You don't get the 4D chess. They are setting up the excuses for the bad reviews - Microsoft misunderstood the AA scope, and made us charge AAA price.$70, what the fuck? Weren't they going on and on about how this was an AA game, not AAA, small team, try to understand? You can't say that and then charge AAA-prices. Tsk.
"AA" is a bullshit distinction without a difference. There's "indie" for the exceptionally cheap-and-cheerful crowd, then "games" in general, and then "AAA" for everything past a certain production threshold, and that runs all the way from Avowed to GTA. The key is that past that threshold, products are primarily competing against one another for the player's time - Avowed, KCD2, Veilguard, BG3 etc. are all running in the same AAA space and charging ten dollars more or less ain't gonna be the driving factor for purchasing one over another (or at all).You don't get the 4D chess. They are setting up the excuses for the bad reviews - Microsoft misunderstood the AA scope, and made us charge AAA price.$70, what the fuck? Weren't they going on and on about how this was an AA game, not AAA, small team, try to understand? You can't say that and then charge AAA-prices. Tsk.
Here’s how it works: WoW Tokens can be exchanged for Battle.net Balance, not just game time, which means players can indirectly buy anything Blizzard sells for real-world money with in-game gold. Players can buy a WoW Token from Blizzard for $20 and either keep it for later or put it on the in-game auction house. Another player will (hopefully) buy that token from the auction house for in-game gold, then exchange it for $15 of Battle.net Balance (Blizzard effectively takes a $5 tax from the transaction). Battle.net Balance can then be used to buy anything Blizzard sells for World of Warcraft for real-world money, including video games.
I checked the Steam forums and saw a lot of Euros balking. Checked the regional pricing and
Obsidian employees have mentioned in the past that their games have done better in Europe than in America, but no way that's happening this time. Does Microsoft want this to fail? This is seriously a massive fuck-up.
Charging 349,00zł when Cyberpunk at most is 199,00zł You STUPID mother fuckers.
Thank God I already purged all the gold I had in my wow account or I might have been tempted to buy this just to see how bad it is.You’ll Be Able to Buy Obsidian’s RPG Avowed With World of Warcraft Gold — 1.3 Million Gold at Today’s Prices
https://www.ign.com/articles/youll-...arcraft-gold-13-million-gold-at-todays-prices
Here’s how it works: WoW Tokens can be exchanged for Battle.net Balance, not just game time, which means players can indirectly buy anything Blizzard sells for real-world money with in-game gold. Players can buy a WoW Token from Blizzard for $20 and either keep it for later or put it on the in-game auction house. Another player will (hopefully) buy that token from the auction house for in-game gold, then exchange it for $15 of Battle.net Balance (Blizzard effectively takes a $5 tax from the transaction). Battle.net Balance can then be used to buy anything Blizzard sells for World of Warcraft for real-world money, including video games.
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Let's be real, I doubt any game will be able to beat Veilguard for quite some time. Avowed may be either a somewhat interesting mix Skyrim and Dark Messiah at best or an utterly mediocre game at worst. It being set in the Pillar of Eternity setting doesn't help (in my opinion). I think it would've been way better to just make it into a dark fantasy or a fantasy with dark undertones (like Dark Messiah was).Avowed: At Least It's Not Veilguard.™
Truly, Obsidian are setting the gold standard for RPG!You’ll Be Able to Buy Obsidian’s RPG Avowed With World of Warcraft Gold — 1.3 Million Gold at Today’s Prices
https://www.ign.com/articles/youll-...arcraft-gold-13-million-gold-at-todays-prices
Here’s how it works: WoW Tokens can be exchanged for Battle.net Balance, not just game time, which means players can indirectly buy anything Blizzard sells for real-world money with in-game gold. Players can buy a WoW Token from Blizzard for $20 and either keep it for later or put it on the in-game auction house. Another player will (hopefully) buy that token from the auction house for in-game gold, then exchange it for $15 of Battle.net Balance (Blizzard effectively takes a $5 tax from the transaction). Battle.net Balance can then be used to buy anything Blizzard sells for World of Warcraft for real-world money, including video games.
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Honestly, I think Obsidian was at their best when they were working on other developer's games.Truly, Obsidian are setting the gold standard for RPG!
DIfferent developers back then.Honestly, I think Obsidian was at their best when they were working on other developer's games.Truly, Obsidian are setting the gold standard for RPG!
It may be oversimplifying it a bit, but I feel the same way. And the same way Avowed is (probably) going to measure favourably against Underworld: Ascendant, it's going to measure unfavourably against Monomyth. You know, the game made by one guy. In a reasonably comparable timeframe.I finally realized what this game reminds me about. A fucking Underworld Ascendant. Aesthetically, they are like 1:1 match, the same oversaturated cartoony aesthetic with a vomit of purple and greenish colors. It's especially obvious when there's any skeleton on screen.