Featuring: Ammosart, Ashgar, Belghast, Kodra, and Thalen
Hey Folks! We are down a Tam and a Grace this week but push through with a limited crew. Bel gets called out by Kodra for being entirely too comfortable with excessive grinds… this time specifically talking about World Completion in Guild Wars 2. Kirby Air Riders is a weird game and we talk a bout it. Bel shares his extended thoughts about Path of Exile II and its current state as well as the Demon Bear being pretty freaking great. Kodra has been trying to wrap up Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 and talks a bit about that. Ash is doing dumb things in Guild Wars 1 and apparently so is Kodra… so we talk about Guild Wars Reforged again. Ultimately Sheep Raccoon is the sequel to podcast favorite Ultimate Chicken Horse and we once again recommend it. Bel talks about the Paladin in Diablo IV and how it is almost as silly as the Last Epoch thorns build. Kodra talks a bit about Blitz Chess and Thalen is back in Warframe and talks about that.
Good Morning Folks. I decided that I needed to rename my turtle pet in Guild Wars 2. I remember being a big fan of the song Yertle the Turtle from the Red Hot Chili Peppers in Middle School, which of course turned me on to the Dr. Seuss book of the same name. Which of course is a much more obvious name than what I had originally called him aka Thumper because of the big canon on his back. I’ve had a bunch of folks ask me recently about this pet when I am using it, because apparently a lot of people do not know you can tame one. I’ve been using it in Soul Beast form because most of the attacks are ranged based, which flow nicely with being a Longbow main. In WVW it was extra nice because I could run it as a pet beside me instead of merged and pop up occasional shields for the “zerg huddle” when we were being shelled by siege equipment.
I did not write a blog post yesterday, because I get into these phases where I second guess myself. Essentially paying a game like Guild Wars 2 with long tailed objectives… and in which I end up doing a lot of the same things over and over… feels like I am not really generating anything worth talking about. The same is true as I reach the tail end of an ARPG league, and I am no longer making big leaps in progress or getting really exciting drops. Basically… I think to myself… who wants to listen to me talk about maintenance gaming? I guess I ask you my readers… do you care at all in the least about what I am doing on a daily basis if I am not doing exciting things? Each night I am moving the needle towards a goal… but said goal is a really long ways off.
I did however finish up my most recent Gift of Battle since the last time I wrote a blog post. I found a really good group and hung out for a few hours on Tuesday night, taking down objectives and defending others. I have to admit, that I think I enjoy defending WVW objectives more than taking them. The big zergs rolling around are generally all about rapid objective completion, and if you put up any resistance… they tend to flow like water around the obstacles. However lately we’ve had some pretty dedicated groups from the red team and it was a lot of fun to bait them into trying to take various objectives and then slaughter them as they rushed in. I could legitimately see myself playing WVW a lot more if I found the right group. It is also one of the better ways to earn various requirements for crafting legendary gear, and has a few specific items that you can only get there.
After finishing up the Gift of Battle, I renewed my efforts for getting a Gift of Exploration. I believe all that I have left in Ascalon is Fields of Ruin, and last night I suffered through the worst renown heart in the entire game… the one where you are forced to stealth around a Char camp. This is a big part about why I did not really feel like blogging yesterday… is does moving the needle from 81% to 88% really amount to enough to talk about it? I am having fun and in my element right now… but I am also not really doing much that is terribly exciting. Quite honestly I get a bigger kick out of swooping down and helping people with events when they are overwhelmed. I helped someone in Cantha last night who was trying to solo a rather tanky Champion encounter, and we managed to duo it… all the while dodging all sorts of nonsense without either of us getting downed. That felt really good… helping others… feels really good. That is legitimately the best aspect of Guild Wars 2 that other players are always a net positive.
I am also still trying to hit up events when I think about them. Doing the daily reset Tequatlfor example continues to be my prime activity in the game. I am not entirely certain WHY this event is so important to me on an emotional level. I think maybe it was the first time I really understood why this game is special. This is the first world boss that really impressed me, and back in the day I just happened to stumble upon it without realizing what I was signing up for. Just like I have all of the lines from Izaro in the Lord’s Labyrinth memorized… I am pretty sure I have all of the lines that the Hylek say during this event. “There’s something in the water” will always be the most iconic however. I also just really like how key of an event it still feels… even though no one really needs anything from it. I mean the community running joke is that we are going there every day to get a spoon.
So I guess I am asking you. Do you give a shit about the dumb things that I do? Would you rather me just not blog until I have something meaningful to talk about? I get into spirals of doubting myself and it has been a few weeks since I have not missed at least one post. So I am opening the idea up for discussion.
The post Look at that Turtle Go… Bro appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.
There are so many little things in Guild Wars 2 that you just sort of forget about half of them until you happen upon them again. For example there is a spot in the Crystal Desert where a Meerkat, Warthog, and Lion Cub just happen to cross the path in front of you. Last night one of the daily quests was to do an event in the Crystal Desert, and I roamed around until I found an escort that was about to start. It just so happened that while I was guarding a bunch of refugees the Lion King themed random encounter happened in front of me. I’ve always greatly preferred this style of easter egg as compared to the World of Warcraft slapstick style that just sort of beats you over the head with it. I remember these sort of minor easter eggs in Everquest and Dark Age of Camelot as well… and they always felt like a sly nod more than a big sign screaming… “Get it? Get it?”.
In other happenings, Mistlock Sanctuary is sort of where the fancy folk go… because for years it was the best of the VIP clubs because it granted you access to way more stuff. Still to this day it is sort of the place where the folks with wild outfits go to dance and be silly. I had never seen the bow that shoots rainbow unicorns until yesterday… and then I happened upon four of them out in the wild with another one here in Mistlock. I had to look it up because at first I thought it was something new… but no it turns out it is a Generation One Legendary Weapon called The Dreamer. It’s a short bow instead of a long bow, which is in part why it has never really been my focus. At least with Ranger… I am not a big proponent of Short Bows because its a Condition damage weapon and I tend to mostly focus on Power builds. Still really cool… but the sound effect would drive me nuts quickly.
Yesterday I completed several more zones and now have brought my total world completion up to 81% over yesterday’s 72%. The needle moves rather slowly considering I finished I think four zones in total… but in all of those cases I was taking them from roughly 60% all the way to 100% which isn’t as big of a leap as it seems. Mostly I just have to keep my head down and let myself get caught up in the zones themselves… and not really think about how much further I have to go. That is sort of the key to completing anything in a game… allowing yourself to lose focus on the goal and just have fun with the individual objectives. It is wild revisiting all of these zones because each time I do it… I am consistently amazed by just how large they are and how much minute detail there is in each of them. The whole Hylek city that is entirely underwater and hidden in a cave system that you would never find… if you did not specifically go looking for it is pretty wild. However when you are just trying to pick up points of interest, it can be a bit frustrating trying to figure how to get to the dot you see on your map… but see no real path towards.
I made significant progress in World vs World last night and pushed my progress from 13/40 to 30/40 or from roughly 30% to 75%. I could probably AFK in zone and grind out the next pip before I ran out of contribution juice, but I would rather wait until this evening and find a group and do some objectives. On one hand I feel like I should probably seek out a WvW specific guild for my final slot. That said… I have not exactly been super active, nor do I want to switch to a specific build. I like my Longbow/Greatsword Power Soulbeast thing that I am doing now, and I don’t really care how optimal that is. Right now I am using Greysky as my WvW guild, in case someone else from the guild wants to tag along. We are part of Throne of Balthazaar which seems reasonable enough. There are a few pretty decent guilds, but they are all the sort that want you to join discord and run invite only squads. This always feels counter productive, because wouldn’t it be better to just sort of have EVERYONE in the squad?
That is the only real complaint I have about returning to the game, is that the WvW folks seem way more bitter than I remember them being. Seen a lot more folks yelling in map chat and blaming others for letting objectives fall. I’ve also seen a lot of folks baiting others into leaving the Eternal Battleground which seems like a dick move. There is a thing you can do called an Emergency Waypoint, which is intended to get reinforcements into an objective when you are just about to be sieged. At several points last night I saw folks firing these off and spamming chat, trying to get reinforcements… at a node that did not have any activity going on. They were effectively just trying to get folks to leave the battlegrounds that had queues… so that they could get into them. This might just be a problem with my own battle group and not more widespread… but it does seem like a kind of cruel trick to pull. The biggest problem is that we seemed to have no commanders… and while I could tag up… I have no clue what the hell I am doing really. My WvW tends to be to hang out on the periphery and apply pressure to zergs to get them to run into the main force… not actually standing in our own zerg and pushing where the commander should be.
For any annoyances there are with the WvW community… the Open World community still seems pure and genuine. I logged in this morning to get some screenshots and saw someone asking for help with a T3 Rift in Bloodtide Coast. Within a few minutes there were a handful of us over there helping out, and another person threw up a tag to make it easier for folks to find the objective. This feels like the community working as intended, and it always makes me happy when I see it in action. This happens so often as folks ask for help and get it regularly. I helped a random level 7 character out the other day with a Hero Point because they rolled up just as I was finishing it… and asked if they got credit. They did not, so I fired it off again to make sure they could take down the Veteran that spawned. There is just a nurturing aspect to the way the game has been designed and I love it so much.
So I have been allowing myself to think that the Gift of Battle and Gift of Exploration were the only real challenges that I was dealing with. That is very much NOT the case. The problem with crafting four legendaries after going years without crafting any… is that I have effectively decimated my crafting material reserves. I am pretty close to the required 250 Globs of Ectoplasm because I religiously salvage my rares. I am back up to 46 Mystic Clovers… but need 77 so that is going to be a challenge. I can buy 10 per week… but that recipe takes Mystic Coins… which I am completely out of but at least those can be bought on the market. Obsidian Shards are not that big of a deal since you can get them after a specific event with Karma in the Straits of Devastation. I have almost 4 million Karma and will probably convert most of that when I am working on zone completion there. Basically there are things I can do to fix all of these problems but it will be a much slower burn than knocking out these two big components that feel way more satisfying. Really I need to get better about doing a daily Ley-Line Anomaly to bank up some coins.
Guild Wars 2 is a game about long grinds, and the most effective way about doing this… is to do a little bit of a lot of things every single day. GW2 Efficiency is a phenomenal site that shows you roughly how much something would cost to craft, and according to it… with the items that I currently have it is going to take me 224 Gold to finish up Kudzu today. That is the Legendary that I am working towards so that I will have both a Longbow and Greatsword for my Ranger, or honestly any other class that will use them. I am probably going to buy the mystic coins… keep farming the ectos, and then convert karma for the obsidian which will lower the total costs by a bit. The worst part of a Legendary is the Gift of Magic and Gift of Might and you get one of those from each Legendary Weapon kit, so every two kits you buy from the Wizard store… you just don’t have to worry about the Gift of Fortune that much.
Anyways… this is the long game and I am deep into it since I have crafted Frostfang, Bolt, Twilight, and Juggernaut… and am now working towards Kudzu. I also have a starter for Frenzy… but since I stole one of the gifts from it to cobble together Kudzu it will be a bit before I am willing to fund another Gift of Fortune.
The post Hakuna Matata appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.