For the record, Magic Users did just kinda suck in AD&D. Sure at higher levels they got good, but in real life few lived to play those high levels. Hence why most would Dual Class or Multiclass into Magic Users. (normally wizard, since most the cool priest classes weren't allowed) Part of why the rare roll of Paladin (required you to roll god tier stats) was so powerful.
Thanks but thanks to modding (and Beamdog weird ideas) your character seems very unusual between crazy stuff I made... like 5 Sarevok companions for the main character.
I remember playing this on my phone when I was in the army. My oil and grime covered fingers made some decisions without my consent due to the nature of the touch interface. Good times.
A true legend for playing Baldur’s Gate on mobile, just as I had a month or two after playing a tabletop DnD campaign irl. Never that, I’ve played it on PC; just never got around to actually completing it. Btw, thank you for your service my g
My boyfriend talks about this series of games a lot! Interesting to see it presented in this way. It allowed me to see it from an interesting persective--a pretty common thing to happen when watching your amazing videos. Thank you for the great work!
Funnily enough, in early versions of the original game, Gorion could, if he rolled well (he needs to kill both ogres in 1 spell each and then rolled better than 50% on all damage rolls while fighting Sarevok), just barely kill Sarevok during their fight, and since they were were lazy and just copy-pasted Sarevok and renamed him Armored Figure, it fires all the same flags that killing Sarevok does, except that the game doesn't expect it to happen while trying to go into the Chapter 1 screen and locks the game up. they eventually buffed the Armored Figure's health so there was no chance of it happening a few patches post-release.
It's about as funny as when it actually happens during actual DND sessions when the level 5 party meets the BBEG and then go through all the dumbest and bold preparations they can imagine to try and kill the BBEG early. Edit: game designers shouldn't be lazy and should allow these kinds of things to happen and let the players have some god damn fun for once. Fun to see BG3 have that with the first tutorial mission where you can kill everything and rack up a ton of XP and a bunch of op items.
@@kardoxfabricanus7590 or at least make a joke about it before reloading "and so gorion wasted the villians and saved the day oh wait isn't this your story should probably reload"
As a kid I thought Baldur's Gate had this air of importance to it. It was the same way for the Hobbit book. An intense, epic name that only smarter people than me could understand. Imagine my surprise when I played Baldur's Gate 1 in 12th Grade and found it filled with silly humor, bright colors and dorky DnD shlock. Likewise, my childhood sanctifying of The Hobbit proved to be unwarranted when I finally did read it in 9th Grade and found out it was, in fact, the simplest and most straight-forward of Tolkien's works.
When I was a kid, before I played the game, I thought the the skull thing on the cover was the "Baldur's Gate". Like it was a huge Fallout-style vault door, and you'd have to go through it to get to a guy named Baldur.
My thoughts as someone who has heard the name Baldur's Gate frequently, but has never even seen footage of it before: I was extremely surprised in this video to learn that Baldur's Gate was the name of a city; although I can't imagine what else I thought it might've been. The only mental image I get when hearing it of an actual massive stone gate, though somehow of a very generic sort. The name really does feel like in some way the limit asymptotically approached by an endless chain of knockoffs of knockoffs of knockoffs of Tolkien--an almost Francis Fukuyama-like end of fantasy.
I felt something similar when I found out that neither Baldur, or a gate, are important parts of the game Baldur's Gate. Like I guess I thought if they'd called it that, surely the name would reflect something of the story but I don't know why I think that when so many works have titles that don't reflect the story, characters or content. Also my favorite Francis Fukuyama works was The End of Fantasy and the Last Dwarf.
What is most surprising is that prior to the game "Baldur's Gate" wasn't even a big deal in-setting (unlike Neverwinter or Icewind Dale) and wasn't a focus of any big stuff that would make it recognisable for fans of D&D. It's like naming Deus Ex after that abbadoned gas station you visit.
@@Sandwich1414 Yeah, I thought that since D&D sometimes uses real-world mythologies, "Baldur's Gate" had something to do with the Norse god Baldur, not some dude named Balduran.
@@quint3ssent1a eh baldr isnt that nice of a god hes just nice for asgerdian. he only became nice when those missionaries made him the christian god to get the norse people to convert.
I mean, the city was created by a sailor named Balduran, so the Baldur's part of the name wasn't far off. It's basically a dude saying "this is my city"
Having only heard the name and nothing about the actual game, I always assumed it was some Norse thing about a portal to another world. I never suspected it was so straight up DnD
Idk if you'll actually read this, but I want you to know that I love these videos you make. There are so many games I want to see you cover and give your unique take on. I hope you continue to enjoy what you do, because I can't wait to see what's to come. Best of luck!
Neverknowsbest, whitelight and raycevick are my favorites on top of this guy. He will have 100k in less than a year from now for sure. Neverknowsbest is above 100k and had 20k at beginning of covid :)
I had that Lilura1 blog, in another tab, for her Neverwinter Nights' Red Dragon Disciple build. About a minute, after I started thinking to myself just how salty she would be to hear you say these things about her beloved Baldur's Gate, you popped it on screen. There was a brief moment of panic, wondering if I'd accidentally clicked off of the video.
I like Raycevick credits question answering spreading further and further. In my opinion It always ads some nice aftertaste to such comprehensive long reviews such as his or Mandalore's. Btw I really like your take on this TH-cam review format. I watch many channels of this type and yours sticks out as one of my recent favorites. About Baldur's Gate name question (I've never played it or much of similar games even) I always perceived it as something much darker than it turns out to be apparently. Probably due to ominous cover art and not distinguishing much between it and Planescape. I was expecting the titular "Baldur's Gate" as something akin to gates of oblivion in Oblivion for some reason. Baldur sounded like some demonic name straight out of Diablo and then the skull... It's funny to find out how wrong my idea of it was.
Ironic part about the name and cover right? Baldur's Gate 1 is one of nicer if not nicest game made on infinity engine. Icewind Dale has more down to Earth title with a Tree on the cover. At the same time this game is 90% dungeons and except for goblins and orcs all enemies are at least twice as big as your heroes. Oh, and also undead do not show up in two like in this video but whole armies.
Nothing sick about it. Playing Baldurs Gate is like driving Toyota Celica '73 despite having new BMW in the garage. There is special charm to theese things.
I am so happy to have found your channel. As a child, I was intrigued by the box art of Arcanum, (already saw your video on it too, but didnt think to comment there) and was fascinated with these kind of massive storytelling games. Unfortunately I was absolute garbage at playing them, poor sense of direction, figuring out what I was supposed to do, and sometimes plain impatiance prevented me from truly enjoying them. But now, trough you, I can finally experience them.
10:50 Elminster is like Atlantis. Glorious hubris now long buried. He was a showcase of what a 20th level wizard player could do back in 2nd Edition. When his sponsor got deaded, the road was cleared for more sane power levels.
The name Baldur's Gate always made me think it was a literal gate, a monolithic archeway which traversing through would transport you to other worlds or parallel realms. It sounded like the endpoint of a grand and expansive quest, or the instigator of an apoctalyptic cataclysm.
You inspired me to do a no-reload-import-and-restart-on-death run like you, and so far it's interesting how much it made the experience of a game from my childhood I basically played to death feel fresh again. I also added that all companions that die have to be booted from the group and replaced. It raises the stakes significantly.
wow bg3 got me into crpgs and i have been playing others while having YT videos playing BG1/pathfinder lore/retrospective videos on the other.. and this is 100% the best video i've seen so far.. great job crafting and narrating your story to us while also letting us in to the game's narrative. first time i actually paused the game and moved the video to my main monitor.
I think BG is so epic because even 20 years later games are trying to recreate the magic people felt when playing it for the first time. Like Pillars of Eternity, espesially PoE1. I think it holds up still when compared to other infinity engine / infinity engine like games. Unpopular with the old old fans but i even like the EE content and companions. I dont think it gets enough credit for making an Evil playthrough so enjoyable though. Even the "best" modern crpg, Pathfinder Kingmaker, or its sequel, the Evil portions feel like an after-thought. Arcanum is also good for allowing your character to be evil, and felt so different than all the other crpgs even thought its pretty similar. Awesome stuff to come, BG2 going to be great.
BG1 is one of the few games where I prefer my local german translation to the original english version. They somehow managed to keep the same vibe of the original voice acting but actually localised it with german dialects and such. Just too bad that BG1 gets completely outshined by its sequel for me. I view it and SoD more as a prologue to power my charakter up and prepare myself for BG2. That being said, having your character complete the whole saga and go from wimp to demi god is great
Oh yes, especially the first Baldur's Gate had amazingly campy German localistation. My friends and me still quote stuff from it at each other even in our 30s now - the choice in voice actors was amazingly memorable and often hilarious.
@@r3v4n21 Definitely, both have great memorable moments. I think in BG2, the whole sequence after leaving Irenicus' dungeon in the beginning is burned into my mind the most, just from how often I heard it back then.
Hey, Sarevok Bane Joke on the thumbnail?! You never fail to make me feel happy, my dude! Thanks for making a vid on one of my favorite games! I haven't finished it yet, but once I'm done I'll give my thoughts.
@@38procentkrytyk yeah, "insult" might be too strong a word. However, I've felt mostly alone as a fan of this game, so someone else having a similar experience to me, enjoying the highs and lows in a similar way, is very cathartic.
Back so soon, big guy? Over an hour long this time as well. Life really ain't that bad after all. Seriously, though... the way you combine obscure old games/mods and niche classics with political science and philosophy without actually getting political... it's brilliant. That's the way it's done: do something new or do something better. I love it.
BG and PS:T are like the manga to the anime (every other rpg) when talking about boomer rpgs. I love how casters have to spend hours in reading and trial-error to be just "meh" and x10 as much to actually feel like you control magic (and not the other way around).. and a half orc barbarian with a good roll can kill everything np by just clicking the get me meth button and watching everyone -vampires, liches, dragons, SHADOW dragons... turn to gibs. That's some serious 90s power metal reference, maybe
Baldur's Gate 1/2 is one of those things, where I played it at such a young age, I can't remember if bits of the plot were real or just my brain going into maximum overdrive again. Things like Minsc and Boo, I thought were fake, until I stumbled across them in the present again.
I played Baldur's Gate EE in ~2016, when I was 14 but (1:04:40) it was still a magical adventure that I will remember forever. After this game, I fell in love with the whole genre. Unfortunately I don't have too much time for playing, so most of the games are still waiting for me. For me, most of the fights were average in difficulty, with a few exceptions of really hard battles. I feel that it was a good mix, but I was a kid so my perception would probably change now. I really loved the writing though! As some other comment said, the voice acting in my own language (polish) was also exceptionally good. I also loved the tavern music (I actually listen to it from time to time while working or learning :p) It wasn't actually the first D&D game that I played, because I had already played original Neverwinter Nights that my uncle bought for my father, but I was like, 7 years old, and couldn't read much. Somehow I still managed to finish the first act, but immediately got stuck in the second one with kind of a "soft lock". 2 years later I tried to play the game again, after Windows got reinstalled on a family PC, so I lost all the saves and have to play from the beginning. I thought that "now, when I know how to read, the game will be easy as butter". It wasn't really easier in terms of fights, but the writing... I really enjoyed it. Unfortunately the pc's gpu/motherboard got burnt and after the repairs we had our Windows reinstalled... again. Recently I bought the Diamond edition and I swear to Helm, I will fucking beat it.
all of the infinity engine games were simply called by their notable setting. Planescape takes place in planescape (the setting as a whole, actually visiting a good chunk of the locations), Icewind Dale takes place in Icewind Dale (and is a prequel to the Icewind Dale Trilogy of books), Baldur's Gate is the main location of the core of the story. Neverwinter Nights was cancelled after repeated delays but would've taken place in and around Neverwinter (it was supposed to come out the summer of the following year after BG1, with Tales of the Sword Coast meant as a place holder to kill time), restarted as an expansion pack for BG2...cancelled again due to all the crap happening at Interplay at the time and them having to turn Baldur's Gate 3 into the Throne of Bhaal expansion just to get an ending to the story. And eventually finally seeing the light of day as a completely different game and concept. Not be confused with Neverwinter Nights (1991), the first true MMO (which shut down it's servers the year before Baldur's Gate came out), though there are rumors that Neverwinter Nights (the Infinity engine game) was delayed due to legal issues with the name (though this is uncomfirmed) due to the rights owners of the MMO still mulling over the idea of splitting it off into it's own thing. (at the time it was heavily connected with AOL servers, but was considering migrating it to an open platform but decided they couldn't compete with these newfangled 3d MMOs that already taken off by then. NWN was made on the Gold-box engine.)
Really glad you showcased the SCS mod as well. It's great, I have interesting memories getting one shot in bg2 by random mages in creative ways (sequencer triple fireball). I think it's a lot more forgiving in the first game due to mages having less instant you lose spells (although chaos kinda fits that bill if it hits your whole party).
"Is Beam Dog writing better or worse than Baldur's Gate writing?" The answer is "no, they are not better" because no one writes better stories than my mom.
One of the first RPGs I ever played as a kid, it was a magical adventure - one I never really appreciated fully until growing up a bit and coming back to it. It will always hold a special place in my heart as I'm sure it does with many other Baldur's Gate fans. Thanks for the excellent recap Mr. Warlockracy
If you like keeping your character a female and want to make her part wizard, you can use EE Keeper to keep that skintight rogue outfit. You can even make interesting class combinations like Wizard/Assassin instead of Wizard/Rogue.
So this is my opinion about BG1. People might disagree a lot. I like the "filler" you mentioned here. This is the highlight of this game at least if you compare it with others. With each game Bioware escapes from the sandbox elements here we see it at its fullest. It creates the feeling of freedom which got missing in later games. After you leave Candlekeep you are free to visit any location and because level scaling only changes few things like number of enemies it feels like making our own choices to visit specific places to fight specific things our own choice and it feels rewarding to do so. In Skyrim and other Bethesda titles it always bugged me how world becomes only harder for player to explore and rewards are... often generic or reduced to your level. So I do not feel like hero in training in TES while in BG it is it's best charm. One other thing; in Tales of Sword Coast there is a quest which we need to get on the boat and sail to specific place. However in other games travel is the least fun thing. Here the travel is narrated so well it feels like we can encounter anything and might lose to just small enemy on the way. I miss that in modern games... or maybe I'm just too old to feel that way.
@@JS-wp4gs kinda, the BG 1 generates number of enemies based on your level. In theory it means 6 characters vs 6 kobolds. In practice it ends with 6 characters vs 36 elite ice archers.
No shit, freedom...Like when you want to level up and suddenly find strange place, such as Durlag Tower💀💀💀 I was low level and tried to fight battle horror, and oh dear...
I love this video man, I come back to it all the time. I can't wait to see you cover TotSC and SoD, especially since I just played through Siege for the first time and actually found it to be fairly enjoyable despite it's reputation
A wave of nostalgia watching my dad play the game when I was little as well as playing it for a little bit, I would say it's one of the games that introduced me into the magical fantasy genre.
'Baldur's Gate' actually reminded me of 'Ishtar's Gate' and ancient Mesopotamia when I was first exposed to it, back as a kid. I suppose the blue and gold color palette of the second game (the first I played) reinforced that idea. Don't really know where I got that from, though.
I never got around to posting it when you initially uploaded this video. But what popped in my mind for Balder’s Gate, is is exactly the Norse God-Baldr’s gate.
I had like a whole 5 min pause when he asked that because I was like I never thought about it but like the title tells me nothing and makes me feel nothing.
I played through this, and the sequels, multiple times. I tended to go Half-Orc Fighter/Thief, and True Neutral. Having the party dynamic so you could literally recruit anyone, of any alignment, made for some insanely amusing NPC- NPC dialogue. Mazzy and Korgan in particular.
I remember playing Baldurs Gate 1 a lot when I was in middle school. I even remember making it to Sarevok once, though I don't think i ever beat the game. That said, a lot of this video was incredibly nostalgic. I remember playing Baldurs Gate 2 *significantly* more though. There was a time where I could recite the entire dialog between Irenicus and the Cowled Wizard police word for word from memory. You bore me mageling, you may take me but you will take the girl as well. What no I've done nothing wrong! I only remember bits of it, like a faded memory. But I do remember all of Yojimbo's barks however :P
I first played this, maybe 15 years ago, picked it back up maybe three years ago on my phone, and then started again a week ago. It's taken me a decade and a half, but I finally got to Baldur's Gate... And immediately stopped playing after getting overwhelmed with all there is to do in the city.
POW: I played BG 2 about 12 years ago (and even then, only the first chapter). "This is an unsanctioned use of magickulll energy. " "All involved will be held."
First thing I do in the second game is download a mod that makes it so I can use whomever I want. Gotta have both Minsc and Edwin. Especially since they have banter throughout the whole game, even though playing unmodded you'd never see it. :P
that whispered "actually it was this", was so spot on. goddamn, dont mind me wiping my snort out of my face. gotta love a hearty belly laugh whilst having a cold. thanks man< 3
Crazy work ! :) I loved your video ! and as you ask us viewer what we would do then I'll say : I love BG it was my first RPG game on PC! I would make a Cleric/Mage because I love cleric support spells and high charisma makes turn undead very easy, that way for several turns undead will flee and you're free to take actions. For an evil playthrough I think enhanced edition gives choicies with nice evil aligned spells. I personally often play cleric/something since I love to use spells like Command or entangle. For an overpowered character with constant haste I think playing a holy/evil assassin would be nice.
One thing in which the Enhanced Edition is definitely better than the original : you can fight and even kill Elminster. He has a bunch of funny OP spells (transform to chicken, cow bombardement, etc) and the only chance you have at killing him is with a critical hit backstab at max level, but it is possible.
Truly awesome video! I'm 33 and have played this before eons ago but never understood or followed through with it. recently I have once again started this Campaign and truly enjoying it. Pity I am experiencing this now after hours of Oblivion, Skyrim, Witcher, Dragon Age, Divinity, Dark Stone and other RPGs Funny how this game even though feels dated somehow holds up and still is enjoyable in 2022
Just wanted to say that you're a great story teller, and that you have managed to convince me, someone that did not grow up with these old RPGs, to give them a try. Keep up the good work! And stay safe out there!
A man who spends so much time in augmented timeflow courtesy of immersive fantasy worlds that he feels the need to specify "real-life years" in casual conversation (sort of...), has my respect.
Underrated channel. But not for long if you keep this up. Also, especially with the speed youre posting content now, try finding ways to keep it fun and fresh for yourself aswell :) Always make what YOU want to make, not what you think we will like. No matter how big your channel might become
47:06 the reason you die instantly, is because the grand dukes both died leaving Sarevok as the only not dead not sick grand duke, and he just orders your death.
Amazing work on this Baldur's Gate playthrough! I think you did incredibly well with your first run as Vachar. =) Strangely enough, being killed by Sarevok during your first encounter with him feels like a befitting end for her first life. In my experience, being killed in a fight to the death against the main villain is the best possible Game Over you can get.
The premier grinding location is the siren cave, since it spawns infinite flesh golems. Those are about as dangerous, but worth more than 3x the xp! Of course, it's also more of a hassle to get there, and they WILL splatter you.
I always imagined Baldr's Gate being more a gateway to Hell considering the name Baal and assuming it was something akin to Diablo. Imagine my surprise when I was 15 and finding out it was just D&D.
Because you asked, when I heard of Baldur's Gate for the first time, I actually thought it refers to a physical gate and given the the game has a big skull on the cover, I was guessing it maybe a gate to the underworld/hell or something made by a dude named Baldur. Personally I also prefer names that give you a better idea of what you can expect like "You have to burn the Rope" and "Don't shit your pants"
After plaing Fallout Baldur's Gate has incredibly underwhelming conversations and every quest that's not fighting is absolute dud. Thank you for having audacity to question a respected and nostalgia evoking property. Also, I admire your willingness to do multiple runs. Unless you ignore content on purpose there's almost no reason to come back to BG1 multiple times. So many of long streches of gameplay are long, obligatory dungeons, every playthrough in last decade fizzles out when I remember I have to do those boring mines. Durlag's Tower is the only bit I'm honestly fond of, rest seems like chore of clicking harmless wolfs, kobolds, bandits, gnolls and not getting charmed in that seaside location that's full of some sea spirtis.
For anyone playing this for the first time, get the BG1NPC project mod. It completely changes the game to become an actual RPG with excellent writing, stories and quests for every party member. If you miss the mechanics only first introduced in the sequel BG2, the mod integrates perfectly into the story adding depth and complexity missing in the first one. What the characters should have been. That is, if you do enjoy making decisions and reading walls of texts of story dialogue.
I love this game! Especially considering the games that came before these. The AD&D Gold Boxed games. I still am trying to play through all 3 games now. And all the side quests in it. Well, all the side quests I can do with out switching out characters to do more classes. :) Anyways... The music for Candle Keep brings a tear to my eye almost every time. So good! Still worth playing in my opinion. Especially BG II. Take care, be well, and stay safe!
Hm, hope more of this video series comes out soon. I'd be interested in seeing. As for dual classing... I dunno. There are already enough Fighter/Thieves in the game, but that would probably be one of the better options. Then again, dual classing into _any_ of the other classes doesn't really let you use the full extent of all your abilities. Can't wear any kind of armor to use arcane spells, so you have to choose between no armor, no spells (which would invalidate dual classing to Mage anyway), or going through the annoying process of equipping and unequipping your armor depending on the situation for Mage. Fighter would likely be the best bet since you can use better weapons and specialize further, but your armor choices are restricted if you want to use your Thief skills. Or you could keep swapping armor like with the Mage. Cleric seems the worst option since it has the same armor dilemma as Fighter, plus your weapon choices are even more limited. But what do I know? I played the game for the first time ever earlier this year, I didn't even know you want high Dexterity no matter what since the AC bonus isn't limited by heavy armor.
never played the games but im icelandic and the name read aloud sounds like "Baldur skeit" in icelandic. meaning, "Bladur shat". note that the name Baldur is common here.
"Ok, I've just about had my FILL of riddle asking, quest assigning, insult throwing, pun hurling, hostage taking, iron mongering, smart arsed fools, freaks, and felons that continually test my will, mettle, strength, intelligence, and most of all, patience! If you've got a straight answer ANYWHERE in that bent little head of yours, I want to hear it pretty damn quick or I'm going to take a large blunt object roughly the size of Elminster AND his hat, and stuff it lengthwise into a crevice of your being so seldom seen that even the denizens of the nine hells themselves wouldn't touch it with a twenty-foot rusty halberd! Have I MADE myself perfectly CLEAR?!" 10/10 - will be replaying this game until RNGesus calls me to finally join his party.
If you want to import this character into your own campaign: drive.google.com/file/d/1w3XMd_32pxChAKznd_YnVvd3gNat805i/view?usp=sharing
For the record, Magic Users did just kinda suck in AD&D. Sure at higher levels they got good, but in real life few lived to play those high levels. Hence why most would Dual Class or Multiclass into Magic Users. (normally wizard, since most the cool priest classes weren't allowed) Part of why the rare roll of Paladin (required you to roll god tier stats) was so powerful.
Thanks but thanks to modding (and Beamdog weird ideas) your character seems very unusual between crazy stuff I made... like 5 Sarevok companions for the main character.
Dual-class into a wizard. There can never be _enough_ wizards in Shadows of Amn.
I'm going to eat your character
please nooo
“Everytime the game gets annoying I end up in a tavern and the game is fun again”
Damn just like real life
Absolutely. =/
When i heard the words '' No Reload Run '' in a OLD SCHOOL RPG i was like....oh god dude xD
Cue: Bouncing lightning traps
As long as you take care of status immunity it's not that bad
But apparently he does reload 🤔 around 23:00
reloaded 3 or 4 times due to pathfinding glitches
@@Warlockracy Still, quite Iron Man of you.
I remember playing this on my phone when I was in the army. My oil and grime covered fingers made some decisions without my consent due to the nature of the touch interface. Good times.
A true legend for playing Baldur’s Gate on mobile, just as I had a month or two after playing a tabletop DnD campaign irl. Never that, I’ve played it on PC; just never got around to actually completing it. Btw, thank you for your service my g
How the hell did you read the dialogue without killing your eyes?
We're you deployed in Sarajevo to combat the Brotherhood of NOD?
@@kakizakichannel its not that bad really
@@kakizakichannel U can change the size of the dialogue
Bane posting will never die.
My boyfriend talks about this series of games a lot! Interesting to see it presented in this way. It allowed me to see it from an interesting persective--a pretty common thing to happen when watching your amazing videos. Thank you for the great work!
I like to go to sleep holding my cats while Warlockracy tells me bedtime boomer rpg adventure stories. It's comforting.
Agreed ❤
Honestly yeah. My mr kitty enjoys the same.
Same
There's dozens of us! Dozens!
Boomer RPG haha. 😂
Funnily enough, in early versions of the original game, Gorion could, if he rolled well (he needs to kill both ogres in 1 spell each and then rolled better than 50% on all damage rolls while fighting Sarevok), just barely kill Sarevok during their fight, and since they were were lazy and just copy-pasted Sarevok and renamed him Armored Figure, it fires all the same flags that killing Sarevok does, except that the game doesn't expect it to happen while trying to go into the Chapter 1 screen and locks the game up. they eventually buffed the Armored Figure's health so there was no chance of it happening a few patches post-release.
So started the Gorion Saga. ^^
That's an amazing bug, should've just patched in a joke ending with how rare it is. XD
@@planescaped Should've cut to a variant of the 'dusted Sarevok' ending screen, on grass at night.
It's about as funny as when it actually happens during actual DND sessions when the level 5 party meets the BBEG and then go through all the dumbest and bold preparations they can imagine to try and kill the BBEG early.
Edit: game designers shouldn't be lazy and should allow these kinds of things to happen and let the players have some god damn fun for once.
Fun to see BG3 have that with the first tutorial mission where you can kill everything and rack up a ton of XP and a bunch of op items.
@@kardoxfabricanus7590 or at least make a joke about it before reloading "and so gorion wasted the villians and saved the day oh wait isn't this your story should probably reload"
As a kid I thought Baldur's Gate had this air of importance to it. It was the same way for the Hobbit book. An intense, epic name that only smarter people than me could understand.
Imagine my surprise when I played Baldur's Gate 1 in 12th Grade and found it filled with silly humor, bright colors and dorky DnD shlock.
Likewise, my childhood sanctifying of The Hobbit proved to be unwarranted when I finally did read it in 9th Grade and found out it was, in fact, the simplest and most straight-forward of Tolkien's works.
When I was a kid, before I played the game, I thought the the skull thing on the cover was the "Baldur's Gate". Like it was a huge Fallout-style vault door, and you'd have to go through it to get to a guy named Baldur.
41:41
"I'll get you eventually, Sarevok, You live in a time. And I do not"
Sounds unintentionally bad-ass, like you're a time-warping villain.
From Seravok's perspective, he is.
My thoughts as someone who has heard the name Baldur's Gate frequently, but has never even seen footage of it before: I was extremely surprised in this video to learn that Baldur's Gate was the name of a city; although I can't imagine what else I thought it might've been. The only mental image I get when hearing it of an actual massive stone gate, though somehow of a very generic sort. The name really does feel like in some way the limit asymptotically approached by an endless chain of knockoffs of knockoffs of knockoffs of Tolkien--an almost Francis Fukuyama-like end of fantasy.
Pretty much the same thing I thought at first too, with my limited knowledge of the series.
I felt something similar when I found out that neither Baldur, or a gate, are important parts of the game Baldur's Gate. Like I guess I thought if they'd called it that, surely the name would reflect something of the story but I don't know why I think that when so many works have titles that don't reflect the story, characters or content. Also my favorite Francis Fukuyama works was The End of Fantasy and the Last Dwarf.
What is most surprising is that prior to the game "Baldur's Gate" wasn't even a big deal in-setting (unlike Neverwinter or Icewind Dale) and wasn't a focus of any big stuff that would make it recognisable for fans of D&D. It's like naming Deus Ex after that abbadoned gas station you visit.
Funniest thing is that it's called so in the name of it's founder... "Balduran". Damn city dwellers couldn't get even _that_ right!
@@Sandwich1414 Yeah, I thought that since D&D sometimes uses real-world mythologies, "Baldur's Gate" had something to do with the Norse god Baldur, not some dude named Balduran.
As someone who never played Baldur's gate I always assumed it was a gate to another world created by someone called Baldur
I thought it was a norse mythology reference, lol. You know, Baldr, the nice guy killed (by proxy) by Loki for being too nice.
I thought it was either a portal or at least a fortress at the frontier
@@quint3ssent1a eh baldr isnt that nice of a god hes just nice for asgerdian. he only became nice when those missionaries made him the christian god to get the norse people to convert.
I mean, the city was created by a sailor named Balduran, so the Baldur's part of the name wasn't far off. It's basically a dude saying "this is my city"
Having only heard the name and nothing about the actual game, I always assumed it was some Norse thing about a portal to another world. I never suspected it was so straight up DnD
Idk if you'll actually read this, but I want you to know that I love these videos you make. There are so many games I want to see you cover and give your unique take on. I hope you continue to enjoy what you do, because I can't wait to see what's to come. Best of luck!
Always look forward to your unique blend of story telling and soothing narration. Excellent work as always covering some of the old gems
Goodness, pumping out the content for us humble viewers. Keep it up, брат.
You're the GOAT man. No one else is doing this at your level right now.
Neverknowsbest, whitelight and raycevick are my favorites on top of this guy. He will have 100k in less than a year from now for sure. Neverknowsbest is above 100k and had 20k at beginning of covid :)
For real, warlockracy is carrying youtube
sseth
Stratedgy is good too
That kind of sycophanctic hero-worship doesn't help anyone.
I had that Lilura1 blog, in another tab, for her Neverwinter Nights' Red Dragon Disciple build. About a minute, after I started thinking to myself just how salty she would be to hear you say these things about her beloved Baldur's Gate, you popped it on screen. There was a brief moment of panic, wondering if I'd accidentally clicked off of the video.
I like Raycevick credits question answering spreading further and further. In my opinion It always ads some nice aftertaste to such comprehensive long reviews such as his or Mandalore's. Btw I really like your take on this TH-cam review format. I watch many channels of this type and yours sticks out as one of my recent favorites.
About Baldur's Gate name question (I've never played it or much of similar games even) I always perceived it as something much darker than it turns out to be apparently. Probably due to ominous cover art and not distinguishing much between it and Planescape. I was expecting the titular "Baldur's Gate" as something akin to gates of oblivion in Oblivion for some reason. Baldur sounded like some demonic name straight out of Diablo and then the skull... It's funny to find out how wrong my idea of it was.
Ironic part about the name and cover right?
Baldur's Gate 1 is one of nicer if not nicest game made on infinity engine.
Icewind Dale has more down to Earth title with a Tree on the cover. At the same time this game is 90% dungeons and except for goblins and orcs all enemies are at least twice as big as your heroes. Oh, and also undead do not show up in two like in this video but whole armies.
You are sick in the head to replay this game so many times.
Great work, I love it.
Nothing sick about it. Playing Baldurs Gate is like driving Toyota Celica '73 despite having new BMW in the garage. There is special charm to theese things.
there are so many ways to approach everything that it works very well, a sign of a good game is it's replayability.
“If you think about it, they were simply retvrning to tradition”
Nice.
I am so happy to have found your channel. As a child, I was intrigued by the box art of Arcanum, (already saw your video on it too, but didnt think to comment there) and was fascinated with these kind of massive storytelling games. Unfortunately I was absolute garbage at playing them, poor sense of direction, figuring out what I was supposed to do, and sometimes plain impatiance prevented me from truly enjoying them. But now, trough you, I can finally experience them.
10:50 Elminster is like Atlantis. Glorious hubris now long buried.
He was a showcase of what a 20th level wizard player could do back in 2nd Edition.
When his sponsor got deaded, the road was cleared for more sane power levels.
Thanks for using Skyrim as a unit of measurement. 👌
The name Baldur's Gate always made me think it was a literal gate, a monolithic archeway which traversing through would transport you to other worlds or parallel realms. It sounded like the endpoint of a grand and expansive quest, or the instigator of an apoctalyptic cataclysm.
You inspired me to do a no-reload-import-and-restart-on-death run like you, and so far it's interesting how much it made the experience of a game from my childhood I basically played to death feel fresh again. I also added that all companions that die have to be booted from the group and replaced. It raises the stakes significantly.
It's Groundhog Day!
I have to say for some reason this video specifically has grown to be my comfort video.
wow bg3 got me into crpgs and i have been playing others while having YT videos playing BG1/pathfinder lore/retrospective videos on the other.. and this is 100% the best video i've seen so far..
great job crafting and narrating your story to us while also letting us in to the game's narrative. first time i actually paused the game and moved the video to my main monitor.
I think BG is so epic because even 20 years later games are trying to recreate the magic people felt when playing it for the first time. Like Pillars of Eternity, espesially PoE1. I think it holds up still when compared to other infinity engine / infinity engine like games. Unpopular with the old old fans but i even like the EE content and companions.
I dont think it gets enough credit for making an Evil playthrough so enjoyable though. Even the "best" modern crpg, Pathfinder Kingmaker, or its sequel, the Evil portions feel like an after-thought.
Arcanum is also good for allowing your character to be evil, and felt so different than all the other crpgs even thought its pretty similar. Awesome stuff to come, BG2 going to be great.
BG1 is one of the few games where I prefer my local german translation to the original english version. They somehow managed to keep the same vibe of the original voice acting but actually localised it with german dialects and such.
Just too bad that BG1 gets completely outshined by its sequel for me. I view it and SoD more as a prologue to power my charakter up and prepare myself for BG2. That being said, having your character complete the whole saga and go from wimp to demi god is great
Oh yes, especially the first Baldur's Gate had amazingly campy German localistation. My friends and me still quote stuff from it at each other even in our 30s now - the choice in voice actors was amazingly memorable and often hilarious.
@@herbertnorman617 The BG2 Dub is also great, "Minsk wird wieder frei sein" is forever burned into my brain
@@r3v4n21 Definitely, both have great memorable moments. I think in BG2, the whole sequence after leaving Irenicus' dungeon in the beginning is burned into my mind the most, just from how often I heard it back then.
Same with polish version.
"Dem han I so lang an de Kopf träta bis er tod war"
Hey, Sarevok Bane Joke on the thumbnail?! You never fail to make me feel happy, my dude! Thanks for making a vid on one of my favorite games! I haven't finished it yet, but once I'm done I'll give my thoughts.
You know, I'm a big BG fan, but everytime you insulted it, I gave a mirthful chuckle. Thank you very much
@@milesp1794 It feel like fair criticism. Baldur's Gate is the roughest game on infinity engine and somehow most charming.
@@38procentkrytyk yeah, "insult" might be too strong a word. However, I've felt mostly alone as a fan of this game, so someone else having a similar experience to me, enjoying the highs and lows in a similar way, is very cathartic.
That's one dead-sexy pfp, chief.
@@futonrevolution7671 Hey! Keep floatin'!
Back so soon, big guy? Over an hour long this time as well. Life really ain't that bad after all.
Seriously, though... the way you combine obscure old games/mods and niche classics with political science and philosophy without actually getting political... it's brilliant. That's the way it's done: do something new or do something better.
I love it.
Been waiting for the next Warlockracy video, love your editing and the way you present the story of the games you play.
Interesting choice to play through EE but call it (1998) and weird permadeath thing you got going, but your analysis is pretty spot on. Great vid.
hmmm you are right. i didn't think about it
Close enough.
BG and PS:T are like the manga to the anime (every other rpg) when talking about boomer rpgs.
I love how casters have to spend hours in reading and trial-error to be just "meh" and x10 as much to actually feel like you control magic (and not the other way around).. and a half orc barbarian with a good roll can kill everything np by just clicking the get me meth button and watching everyone -vampires, liches, dragons, SHADOW dragons... turn to gibs.
That's some serious 90s power metal reference, maybe
Baldur's Gate 1/2 is one of those things, where I played it at such a young age, I can't remember if bits of the plot were real or just my brain going into maximum overdrive again. Things like Minsc and Boo, I thought were fake, until I stumbled across them in the present again.
The wilderness areas always made me feel like I was wandering around in a Bob Ross painting, at least until something tried to kill me.
we don't have random encounters we have diy free stuff
Your mom did alright
I played Baldur's Gate EE in ~2016, when I was 14 but (1:04:40) it was still a magical adventure that I will remember forever. After this game, I fell in love with the whole genre. Unfortunately I don't have too much time for playing, so most of the games are still waiting for me. For me, most of the fights were average in difficulty, with a few exceptions of really hard battles. I feel that it was a good mix, but I was a kid so my perception would probably change now. I really loved the writing though! As some other comment said, the voice acting in my own language (polish) was also exceptionally good. I also loved the tavern music (I actually listen to it from time to time while working or learning :p)
It wasn't actually the first D&D game that I played, because I had already played original Neverwinter Nights that my uncle bought for my father, but I was like, 7 years old, and couldn't read much. Somehow I still managed to finish the first act, but immediately got stuck in the second one with kind of a "soft lock". 2 years later I tried to play the game again, after Windows got reinstalled on a family PC, so I lost all the saves and have to play from the beginning. I thought that "now, when I know how to read, the game will be easy as butter". It wasn't really easier in terms of fights, but the writing... I really enjoyed it. Unfortunately the pc's gpu/motherboard got burnt and after the repairs we had our Windows reinstalled... again. Recently I bought the Diamond edition and I swear to Helm, I will fucking beat it.
all of the infinity engine games were simply called by their notable setting.
Planescape takes place in planescape (the setting as a whole, actually visiting a good chunk of the locations), Icewind Dale takes place in Icewind Dale (and is a prequel to the Icewind Dale Trilogy of books), Baldur's Gate is the main location of the core of the story. Neverwinter Nights was cancelled after repeated delays but would've taken place in and around Neverwinter (it was supposed to come out the summer of the following year after BG1, with Tales of the Sword Coast meant as a place holder to kill time), restarted as an expansion pack for BG2...cancelled again due to all the crap happening at Interplay at the time and them having to turn Baldur's Gate 3 into the Throne of Bhaal expansion just to get an ending to the story. And eventually finally seeing the light of day as a completely different game and concept.
Not be confused with Neverwinter Nights (1991), the first true MMO (which shut down it's servers the year before Baldur's Gate came out), though there are rumors that Neverwinter Nights (the Infinity engine game) was delayed due to legal issues with the name (though this is uncomfirmed) due to the rights owners of the MMO still mulling over the idea of splitting it off into it's own thing. (at the time it was heavily connected with AOL servers, but was considering migrating it to an open platform but decided they couldn't compete with these newfangled 3d MMOs that already taken off by then. NWN was made on the Gold-box engine.)
That thumbnail is just amazing. I can't get over it.
I know it’s dated, but i still like it
the voice acting in the first 30 seconds pulled me back after all those years, well played
The first line is so classic for me. Idk what the innkeeper says, but to me it always sounded like "my old toes are clean as an elvens arse".
@@benriffle104 "My hotel's as clean as an elven arse."
I personally heard something like "my old towels" back in the day.
Really glad you showcased the SCS mod as well. It's great, I have interesting memories getting one shot in bg2 by random mages in creative ways (sequencer triple fireball). I think it's a lot more forgiving in the first game due to mages having less instant you lose spells (although chaos kinda fits that bill if it hits your whole party).
Playing Baldurs Gate 2 back in the day on older PC's, feels like I spent more time on loading screens than actually playing.
“Never had rats. No, siree.” hits different if you accidentally (or intentionally) get the innkeeper in combat.
These are the best and most comprehensive presentations of this class of game. Excellent work.
"Is Beam Dog writing better or worse than Baldur's Gate writing?"
The answer is "no, they are not better" because no one writes better stories than my mom.
One of the first RPGs I ever played as a kid, it was a magical adventure - one I never really appreciated fully until growing up a bit and coming back to it. It will always hold a special place in my heart as I'm sure it does with many other Baldur's Gate fans. Thanks for the excellent recap Mr. Warlockracy
If you like keeping your character a female and want to make her part wizard, you can use EE Keeper to keep that skintight rogue outfit. You can even make interesting class combinations like Wizard/Assassin instead of Wizard/Rogue.
So this is my opinion about BG1. People might disagree a lot. I like the "filler" you mentioned here. This is the highlight of this game at least if you compare it with others. With each game Bioware escapes from the sandbox elements here we see it at its fullest.
It creates the feeling of freedom which got missing in later games. After you leave Candlekeep you are free to visit any location and because level scaling only changes few things like number of enemies it feels like making our own choices to visit specific places to fight specific things our own choice and it feels rewarding to do so. In Skyrim and other Bethesda titles it always bugged me how world becomes only harder for player to explore and rewards are... often generic or reduced to your level. So I do not feel like hero in training in TES while in BG it is it's best charm.
One other thing; in Tales of Sword Coast there is a quest which we need to get on the boat and sail to specific place. However in other games travel is the least fun thing. Here the travel is narrated so well it feels like we can encounter anything and might lose to just small enemy on the way. I miss that in modern games... or maybe I'm just too old to feel that way.
There is no level scaling in baldurs gate
@@JS-wp4gs kinda, the BG 1 generates number of enemies based on your level.
In theory it means 6 characters vs 6 kobolds. In practice it ends with 6 characters vs 36 elite ice archers.
No shit, freedom...Like when you want to level up and suddenly find strange place, such as Durlag Tower💀💀💀 I was low level and tried to fight battle horror, and oh dear...
@@38procentkrytykI had never saw Kobolt with ice arrow. I often found Kobolt Commando uses fire arrow
I love this video man, I come back to it all the time. I can't wait to see you cover TotSC and SoD, especially since I just played through Siege for the first time and actually found it to be fairly enjoyable despite it's reputation
I've been binging your videos recently. I'm sure this one will be another banger!
A wave of nostalgia watching my dad play the game when I was little as well as playing it for a little bit, I would say it's one of the games that introduced me into the magical fantasy genre.
'Baldur's Gate' actually reminded me of 'Ishtar's Gate' and ancient Mesopotamia when I was first exposed to it, back as a kid. I suppose the blue and gold color palette of the second game (the first I played) reinforced that idea. Don't really know where I got that from, though.
I never got around to posting it when you initially uploaded this video. But what popped in my mind for Balder’s Gate, is is exactly the Norse God-Baldr’s gate.
I had like a whole 5 min pause when he asked that because I was like I never thought about it but like the title tells me nothing and makes me feel nothing.
First video of yours I've seen and have binged them all since. Your style of review is very entertaining, and I can't wait to see part 2. thx m8
"we are an orphan"
Ah, clumsy enough to lose both of their parents.
thank you for acknowledging that Elminster is a Mary Sue
I mean, it's not a secret. Ed Greenwood made it pretty well-known.
Love the video, got excited when I saw it posted. Thanks for the stellar content.
I played through this, and the sequels, multiple times. I tended to go Half-Orc Fighter/Thief, and True Neutral. Having the party dynamic so you could literally recruit anyone, of any alignment, made for some insanely amusing NPC- NPC dialogue. Mazzy and Korgan in particular.
You must gather your party before venturing forth!
I remember playing Baldurs Gate 1 a lot when I was in middle school. I even remember making it to Sarevok once, though I don't think i ever beat the game. That said, a lot of this video was incredibly nostalgic.
I remember playing Baldurs Gate 2 *significantly* more though. There was a time where I could recite the entire dialog between Irenicus and the Cowled Wizard police word for word from memory.
You bore me mageling, you may take me but you will take the girl as well.
What no I've done nothing wrong!
I only remember bits of it, like a faded memory. But I do remember all of Yojimbo's barks however :P
I cannot be caged.
I cannot be controlled.
You bore me, mageling!
Such a hilarious yet condescending line. Irenicus was a great villain
I first played this, maybe 15 years ago, picked it back up maybe three years ago on my phone, and then started again a week ago. It's taken me a decade and a half, but I finally got to Baldur's Gate... And immediately stopped playing after getting overwhelmed with all there is to do in the city.
POW: I played BG 2 about 12 years ago (and even then, only the first chapter).
"This is an unsanctioned use of magickulll energy. " "All involved will be held."
Another wonderful long-form video, Warlock. Listen to your videos every few days while doing work tasks. Keep being awesome m8.
Played this game. It's amazing. Love the small stories.
First thing i did was to add movement speed to all my characters because they moved too slow.
First thing I do in the second game is download a mod that makes it so I can use whomever I want.
Gotta have both Minsc and Edwin. Especially since they have banter throughout the whole game, even though playing unmodded you'd never see it. :P
that whispered "actually it was this", was so spot on. goddamn, dont mind me wiping my snort out of my face. gotta love a hearty belly laugh whilst having a cold. thanks man< 3
0o0 !!! I was hoping you got to Baldur's Gate eventually. Love the videos
Crazy work ! :) I loved your video ! and as you ask us viewer what we would do then I'll say :
I love BG it was my first RPG game on PC! I would make a Cleric/Mage because I love cleric support spells and high charisma makes turn undead very easy, that way for several turns undead will flee and you're free to take actions. For an evil playthrough I think enhanced edition gives choicies with nice evil aligned spells. I personally often play cleric/something since I love to use spells like Command or entangle. For an overpowered character with constant haste I think playing a holy/evil assassin would be nice.
Gather your party before traveling forth! Gather your party before traveling forth! Gather your party before traveling forth!
One thing in which the Enhanced Edition is definitely better than the original : you can fight and even kill Elminster. He has a bunch of funny OP spells (transform to chicken, cow bombardement, etc) and the only chance you have at killing him is with a critical hit backstab at max level, but it is possible.
Truly awesome video! I'm 33 and have played this before eons ago but never understood or followed through with it. recently I have once again started this Campaign and truly enjoying it. Pity I am experiencing this now after hours of Oblivion, Skyrim, Witcher, Dragon Age, Divinity, Dark Stone and other RPGs Funny how this game even though feels dated somehow holds up and still is enjoyable in 2022
Just wanted to say that you're a great story teller, and that you have managed to convince me, someone that did not grow up with these old RPGs, to give them a try.
Keep up the good work! And stay safe out there!
A man who spends so much time in augmented timeflow courtesy of immersive fantasy worlds that he feels the need to specify "real-life years" in casual conversation (sort of...), has my respect.
What a coincidence. I just finished a playthrough yesterday with Red Dragon Disciple. That game never gets old =)
Been watching your vids recently and gotta say youre my new favorite rpg tuber
now i gotta go re-install for my 150th play through.
*MY HOTEL IS AS CLEAN AS AN ELVEN ARSE*
Underrated channel. But not for long if you keep this up.
Also, especially with the speed youre posting content now, try finding ways to keep it fun and fresh for yourself aswell :) Always make what YOU want to make, not what you think we will like. No matter how big your channel might become
He's been picked up by The Algorithm, but usually these things have a snowball effect and take a little while. He's definitely getting to 100k.
Still waiting for that BG2 video. Now would be the perfect time to make it cause BG3 just came out, and the interest in the franchise spiked.
warlock shows everyone what a crazy person he is with the no death run
47:06 the reason you die instantly, is because the grand dukes both died leaving Sarevok as the only not dead not sick grand duke, and he just orders your death.
Amazing work on this Baldur's Gate playthrough! I think you did incredibly well with your first run as Vachar. =) Strangely enough, being killed by Sarevok during your first encounter with him feels like a befitting end for her first life. In my experience, being killed in a fight to the death against the main villain is the best possible Game Over you can get.
The premier grinding location is the siren cave, since it spawns infinite flesh golems. Those are about as dangerous, but worth more than 3x the xp! Of course, it's also more of a hassle to get there, and they WILL splatter you.
Fixed in EE, but ankhegs still work.
@@neutronshiva2498 Was it? Pretty sure I was still doing that the last time I played, though only briefly in my pillaging of the cave.
Your sense of humor lands every single time, its like you're not even trying to be funny and I'm still laughing.
I always imagined Baldr's Gate being more a gateway to Hell considering the name Baal and assuming it was something akin to Diablo. Imagine my surprise when I was 15 and finding out it was just D&D.
I put this video on while I sleep because I love this game , story and the way you tell it. It's so soothing to laugh and sleep at the same time
Because you asked, when I heard of Baldur's Gate for the first time, I actually thought it refers to a physical gate and given the the game has a big skull on the cover, I was guessing it maybe a gate to the underworld/hell or something made by a dude named Baldur.
Personally I also prefer names that give you a better idea of what you can expect like "You have to burn the Rope" and "Don't shit your pants"
Same
OMG I just found you like a week ago and subscribed and now you cover my favorite oldschool RPG! You the real deal
After plaing Fallout Baldur's Gate has incredibly underwhelming conversations and every quest that's not fighting is absolute dud. Thank you for having audacity to question a respected and nostalgia evoking property.
Also, I admire your willingness to do multiple runs. Unless you ignore content on purpose there's almost no reason to come back to BG1 multiple times. So many of long streches of gameplay are long, obligatory dungeons, every playthrough in last decade fizzles out when I remember I have to do those boring mines. Durlag's Tower is the only bit I'm honestly fond of, rest seems like chore of clicking harmless wolfs, kobolds, bandits, gnolls and not getting charmed in that seaside location that's full of some sea spirtis.
Those sea sirens are the quickest way to level up early on
Warlock congrats on 30k subs.
Your videos were and are always good.
facts
Koveras's name tricked me first time I played because I didn't think about it. It just sounded like all the other fantasy names
Always happy to see a new video from you.
Hello from Nicosia Cyprus, love your videos.
I really have to commend your video making skills. They're getting better and better, and I'm glad I found this channel.
Kudos.
For anyone playing this for the first time, get the BG1NPC project mod. It completely changes the game to become an actual RPG with excellent writing, stories and quests for every party member. If you miss the mechanics only first introduced in the sequel BG2, the mod integrates perfectly into the story adding depth and complexity missing in the first one. What the characters should have been. That is, if you do enjoy making decisions and reading walls of texts of story dialogue.
Love the idea of an immortal bhaalspawn in a groundhog day style setting. True legend
Elminster has also been a thief, a bard and was turned into a woman by that same goddess for some reason. The wiki page on him is pretty hilarious.
I love this game! Especially considering the games that came before these. The AD&D Gold Boxed games. I still am trying to play through all 3 games now. And all the side quests in it. Well, all the side quests I can do with out switching out characters to do more classes. :) Anyways... The music for Candle Keep brings a tear to my eye almost every time. So good! Still worth playing in my opinion. Especially BG II. Take care, be well, and stay safe!
Hm, hope more of this video series comes out soon. I'd be interested in seeing.
As for dual classing... I dunno. There are already enough Fighter/Thieves in the game, but that would probably be one of the better options. Then again, dual classing into _any_ of the other classes doesn't really let you use the full extent of all your abilities. Can't wear any kind of armor to use arcane spells, so you have to choose between no armor, no spells (which would invalidate dual classing to Mage anyway), or going through the annoying process of equipping and unequipping your armor depending on the situation for Mage. Fighter would likely be the best bet since you can use better weapons and specialize further, but your armor choices are restricted if you want to use your Thief skills. Or you could keep swapping armor like with the Mage. Cleric seems the worst option since it has the same armor dilemma as Fighter, plus your weapon choices are even more limited. But what do I know? I played the game for the first time ever earlier this year, I didn't even know you want high Dexterity no matter what since the AC bonus isn't limited by heavy armor.
I love the long videos I can watch/listen to while I'm working and gaming!
never played the games but im icelandic and the name read aloud sounds like "Baldur skeit" in icelandic. meaning, "Bladur shat". note that the name Baldur is common here.
"Ok, I've just about had my FILL of riddle asking, quest assigning, insult throwing, pun hurling, hostage taking, iron mongering, smart arsed fools, freaks, and felons that continually test my will, mettle, strength, intelligence, and most of all, patience! If you've got a straight answer ANYWHERE in that bent little head of yours, I want to hear it pretty damn quick or I'm going to take a large blunt object roughly the size of Elminster AND his hat, and stuff it lengthwise into a crevice of your being so seldom seen that even the denizens of the nine hells themselves wouldn't touch it with a twenty-foot rusty halberd! Have I MADE myself perfectly CLEAR?!"
10/10 - will be replaying this game until RNGesus calls me to finally join his party.
I always assumed Baldur's Gate was a gate to a hell-like dimension or region based on the cover art