate living thing that it never ceases to impress me. While I struggled with grasping the combat and role mechanics and honestly still do at times. From the day I first set foot into Alpha, I thought the world itself was exceptionally special. The other day I swam down someplace I had apparently never before and realized there was an entire underwater section of a living world zone that I had never explored before. Moments like that really cement how cool and intricate the zone design is, and similarly as a result I think this is why the shift to smaller more reliable content drops interests me. I am hoping as a result we keep getting these self-contained areas of content that are deeply intricate. I think I’ve come to realize that I enjoy specifically designed zones more than I enjoy the ability to roam an entire world without zone barriers.
The only thing that the ability to fly across an entire continent has really given us is a bunch of weird liminal spaces where nothing much is happening. I would rather see zone designs where every corner of a zone is packed with interesting detail, than the ability to free fly over wide sweeping vistas that are more or less empty. Sure there are moments that look cool as the clouds roll in over the world as you are flying across it… but also you stop existing in the zone itself. In World of Warcraft, I would point my mount in a direction, climb to as high as I could… hit the auto run button, and then alt-tab out while moving in a direction. The active flight of the Skyscale forces me to stay focused on what I am doing, and as a result, I am also way more likely to dip down and join an event that I pass. In WoW I made a straight line between quest objectives and rarely interacted with the world as a result. Both have their places and there are times that I find myself teleporting to Mistlock Sanctuary just to have a moment of safe reprieve from the otherwise hectic pace of the world. I also find myself trying to figure out how to get to places that I have never gotten to before, if for no reason other than to give me a new vantage point on scenes that I have already seen. Both design models have their place, but I think I am just more engaged in the action focus of a game like Guild Wars 2 than I am in the traditional MMORPG mold at this point. I am sure at some point my brain with shift again and I will put away all of my ARPGs and crave something more sedate, for now, I am just going with my instincts. The post Beetle Racing Time appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.