Best comment today this is for you
What was it about Skyrim that didn’t hook you? Fallout 4 (another Bethesda title) hooked me for more hours than I care to admit.
How does doing the campaign with each class get you to 100?
Because the way it was explained to me, you lvl up till 50, then between 50 and 100 you gain paragon points. Does that system work like D3? As in it being account wide?
The way I understand it, it’s for a specific character and not account wide.
They had a 0 post history. What I like is how many people see this but still take the bait.
It can be an entertaining show watching all of the new people on the forum, just have your ready.
Thankfully it is not account-wide.
There is not much to praise D4 about these days, but that is one.
Yeah, that’s what I heard, too…
which is why the statement of “go through campaign with 5 characters and that will get you max paragon” didn’t make awful lot of sense to me…
What dos “you” mean. Your main, your account?
I think people are hearing terms from D3 and think it’s the same in D4.
Can’t particularly point any specifics. It’s just not my kind of game.
Fair enough.
/characters
Diablo 4 is a modern AAA game. That means $70 for a game designed around paid cosmetics. The end game of Diablo 4 will be paid cosmetics. AAA games aren’t worth the investment anymore and I’m afraid the Diablo we loved is dead.
This was about 100 hours of game time.
Physical cartridges always cost more than digital downloadable media, because you’re paying for the plastic housing and the ROM chip inside.
Doesn’t really matter. Point is still valid. If I wanted to compare that to today, I sold some of those same games for double what I bought them for.
Essentially, paying to play a game the price point may be irrelevant. People are only going to pay what they are willing to pay. And honestly, most people will pay 70-100 for a digitally downloaded game. Whether that is acceptable to some of you or not, that is honestly your issue. Then you have a simple choice. Choose to pay and play, or don’t pay and don’t play.
There are so many games out there, its not that hard to figure out. And yes, they range all over in terms of price.
For example, I got notified that Red Redemption 2 went on sale on steam for about 20 bucks. But its not worth that to me yet. If it hits 15, I will probably pick it up.
But that is my choice. If I don’t feel a price is worth my investment when the game newly released, I won’t plunk it down.
Another example:
I pre-bought Cyberpunk when it was to be released. Then, I couldn’t play it for the first 2 weeks due to problems. I ended up refunding the game. I might pick it back up some day down the road when its on sale and all the bugs and updates are done. (most of that is probably fixed by now but you get my point)
So price is relative to the amount you are willing to pay for something. If you don’t want to buy the game at 70, 90, or 100, then don’t.
Game on.
$70 is good price considering this will last you 5 years (or 5 days).
Some other form of entertainment lasts only 1 hour and cost just as much.
True. I was an adult when D1 released.
Oh good, someone else I can call “sir” to feel better about myself.
Thank you, sir
Don’t ever call me Sir - that was my dads’ name.
In other words focus on real life instead of wasting your time on games. There is obv things u can improve irl. If u cant afford a game then dont buy it. Its rly simple.
For example there are ppl who got trash jobs because they played games instead of studying. Now they are here complaining.
Again its cheap for the amount of entertainment u get. If u cant afford that then u have other issues which u should prio.
Its not a subscription but a 1 time payment.
Also wrong. But I’m not gonna waste any more time arguing that, it’s not what this forum is for.
Though your response here sounds very rough, it’s sadly true. People living outside of their means or not prioritizing their money.
If you have debts or hardly make enough to make ends meet, stop spending your extra money on video games, Starbucks, Doordash, or other things you do not actually need. You are your own worst enemy when you choose not to do this.
I’ve known a few people in my life who were gamers… chose to work jobs like fast food, or 2nd shift at a gas station so they had extra time to game but when it came to owning a car that didn’t sound like a machine gun, having insurance, etc… they like to pretend life has just been unfair to them. My thoughts? There is a factory down the street paying $6 more an hour than you’re making… full time, benefits, insurance.