Playing The Witcher with polish voiceovers is the shit. I have to get back to it tonight.
Angry_Beaver said:There's not enough Witcher enthusiasm in this place, dammit! So drink your potions, grease your... sword, and meditate, 'cause we's gonna party!
Finally!
Angry_Beaver said:Witchers
Witchers came into being when the first settlers were colonizing the untamed lands of present-day Temeria. The elite caste of warrior-monks was to defend humans from the monsters which inhabited the wild. Thanks to mutagenic mushrooms,
Am I the only one that thinks of Mario when I hear or in this case read mutagenic mushrooms?
I will ad this
Witcher according to Slavic mythology
Witcher (Russian: Ведьмак, Vedmak, Ukrainian: Відьмак, Vidmak or Polish: Wiedźmin[1]) is a witch-like character in Slavic mythology, the male equivalent of witches. The witcher is in many respects identical to a witch (vedma),[2] but unlike the latter he may also possess positive qualities. For example, they treat people and animals, protect humanity and force witches to stop doing evil. The term Vedmak comes from Proto-Slavic *vědě ("I know") and Old Russian вѣдь ("witchcraft", "knowledge").[3]
By belief, witcher, as well as a witch, may be innate or taught (trained). An innate witcher has a beard, mustache and a little tail, and trained witcher is no different from other people. The witcher possesses two souls, human and demonic. He is capable of shapeshifting into a horse, moth, wolf. He is also resistant to rusalkas' enchanting.
I said it before and said it again, we need more Slavic mythology in games. So much cooler than endlessly ripping of Tolkien
Dvader said:I want to play it but someone doesn't want to port it to consoles. Grrr.
Join the master race or be gone console peasant. And you will be able to play Mass Effect 1!
bugsonglass said:I presume it requires a fairly high-end PC to run properly?
Nah. You can get away with most entry level GPUs. I rock a modest GT220 512 Mb and average 25-30 fps at 1280x720 with practically everything on high except AA and shadows, which I never bother with.
SteelAttack said:bugsonglass said:I presume it requires a fairly high-end PC to run properly?
Nah. You can get away with most entry level GPUs. I rock a modest GT220 512 Mb and average 25-30 fps at 1280x720 with practically everything on high except AA and shadows, which I never bother with.
Is that for Witcher 1 or 2?
The Witcher 1 system requirements:
Minimum:
- Supported OS: Microsoft® Windows® /XP/Vista
- DirectX Version: DirectX 9.0c (included) or higher
- Processor: Intel Pentium 4 2.4 GHz or Athlon 64 +2800 (Intel Pentium 4 3.0 GHz or AMD Athlon 64 +3000 recommended). Athlon XP series, such as the Athlon XP +2400, is not supported
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce 6600 or ATI Radeon 9800 or better (NVIDIA GeForce 7800 GTX or ATI Radeon X1950 XT or better recommended)
- Memory: 1 GB RAM (2 GB RAM recommended)
- Sound: DirectX version 9.0c-compatible sound card
- Hard Drive: 15 GB Free
The Witcher 2 system requirements:
- Minimum:
- OS: Windows XP/Vista/7
- Processor: Intel 2.2 GHz Dual-Core or AMD 2.5 GHz Dual-Core
- Memory: 1.5 GB (Win XP), 2GB (Win Vista/Win 7)
- Graphics: GeForce 8800 (512 MB) or Radeon HD3850 (512 MB)
- DirectX®:
- Hard Drive: 16GB
- Sound:
- Recommended:
- OS: Windows XP/Vista/7
- Processor: Intel or AMD Quad-Core
- Memory: 3 GB (Win XP), 4GB (Win Vista/Win 7)
- Graphics: GeForce 260 (1 GB) or Radeon HD 4850 (1 GB)
- DirectX®:
- Hard Drive: 16GB
- Sound:
The Witcher 2 is a rather demanding game, but it's abso-fucking-lutely (thanks for that word, Geralt!) beautiful. I have a new Intel quad core processor, 8 GB of DDR3 RAM (slow, but DDR3 nonetheless), and a Radeon HD 4890 1GB graphics card. I have to have many of the graphical features turned off because I'm just above the recommended video card spec, but I get the feeling from what I have experienced that I'll be able to run the game smoothly. And it's STILL incredibly beautiful.
AB, what other RPG's would you say it is similar to? Does this one stand out due to the mythology behind it and the characters?
I wouldn't really know. I haven't played more than a few minutes in any WRPGs newer than The Witcher, which came out in 2007 (irrelevant exception: Torchlight). And my only experience in that genre prior to that year consisted of the Elder Scrolls series and the first Fable, which I don't remember a ton about.
The mythology is definitely unique. There's no morality meter or points like there are in Bioware games. You just have to make decisions and, later, some of them prove to have big repercussions.
The first game has only one ending cutscene, but there are something like three different paths you can take through the main quests (side with one faction, with the other, or neither). Combat consists primarily of timed clicks, which I'm perfectly happy with, but it's simple enough to put many people off. Combat in the second game is radically different and requires greater skill. The second game also has 16 different endings.
As I've said, I'll be trying to wait to play the second game due to my graphics card situation, so I can't say much of anything about it from first-hand experience.
SteelAttack said:One, one. I don't think I have what it takes to run TW2. Yet.
Yeah, it takes quite a beefy rig to get it to run - I meet all the minimum reqs, but my graphics card is the only failure. Can get it running well enough, without all the fancy effects and the like.
darthhomer said:
Yeah, it takes quite a beefy rig to get it to run - I meet all the minimum reqs, but my graphics card is the only failure. Can get it running well enough, without all the fancy effects and the like.
It also seems to have been developed with quad core processors in mind. I've seen at GAF impressions from users with fairly good GPUs having performance issues because their dual core rigs bottleneck them.
If only I could find a PSU that could fit my micro ATX case, I would definitely upgrade my video card (provided I could find one with an adequate form factor).
The Witcher 2 is one of the best RPGs ever.
One of the site's forefathers.
Play fighting games!
F
Average framerate of 50fps with it varying from 32fps to 60fps.
One of the site's forefathers.
Play fighting games!
This topic needs MOAR POASTS! Those who have been playing the game... POAST PIX!!!1
I can't. Not only am I talking with someone in an attempt to send my video card in again, but now my monitor is dying and I'll be attempting a repair. T_T Won't be PC gaming for a while, it seems, unless I can fix my out-of-warranty monitor instead of having to get a new one. On the other hand, this gives me another chance to go through the entire Golden Sun series. I love it!
There's not enough Witcher enthusiasm in this place, dammit! So drink your potions, grease your... sword, and meditate, 'cause we's gonna party!
From the Witcher Wiki page regarding the series:
A witcher is:
Geralt of Rivia is perhaps the most famous witcher, or at least the most famous of his time. The following tells us about the events leading up to the first game, as well as the basic story of it.
Details about the first game can be found here.
Witcher 1 combat:
Witcher 1 cinematic teaser trailer:
Details about the second game can be found here.
Here are some descriptions of some male characters, some female characters, and some monsters.
The next three videos are trailers that CD Projekt Red released within a few days of release of The Witcher 2. "Disdain and Fear" is my personal favorite.
Witcher 2 "Love and Blood" trailer:
Witcher 2 "Hope" trailer:
Witcher 2 "Disdain and Fear" trailer:
Witcher 2 combat overview:
If you like what you see and hear, then by all means, investigate! This is a wonderful series, and neither game should be passed over if you have the hardware to play them! Also try out the books. Currently, there are two that have been translated into English (a book of short stories, and the first of the novels), and a third is on the way.
Bonus: And because you'll all love it, this is Triss Merigold, a sorceress Geralt is involved with. Btw, sorcerers and witchers don't show their age. Magic, in the former's case, and mutations, in the latter's case, make them seem far younger than what they really are. Still, Triss is considered young for a sorceress. She's also not Geralt's love interest in the novels, but in the first game, Geralt has amnesia (he was just brought back from the dead for Phlox's sake!), and his main love interest is nowhere in sight.
Her appearance is quite a bit different from in the first game.
Reviews for The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings:
Games Radar: 10/10 hoooooooly sheeeit
Game Informer: 9.25/10.00
Eurogamer: 9/10
PC Gamer: 89/100 People complain about this one because PC Gamer gave Dragon Age 2 a 94/100.