Wesp5
Arcane
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2007
- Messages
- 1,947
Well, then it fit's perfectly in here !It's an "only autists will notice and care about this" thing.
Well, then it fit's perfectly in here !It's an "only autists will notice and care about this" thing.
Started playing with 1.2. Strangely, I remember vanilla cutscenes being more janky. Maybe the Steam version has some differences compared to the original CD release or maybe what I remember was from the earlier iterations of the unofficial patch. Also, my PC spec at the time was hardly suitable to play this game. Would love to get my hands on the original CD to compare, but I can't even find anything legit in the usual places.
But in any case, the vanilla "buginess" is definitely exaggerated. The famous Leopold bug was fixed with the official patch 1.2.
Then just play your vanilla full of bugs and let people play their patched game with extra content (and the much needed shortcuts).
Cheats like noclip can completely ruin immersion for some people.
Wesp5Have you ever considered changing the placement of saulocept for the +patch?
No, because while it would be possible to do like you write, it could really impact the game balance by providing a lot more experience points early on.
- Open Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines driver profile via Nvidia Profile Inspector.
- Change Antialiasing compatibility to 0x000000C0
- Change Antialiasing - Mode to Override any application setting.
- Change Antialiasing - Setting to 4x [4x Multisampling] or 8xQ [8x Multisampling].
- Change Antialiasing - Transparency Supersampling to 4x Sparse Grid Supersampling or 8x Sparse Grid Supersampling. This should match your Multisampling selection.
- Apply changes.
This method of forcing AA doesn't work anymore with the newest Nvidia drivers. Anyone know a workaround? Thanks in advance.
0x000000C1Anyone know a workaround?
0x000000C1
Also, its really, really, really, really obvious when the restored content kicks in. In particular, I'd like to especially complain about Beckett's emails, they sound like someone completely different.
The end of the Giovanni mansion was crashing the game, so I had to load a save from before entering and cheat to skip it.
Which seems to be related to the new research mechanic, which feels lame.
Melee seemed..worse than I remembered and most enemies ate a lot more bullets too. Most of the bosses seemed stronger than they were before.
In particular, I'd like to especially complain about Beckett's emails, they sound like someone completely different.
Agreed. During the Victorian era, people used to accord a lot of importance to what they considered the art of letter writing. What kind of paper, how you fold it, your calligraphy and especially the elegance of your writing style, as well as the contents. Older vampires would be set in those old ways. They wouldn't be caught final-dead writing like modern people.I think a good place to start on that is how a centuries old vampire isn't going to sound like a millenial.
This method of forcing AA doesn't work anymore with the newest Nvidia drivers. Anyone know a workaround? Thanks in advance.
- Open Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines driver profile via Nvidia Profile Inspector.
- Change Antialiasing compatibility to 0x000000C0
- Change Antialiasing - Mode to Override any application setting.
- Change Antialiasing - Setting to 4x [4x Multisampling] or 8xQ [8x Multisampling].
- Change Antialiasing - Transparency Supersampling to 4x Sparse Grid Supersampling or 8x Sparse Grid Supersampling. This should match your Multisampling selection.
- Apply changes.
Agreed. During the Victorian era, people used to accord a lot of importance to what they considered the art of letter writing. What kind of paper, how you fold it, your calligraphy and especially the elegance of your writing style, as well as the contents. Older vampires would be set in those old ways. They wouldn't be caught final-dead writing like modern people.I think a good place to start on that is how a centuries old vampire isn't going to sound like a millenial.
This evolution in style is even easily observed when reading older stuff on the internet. The way people used to sound more intelligent and considerate on older forums back in early 00s, that just doesn't exist anymore. And that's only 20 years of difference.
Agreed. During the Victorian era, people used to accord a lot of importance to what they considered the art of letter writing. What kind of paper, how you fold it, your calligraphy and especially the elegance of your writing style, as well as the contents. Older vampires would be set in those old ways. They wouldn't be caught final-dead writing like modern people.I think a good place to start on that is how a centuries old vampire isn't going to sound like a millenial.
This evolution in style is even easily observed when reading older stuff on the internet. The way people used to sound more intelligent and considerate on older forums back in early 00s, that just doesn't exist anymore. And that's only 20 years of difference.
Social media culture seepeth into spoken languages, further advancing the corruption of educational cutbacks. Languages evolve all the time but now this seems more like decay.
I say related to the occult items because you say something about those screwing something up in the readme at one point. Dunno where it was, but that was the impression that was left.
The way exclamation marks pepper his speech don't scream old vampire to me.
Well, I'll give another look when I get there again on both accounts...but I make no promises.
Anyway, something occurred to me. Ghouls take on minor characteristics of the blood of their vampire, yes? So why don't Nosferatu ghouls look like victims of a bad plastic surgeon?
Anyway, something occurred to me. Ghouls take on minor characteristics of the blood of their vampire, yes? So why don't Nosferatu ghouls look like victims of a bad plastic surgeon?