Baldur’s Gate 3 has always performed really well, but this month, after five months out, its huge playercount is somehow increasing.
Why are we shocked that people got a popular video game for Christmas?
That’s how I got it. I was going to wait for a 50% off sale.
It’s Forbes. I’m pretty sure this article’s audience are boomers of the “I’m not a computer person” variety, who are only reading it thanks to the Apple ecosystem and younger family members.
Spot on. Forbes articles are pure clickbait without any substance.
It was on sale during the holiday sale so it’s even less surprising
Exactly. Plus it just won Game of the Year, thus getting more publicity. And it got released on X-Box, which is again more publicity.
Especially after is won game of the year at the Game Awards. This seems pretty normal to me.
It’s pretty simple. The game is extremely good. It is a game of the generation contender. Some may say it’s a game of the past decade contender. It is an elaborately woven tale of character development and creative gameplay in the vein of Dungeons and Dragons that will stun almost any player, even those new to TTRPGs.
And that’s the entire article.
I bounced right off BG3, just like I did DOS2. Personally, I enjoyed the Owlcat Pathfinder games much more.
I’ll probably give it another shot with a different character in a couple of weeks.
It took me a few weeks to get into it. I put it down a few times along the way and went back to CP2077.
A lot of the mechanics, items, spells, etc. still elude me.
That said, I’m now on the third act of my main campaign and every day I look forward to when I get some time to play it a bit more.
The story is fantastic, the voice acting is excellent, the graphics are beautiful and despite some clunkiness and the inherent complexity of a D&D game it’s thoroughly enjoyable by someone like me who’s never been much of a fan of the genre.
I think I still prefer owlcat games overall but damn, I really like how streamlined BG3 is. I do not miss the infinite buffing and pre-combat preparations that pathfinder boils down to in the end - and despite this I still feel like combat in BG3 is more tactical and I have more choices every turn in the end.
“We need to talk about”
Why?
It’s not like it hasn’t received plenty of coverage.