AggroChat #505 – One Portal Woes

Featuring: Ammosart, Ashgar, Belghast, Grace, Kodra, and Tamrielo
Hey Folks! We are back this week and only actually down one person which seems great for the holiday season.  This week we start off talking about Toad’s Item Factory which is a multiperson minigame in Super Mario Party Jamboree and Kodra talks about his experiences playing it with his kiddo.  From there Tam shares his experiences with Nine Sols, which is in theory a game he should like but is not quite there. Several of us have made it to the Path of Exile II Endgame and as such we discuss some of the issues with it, the most glaring being the whole One Portal Problem.  Kodra has started playing Warhammer 40,000 Martyr which is honestly prompting Bel to reinstall and check it out again.  Finally, Tam talks a bit about the major changes that have gone into Star Citizen with the opening of a whole other star system with the Pyro update.

Topics Discussed:

  • Super Mario Party Jamboree
    • Toad’s Item Factory
  • Nine Sols
  • Path of Exile II Endgame
    • Our Issues
  • Warhammer 40k Martyr
  • Star Citizen 4.0: Pyro
The post AggroChat #505 – One Portal Woes appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

Path of Exile II Rant Thread

Good Morning Folks! At least I hope it is still morning by the time I get this blog post out there. This thread is a bit out of ordinary for my normal post, and you are essentially getting a stream of consciousness rant about things that I think need to be improved in the game. Generally speaking I take more effort to shape my arguments, but this is pretty much just raw snippets of feelings. It might lead you to believe that I hate Path of Exile II. I would not have spent the last two hours randomly jotting things down if I hated the game. In fact I think that depending upon the path it takes… Path of Exile II could be the best ARPG in another few years eclipsing the greatness that has been the original Path of Exile. There is a lot of interesting stuff going on here. I think the game has “good bones” to borrow a term used by home renovators. However in its current state there are a lot of things that are just not working. I feel like I also have to preface this statement, that at this point I have spent almost 200 hours playing Path of Exile II since its launch. I have leveled a Titan to level 78 and have since shifted to an Infernalist which I have taken to 88 and continue pushing it forward. I have played the worst class and one of the absolute best classes, and the experiences were wildly different. A lot of my early complaints about Path of Exile II just do not exist when you are playing a well designed class. I also feel like it is important to state that I have around 4000 hours played in Path of Exile 1, and started seriously playing in the Sentinel league and have made it to the endgame in every league since then. I’ve built a bunch of different viable characters even though I fell in love with Righteous Fire and keep playing those each league as well. I’m also not really expressing a lot of radical opinions that I have not seen bandied about in the Redditsphere. However I felt like it was time to unburden my soul with a good rant. I am not even going to make the pretense of trying to break up the block of text with images. You are warned… big damned wall of text forum post mode has engaged.

One Portal Softcore Is Bad

Okay, this is probably the thing that annoys me the most about Path of Exile II. I was fully on board with the concept of the bosses resetting their health back to full after failing to kill them. What I was not on board with was still spawning six portals, but removing your map after dying once. This just feels awful and even now that I have finished unlocking all of the atlas points… and whether or not I complete a map no longer matters at all… it still feels atrocious. For those not indoctrinated to Path of Exile, there is already a game mode called hardcore that is an optional challenge where you effectively lose your character… or at least it transfers to another league… when you take a death. I do not play in that game mode for a reason.

Runes Are Bad

In Path of Exile II, we lost access to the crafting bench and instead got the rune system where we can socket in an item and gain some additional stats on an item. This is bad for a few reasons. Firstly this choice is permanent, and unlike the crafting bench, you cannot change your mind and put on something more useful when you no longer need that 12% resistance to a single stat. Additionally, 12% just feels like it isn’t enough to matter in some cases. What I would like to see is a few things. Firstly I would make it so you could socket over top of an existing rune destroying the first rune and replacing its stats. Second I would really like to see multiple tiers of runes just like we had multiple tiers of bench crafts. The game has the reforging bench and should be used more often. I envision three tiers of runes, and each one requires you to reforge three of the previous tiers to make it.

Gold Feels Meaningless

Right now there is not a reasonable gold sink. I feel like lowering the respec costs was the right thing to do, and it should be almost free to change your character. This is something that was unnecessarily punishing players at low levels. Even in Path of Exile 1, you eventually reached a point in progression where you had more Regret Orbs than you knew what to do with, and respecs were effectively free. What gold lacks is something fun to do with it, that you actually care about. Right now the only real option is gambling, and gambling is a mistake… a massive mistake. What we are really missing is Kingsmarch, because that was the piece that made gold feel good in the Settlers of Kalguur league. Maybe this is eventually something that is going to be implemented, but for now, it feels just as useless as gold felt in Diablo III, where it was just a number that constantly went up and that you had nothing really to do with it. What I would love to see is some additional vendors added to the game that sell a limited stock of items for gold. For example what if you had someone similar to POE1 Tujen that sold random currencies and you could haggle with them trying to get the price of gold down? There just needs to be something fun to do with it.

Most Maps are Not Well Designed

One of the hallmarks of Path of Exile 1 mapping was that it had a lot of really great maps. While everyone pretty much universally loved some of them, there were various niche maps that other folks loved and were perfect for specific builds. For example, I love Toxic Sewers, but that map is going to suck for any build with a lot of damage projection. The problem that Path of Exile II has is that almost universally they are filled with super tight corridors with way too much collision forcing you to get hung up on things constantly. The maps themselves are also massive in scale and take way too long to complete. There are a handful that are great, but because of the meandering nature of the endgame… you are constantly stuck choosing the lesser of two evils while figuring out how to path around. Vaal Factory can die in a fire.

Mapping is KinDA Boring

Right now Path of Exile II mapping suffers from the same problem as the Last Epoch monolith. There just isn’t enough interesting stuff going on in the maps. Partially this is due to the fact that we do not have over a decade’s worth of league content infused randomly into the maps. However, it is more than that. Right now it feels like the only mobs in the entire map that matter are the half-dozen rare spawns. Once you have killed those, there is little to no reason to keep clearing the map. They are legitimately the only mobs that have a reasonable chance of dropping anything worth picking up. Occasionally you can get maps dropped from white packs, but nine times out of ten these will be a map that is at least 10 tiers too low for you to actually care about.

Rarity is Mandatory for Fun

Related to this last point… right now it feels like Item Rarity is a mandatory stat for you to stack to make mapping feel interesting. This means EVERYONE is magic finding 100% of the time, or feeling like they are making no progress. I feel like this stat needs to be removed from the game entirely and come up with a more creative way to add it back in. Maybe rarity is a sliding scale, which can solve the one multiple portals thing. Maybe maps start out with a high base rarity and that drops each time you lose a portal. Rarity exists on the Atlas tree and I feel like if they buffed that slightly they could remove it entirely from gear and the game would be better for it.

Item Drops Don’t Matter

One of the points that Jonathan stated repeatedly in interviews is that they wanted to make it so that loot on the ground mattered again. This is a goal that they have entirely failed at. Loot for the most part is just as bad as it ever was in Path of Exile 1, the main difference is we are getting way less of it and as a result have a way lower chance of ever seeing anything that is worth picking up. I thought maybe the Tiered loot system that they introduced would be something similar to the “well-rolled” concept that some of the league mechanics in Path of Exile 1 awarded. For example in the Settlers mechanic, you wound up getting some extremely solid drops with decent resists and stats that you might actually care about. I’ve seen a bunch of Tier 5 drops in maps, which is the highest tier in the new system of drops, and almost all of them were worthless. Most of the pieces of gear had zero resistances, which is effectively a requirement in this game since resists in general feel so much harder to get. The best loot in the game appears to be on the vendors because they seem to actually be generating loot with that well-rolled formula.

Crafting is Not Crafting

Right now it feels like we have the Duplo version of the crafting system from Path of Exile. I was by far not a crafting genius, nor did I think it was great that you were effectively required to use Craft of Exile to figure out how to make anything. What we got instead is a total crapshoot where quite honestly… if you don’t end up with the two best stats you can possibly get while it is still a magic item, it is not worth progressing at all. Crafting is effectively picking up a bunch of bases, throwing a transmute and an aug at it… and if you did not hit the jackpot you throw it back on the ground or vendor it. For the average player I do not feel like it is really a system worth even engaging with unless you are being masochistic and rolling the Solo-Self-Found lifestyle.

Greater Essences are Unobtanium

We were sold this vision of being able to use essences to guarantee two stats on an item, and that this was going to be part of the common crafting routine for players. Essences spawn fairly infrequently in maps and the campaign, and when they do… you are very unlikely to get anything but lesser essences which require the item to be white before you start. In my entire time playing Path of Exile II I have seen a single greater essence. I polled my friends who are also playing and they have each gotten one a piece. There are a few things I would like to see changed with the system. Firstly I would like to see Lesser essences changed so that they can be used in place of either a Transmute or an Augment, aka they will add a single stat to either a Normal or Magic item. Similarly, I would like to see Greaters changed so that they will make a magic item a rare and add an affix, or work like an exalt and add it to an existing rare item. This is going to make the guaranteed stat that an Essence can provide way more valuable because you can use them on an item that already has some potential. Next similar to my suggestions about Runes, I would like to see it so that you can reforge 3 Lesser Essences into 1 Greater Essence of the same type. This means that players can actually work their way up to crafting with Greater Essences rather than hoping on the one-in-a-million drop.

Six Links are Harder to Get than they were in Path of Exile

Another thing that we were told repeatedly, is that the design of Path of Exile II should make it much easier for folks to reach their goal of having multiple abilities as six-links. This is a lie. Greater and Perfect Jewelers orbs just don’t really exist. I’ve not seen a single Five Link, and I sure as hell have never seen a Six Link. Similarly, I have seen streamers who can seemingly get Perfects but have not seen a Greater and therefore still are using Four Links on everything. It would be amazing if you had a system already in the game that was built around combining things… and getting higher-tier things. You guessed it… I would once again love to see them use the damned Reforge Bench to let us combine 3 Lessers into a Greater, and 3 Greaters into a Perfect.

Use the Reforge Bench for Almost Everything

Similarly, I would love to see this concept carried forward into pretty much any place where it would make sense. Do you have too many level 14 Uncut Gems but need a level 15? Bam through the magic of the reforge bench and the standards that have already been set out with way stones… combine 3 gems to get a gem of a higher level. If they add other tiered systems in the future… then bam… make them work through the reforge bench. Hell, I would even love it if they added in Recombinating Rares through the Reforge Bench. Was it too broken to make binary choices as to which stats got kept in the final product? Probably… but it would be way harder to game the system if you required three input products. It just gives players another thing to do with the rares that drop on the ground that are not good enough to actually use…. which are most of them.

Give us the Chinese Auction House

I know this is a big ask and one that will not be given… but trading feels worse in Path of Exile II than it was in Path of Exile. The currency exchange pretty much reset my expectations for how trading should work, and now I would like to see this carried forward into other aspects of the game. Buying things from players is awful. This morning I tried to buy a level 19 Uncut Spirit Gem because I had not found any yet and was getting tired of waiting. I had to message 30 people before I finally got one to respond. The Chinese server already has instant trading, where the item is pulled from the player’s stash and given to you. Make this a thing and make it cost gold… giving us another reason to earn gold. POE1 trade is something I am fond of… but it is a fucking mess and incomprehensible for anyone new to the game. All of my friends reach a point where they cannot seem to progress their builds because their gear sucks… but they refuse to cross the line into turning into a proper trading degen… but also have no problem using Auction Houses in MMORPGs. It is time to move away from this nonsense and just give us a system that actually works well.

Energy Shield Feels Mandatory

Right now the only defensive layer that actually feels good is Energy Shield, and this is in large part because it exists on the tree. Energy shield is different from all of the other defensive layers because it is effectively a replacement for player health. As such by removing health from the passive tree… and quite honestly watering down all of the other defensive layers… the only really viable way of playing in the endgame is to invest heavily in Energy Shield. The answer is not to nerf Energy Shield… though I know they are probably going to do precisely that as soon as they get back from holiday break… the answer instead is to buff the other defensive layers so that they actually feel like a reasonable option. Armor right now is royally fucked, and so is Health and Life Regen. Recoup works fine, but is not enough on its own… and Block while great is entirely too fucking cumbersome and requires picking up every single node on the tree to make it viable.

Build Diversity is Bad Because Classes Feel Bad

Playing as a Warrior felt reasonable enough… until I felt what it was like to play the game as Infernalist Minions. Similarly, yesterday I talked about Alkaiser’s change in religion once he stopped playing Warrior and switched over to Invoker. Essentially there are four builds right now that feel good, and as a result, the players who are sticking around are migrating to them. This is not that these are wildly overpowered builds, but instead just the type of gameplay that people want to play. I fear that they are all going to be nerfed into the ground, when the opposite approach should be taken. Look at what these classes are doing and what makes them fun to play, and then start reworking and buffing the other classes until they can do the same thing. Stampede Explode actually felt pretty good, but was due to a bugged interaction… maybe you should have made that bugged interaction actually a thing instead of fixing it.

Give us Old Ambush

The current state of stongboxes is awful. Instead of popping the box and getting a bunch of spawns that you can clear in a few minutes… it starts this annoying timer causing waves of mobs to spawn in the vicinity eventually leading to a rather anemic amount of loot. They are just not worth doing in their current state because they both take too long, and are way the hell too unrewarding. Strongboxes in Path of Exile 1 are something people actually try their best to add into most Atlas strategies because they feel like this tight little dose of dopamine and are actually fairly rewarding. I have no clue who dreamt up this change, but it needs to be reworked entirely.

Decouple Trials from Ascendancy

I feel like Trial of the Sehkemas and Trial of Chaos are perfectly fine optional content. However I feel like they should not be required to ascend your character. Sanctum was deeply polarizing and favored specific types of builds, and I feel like Sehkemas suffers from all of these problems. Similarly asking a player to do four floors to get that last ascendacy is asking them to commit to potentially a multi-hour gamble instead of what felt like 10-15 minutes to get through a Labyrinth. Trial of Chaos just needs to be deleted honestly… but I can see how some players and some builds might like it. It similarly feels miserable to do. The Ascendancy is a big part of the player identity and I feel like it should almost be free. Right now the Trials feel like the Dungeons in Last Epoch, something you do exactly once before moving on with your life and realizing there are far better uses of your time.

Dodge Needs Phasing

So the changes to dodge roll are better, but I still feel like dodge rolls need phasing. Mob collision is not fun, and especially awful given how claustophobic a lot of the areas are. Ritual for example always seems to spawn in the worst possible places giving you a tiny corridor to fight in. I took a death this morning just because I had no way of getting through the wall of mobs around me, and my minions were being blocked by geometry. It just feels super bad and at least having phasing on dodge roll would help a bit in these scenarios. In a perfect world I would remove all mob, player, and minion collision because none of that is enjoyable in the least.

Atlas Progression Feels Bad

One of my favorite things to do in a Path of Exile League was to slowly work my way through unlocking the 115 out of 115 map nodes. Each time I cleared a new map with its bonus objective, I got what felt like an immediate jolt of possibility as I was granted points to shape my endgame Atlas. Right now the entire process of progressing through the Doryani tiered quests just feels bad. Like I see how you end up in this scenario… you had 115 maps to clear in Path of Exile one, so dividing this out into 10 per white map tier, 8 per yellow map tier, and 6 per red map tier for a total of 120 maps seems equivalent. The problem is the player agency and benefits of your effort… really are not felt at all until you reach red maps. At a minimum you have to slog through 10 completely unrewarding tier 1 maps before you get any points to spend, and then only have two to do anything with. I know they purposefully paired down the Atlas tree to 30 points, but right now it does not feel good in the least. I am not sure what the answer is, but this is not it.

Do Unique Maps Exist? What Biome is this Map?

I’ve cleared a bunch of maps at this point and have purposefully branched out into a bunch of directions looking for additional content and have not stumbled onto a single unique map yet. More than that I have only actually found one hideout thus far. On the other hand… I have seen over fifty copies of the Augury. I feel like maybe there needs to be some work on that randomizer. Additionally I would love it if it were easier to tell immediately by mousing over the node what biome it belonged to. Like if you find a Crypt in the middle of a grassland… is it part of the Grass biome? I have no clue. I should be able to know that information just like I was able to immediately tell what biome I was in during Delve. I mean they have this information, so it should just be a matter of presenting it to us.

Citadels are too rare and as a result valuable.

Honestly this is a problem that I had with Path of Exile 1, but I am seeing it play out again in Path of Exile II. Right now it is too hard to find the Citadels that are required to summon the pinnacle boss, and as a result… when I do find one… I am absolutely going to sell the token that it drops because it is not worth the risk of attempting the fight as compared to the potential value of the item on the trade market. I also sold invitations in Path of Exile 1, because it just was not worth my time to take the risk on the fight that might not even drop anything I can use… when I can just sell the item and get currency that I can in turn buy the item I wanted. I feel like this is not the calculus that GGG probably wants its player base to have, but by making invitations annoying to farm… this is the reality that they have created.

Boss Maps Need Reworked

So when GGG talked about boss maps and them being a bit rarer… I pictured that it would be a map that was just a boss arena, and then have a much harder version of a campaign boss that you fought that would then be more rewarding. That is not at all what they ended up being. Right now I would love to see these changed so you just spawned into the Boss Arena and that the Atlas tree buffed them significantly. Give them a new pool of loot that they can drop or have it so there is a guaranteed chance of getting a decent unique from them or something like that.

Give Normal Maps the Steamroll Bosses

Isolating the bosses in their current state to ONLY be on boss maps feels equally bad. I would like to see the current version of map bosses shifted to just appearing in every single map, and leaving them at their current power level. One of the things that POE2 lacks right now is the player agency that POE1 had, and I feel like further separating bossing from mapping is going to benefit everyone. Mapping should be a chill time, and bossing should be the more sweaty tryhard experience. The people who care about challenge and difficulty, are the folks who chase uber uber pinnacle bosses. Let the rest of us have reasonable chill and predictable mapping.

If We Can’t Have Custom Tabs… give us affinities.

The current state of the game and all of the various currencies that used to have custom tabs in Path of Exile 1, that no longer do… is a bit maddening. By far the worst of these offenders is the lack of a map tab. I know custom tabs require a lot of work, but in theory the affinities that you already had coded should require less work? If we can’t have the proper tabs yet, please at least give us the ability to set up tab affinities so that we can quickly shunt loot into the bank without flipping between a bunch of tabs. Right now loot management feels awful, and please GGG throw us a bone here.

Remove Tower Maps

Conceptually I like the idea of Towers, and honestly I have enjoyed using them to buff the maps in the vicinity. I don’t feel like they are the ideal replacement for scarabs but I am willing to roll with it. What I do find maddening however is constantly needing to waste a map on running the exact same tower layout over and over. In an ideal world you would remove the tower map entirely and just make it so that pathing to a Tower unlocks it and allows you to begin using it. There is nothing interesting about the process of running this same map over and over, but unlike a lot of the voices in the community I don’t necessarily hate the Towers themselves. The post Path of Exile II Rant Thread appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

Goodbye Stampede and Hello Minions

When Path of Exile II was released into early access I had a pretty clear vision. I wanted to play a big tanky character that ran around with a two-handed weapon and a shield. I struggled to get this off the ground because starting off as the Warrior is pure misery. However given enough bashing my head against the wall I managed to make it work, and when I stumbled onto Stampede late in the build the rest of the game went much more smoothly. I used Stampede for clear and Hammer of the Gods to one or two shot bosses and life was sublime. However Stampede ate a pretty big Nerf, and it was already a janky mess to play and I just lost steam in trying to push forward. I made it to the end of white maps before I was lured away by one of my alts.
It was a night and day difference playing an actual “on meta” build and was able to pretty much steamroll the campaign. There were a few bosses that I had to take two attempts at, on December 20th when I last made a post I was just starting Act III Normal, and on the 23rd I cleared Act III Normal and progressed into mapping. I started out pretty slowly, but without really doing any work to fix my gear I was able to pick up where my Titan left off and started ripping through maps so much faster than Stampede ever could. The thing is… I was weirdly tankier, or at least felt it as Grim Feast allowed me to gather up some 11,000 Energy Shield over the course of a map. I’m now chipping away at Tier 13 maps and have done a couple of T15 maps which is the highest natural unmodified map tier available in the game. During all of that time, I think I have taken a single death in a map, and that was after doing a full clear and getting credit for it and going back to try a very rippy ritual.
Since we have no Path of Building II, I took some time this morning and input my build in the Maxroll Build planner tool so you could follow along if you so choose. Basically it is derived from the standard maxroll build, but instead, I decided to lean into a unique which is just fun to use. Corpsewade are low-level boots that have the effect of casting Decompose on any corpse that your character walks in the vicinity of… and honestly, the range is pretty wide for triggering this. So what this means in practice is that I am actively poisoning packs of monsters that I am fighting and occasionally either my Flame Wall or the Molotov cocktails that my Skeleton Arsonists are throwing will ignite the cloud of poison causing it to explode for more damage. Packs of monsters die extremely quickly, and this has continued to be true as I have progressed into upper mapping levels.
The biggest challenge of the build is that I am running two unique items and as a result giving up a chunk of potential stats from each of them. My resists are in a reasonable state with 73/69/75 elemental resists and 59 chaos. I am giving up a ton of life by using Ghostwrite to convert 50% of my life to flat Energy Shield, which I then buff further with the passive tree. I’ve contemplated giving up my “Fart Boots” as I call them and going with some 30% movement speed Energy Shield boots with a lot of flat life on them to push that conversion further. I could also go Armor/Energy Shield instead which would help to give me a bit more of a lead in the armor department for when hits finally land. Right now I am anointing Mental Perseverance which takes 10% of my damage out of Mana. I tried running with Mind over Matter and it was a bit much and largely the 50% reduction in mana regen made it too hard to keep mana sustained. 10% is just enough to help blunt the damage a bit.
The biggest challenge that I am dealing with is map sustain. You would think running a T15 map would not yield T1 maps… but you would be wrong. In fact I rarely get maps to drop that are of sufficient level to keep pushing forward. I need T13s right now to keep my quest going, but at the moment I have two T14s before having to slog through lower-level maps and praying for those unicorn high-level maps to drop. This feels REALLY bad, especially considering that I am investing in every map drop node on the atlas tree and also running as many towers with additional Waystone chance on them as I can. I do not want to have to buy maps from trade, because buying maps feels so awful. The only way to do it efficiently is to engage with those third-party community discords, and I would just rather not.
The other problem with mapping in Path of Exile II is effectively the same problem running the Monolith in Last Epoch. Unless you get some bonus content to show up, it feels bad to clear your way through a map. Then there is the ever-present threat of a single death causing you to lose all of the things that are buffing the map to make it feel halfway decent in the first place. There just isn’t enough going on and really when you kill the rares you might as well port out and call it done as opposed to full clearing, because it is super uncommon that anything of consequence drops after that point. Packs of blues really are useless, and only serve to slow down your progress. Loot in general feels like it is in a bad place if you are not stacking mass quantities of rarity. Essentially… right now mapping is pretty boring.
At this point, I feel committed to seeing it through and getting all of the normal atlas passive points by completing all of the red map quest objectives. Even those feel way less exciting than they did in Path of Exile 1. Essentially in POE1, you had to run every map at least once while completing the bonus objective in order to get your 115 out of 115 atlas completion. Here in Path of Exile II for the white map tiers, you have to complete 10 maps, yellow 8 maps, and red 6 maps… and it sort of feels like you are always trying to choose the lesser of evils when it comes to map layouts. The individual maps themselves are just worse than Path of Exile 1. They are all far too cluttered and cumbersome to clear, and always end up with a situation where you missed a rare near the beginning of the map and now have to backtrack all the way through the entire maze of tight corridors in order to go kill it.
At some point I am probably going to do a follow up to my blog post talking about the things that need to change in Path of Exile II. By then I will probably be closer to 200 hours played and feel like I will have a more nuanced take on the game. Right now I feel the same way about Path of Exile II as I do Last Epoch, where both are good bases to build upon, but that it is probably going to take at least two more years before either game is truly “great”. The coming months are going to be interesting because I feel like there is going to be a battle waged in the community for the soul of the game. Depending on how that shakes out, is going to ultimately determine how much time I will spend focused on this game going forward. I am having fun on the Infernalist Minions build but it is very sad just how different of an experience it is to my Stampede Titan build was. There will always be outliers… but right now we have a scenario where four different builds are fun ti play and the rest of the game is a mess otherwise. My ultimate fear is that GGG is going to Nerf the four builds that actually feel good to play, instead of buffing the hundreds of potential builds that feel like shit.
The Streamer Alkaiser has been mister “Warriors are Fine” up until this point, often saying that folks were struggling due to a skill issue. Recently however he rolled a second character and decided to go down the very meta path of the Monk Invoker, and it has been telling how fast he has essentially changed his tune. On basic gear he said in the above video that he feels tankier and stronger in every possible way on the Invoker as compared to the Warrior. The thing is… this isn’t just a warrior thing. This is effectively everyone who is not playing the meta builds for Invoker, Infernalist, Stormcaller, or Deadeye. SirGog highlighted this problem in a recent video where effectively those four builds make up some 85% of the total pie of the top progressed players in Path of Exile II. Everything else feels worse to play, and everything else has a harder time trading power for item rarity to make the drops feel more meaningful. Anyways, like I said I have a post in me at some point where I talk about all of the core problems I see with the game, but for now I am progressing through the endgame on a character that has less than a week played on it. The post Goodbye Stampede and Hello Minions appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

Indiana Jones and the Great Circle

It’s a game that’s struck me enough to write about, how about that. I am gifted/cursed with perception. It’s almost certainly a function of low-grade ADHD, where my brain gets bored of whatever I’m directly looking at or listening to (or smelling, or feeling, or even tasting) and starts pulling in other sensory information to occupy itself. If I’m walking down the street talking to a friend, I can’t help but notice the smell from a nearby restaurant, the couple arguing in a car at the stoplight, the person doing their makeup in the car behind them, the person trying to stop their dog from dashing into the crosswalk, the book the person on that bench is reading, the whispered gossip from the pair crossing the other way, the irregular cracks in the sidewalk, the gentle plants sticking out from the gaps in the pavement, the places where water has pooled in the street instead of running to the drains, the seagulls fighting overhead… You can see why I link it to semi-diagnosed neurodivergence. The same perception is in effect when I’m playing a game (or doing anything, really), because I can’t turn it off. I can generally no more shut out the sounds of my office or the rain outside as I can ignore the feeling of each article of clothing I’m wearing on my skin, the omnipresent feeling of my wedding band on my finger, or the physical sensation of blinking. It means a lot of games simply aren’t engaging enough for me to get really immersed. I’ve had an ongoing conversation with friends (and on our podcast) where I don’t really get games that are about “turning your brain off” because they’re low-impact. For me those games are Ikaruga, bullet hell shooters, or extremely high intensity games like Nerts. If I overload my sensory input, I can relax. It’s true outside of games, too. A theme park, a loud dance floor or concert with bright lights and a ton of people, or a big outdoor event (though usually not protests, those have an undercurrent of anxiety that I can never shake) all give me a kind of peace and clarity. I crossed the street at the Shibuya Crossing while vacationing in Tokyo, and it was such a sublime, calming experience I did it several more times for no reason other than to get lost in the scramble. So, Indiana Jones. It’s a stealth game, in theory. Stealth games are games about perception, about paying attention. You’re keeping track of your surroundings in order to move through a space, both determining where you should be at any given moment (usually to avoid detection) and where you need to go, and then working out a path based on what you can observe to get from one to the other. You take risks in order to observe better, peeking around a blind corner or popping up to get a better vantage point. Guards walk in the places normal people walk — streets, sidewalks, inside buildings, so you can get an advantage if you can notice paths normal people wouldn’t walk — rooftops, treetops, underground. A good stealth game is not about hiding and sneaking; it’s about the environment, and having an environment that both offers enough for you to notice and find satisfying and is, itself, satisfying to overcome. Thief is a game about light, shadow, and sound, remaining unseen and in turn finding small, valuable things to take with you along the way, taking risks to reach them. Dishonored is similar, remain unseen, remove cogs in the machine that is the way guards move until it shuts down without collapsing and you can navigate the machine with impunity. Hitman is rarely about actually hiding and is more often about context, ensuring that you fit in and match what people expect. Indiana Jones is about clonking Nazis and solving ancient puzzles, also often via clonking. It is a stealth game, in that the environment is rich, full of interesting things to find and see and do, and you are rewarded for noticing things. For example, you’re rewarded for noticing the bottle of wine on the table near the fascist who’s attacking you by suddenly having an improvised weapon to turn the tide of that fight. You’re rewarded for noticing the layout and high cliffs of an area when you push a Nazi over a railing. You’re rewarded for sneaking up on that Nazi because now you can have a good laugh at his Wilhelm Scream as he falls instead of fistfighting him. You’re rewarded for noticing the windup of the blackshirt you’re fighting so you can parry his attack, and you’re rewarded for noticing the pistol in the hand of the SS officer so you can whip it out and turn a gunfight into a fistfight. There’s only really as much sneaking as you’d expect from Indiana Jones, which is both a non-zero amount but also not the crux of the experience. You’re still a pulp action hero, not a superspy.
Unlike games like Dishonored or Metal Gear Solid, where detection by an enemy is heralded by loud, abrasive, alarming sounds and a feeling of failure, in Indiana Jones being detected often results in a quip from Indy — “uh, hey guys!” — and a feeling of inevitability. This was always going to go loud, or at least non-quiet, because you’re Indiana Jones, not Jason Bourne. It leads to the kind of play that makes the game feel even more like the movies it’s based on — sneak in, shoot out, or punch a guy because it’s more annoying to slip around him than not. Maybe you miscalculate — Indy has bad plans sometimes, and maybe so do you. The game largely isn’t going to punish you for going a little bit loud. It pulls this off by adding a thing that stealth games have had for a long time, but rarely used for much. Most stealth games appear to have two and a half stealth states: hidden, detected, and about-to-be-detected. They often actually have three, where there’s a third “detected but not enough to raise an alarm” which generally exists to give you a split second to react to being seen without everything going to hell. It’s the moment where the guard has seen you and before they shout for help, because every guard will shout for help almost immediately and cause the whole house of cards to crash down around you. The first thing I noticed when I was seen in Indiana Jones was that the fascist who noticed me decided to handle the problem himself. I wrote it off as tutorialization, but when I later had my mouse disconnect after punching (but not knocking out) another fascist later, I saw him step away from me, and shout for help — AFTER having already tried fistfighting me. Indiana Jones revels in that layer that in most stealth games lasts for a split second. Really loud noises can alert everyone in an area — whistles, horns, alarms, gunshots — but often the one or two enemies you see will start by trying to deal with you themselves. It means you can be seen and still win, still keep things under control and not have to either die and reload or leave a giant pile of bodies behind you. It means that if you take the “easy” way out and just start shooting people, it gets very loud very fast, and notably it means your enemies will escalate as well. An enemy with a gun does not always immediately resort to shooting you, but contextually you can guess whether they will or not, and often the thing that will cause them to start shooting is if you do it first. It all adds up into an experience that FEELS like an Indiana Jones movie. It’s amplified by how much MachineGames feels like they get Indy, from every great dialogue bark to the feeling of chaos and overall pacing control they have. The first few areas are more slow and thoughtful, potentially plodding if you’re a completionist, and then it picks up at very high speed into the kind of action thrill ride you expect from Indiana Jones. I haven’t quite beaten it as of this writing, but I’m expecting a final, slower area, smaller than the first few but more intense, as a kind of culmination, just because it’s what I would expect from the movies. I won’t spoil it, but there are moments in the game that mirror classic scenes in the movies, and do so in actual play, giving you just a moment to notice what you’re looking at and how you can resolve it and doing so in classic Indiana Jones style. When I’m out of breath from an intense run and I see a guy block my path with a sword, weaving it through the air menacingly, I have a moment as I watch him to go “wait, I know how this goes” and do the scene properly. It’s very satisfying, and totally optional. It’s just a little reward for noticing. As I’ve been playing, I’ve been deeply immersed because there are so many things for my brain to notice and pick up on. It would be a fun ride even if I didn’t, but for me it’s giving me everything I love in a stealth game without actually really being a stealth game. It’s a rollicking action movie of a game, but it’s not simple about it. The backgrounds are more than just set dressing, the spaces are crafted and thoughtful, not just where I fight the next encounter. It satisfies my perception, because it’s not just picking out nice textures or cute background details, it’s walking into a room and noticing everything I can use as a weapon or tool. I haven’t been this into a game in years. I’m going to be sad when it’s over, and there’s a decent chance I go and try to 100% it. Easy call for Game of the Year.