Personally, I hate opening doors right away. For some reason, I like to check as much of the "perimeter" of the dungeon as I can...
Possible due to too much age of empires gaming, as sending a cavalry unit, or scout unit around the map to discover enemy positions is a default tactic to know where the enemy is for any future attacks. In an rpg, especially harder ones, it's especially idiotic as you're just losing that unit, most likely anyhow, for the advantage of knowing there is danger in that direction.This thread is a good detector of noobs who haven't played anything released before baldur's gate. "I send someone to scout ahead", lmao, what?
Calling people noobs, just because they refer to games where character not glued together and can't move separately -stupid as hell. Recently I finished Betrayal at Krondor and overall enjoyed it (except maybe party splits after 3 chapter, fuck this shit), before this I finished Dark Sun: Shattered Lands and had fun (final battle was tough, though). It's not like I didn't played anything before BG (lol I can't even consider myself as fan of BG), it's just without party composition any Order of Operations(tm) streamlined and writing another attempt on a joke "lol I walk forward" is just boring.This thread is a good detector of noobs who haven't played anything released before baldur's gate. "I send someone to scout ahead", lmao, what?
I'm pleasantly surprised that nobody has suggested grinding a few days before advancing.
I'm pleasantly surprised that nobody has suggested grinding a few days before advancing.
You are exploring a dark dank dungeon, and a timid player has already maxed out everything before leaving the starting town.
Rating my post retarded without a response my answer to your question you asked is quite impolite crispy.
I'm pleasantly surprised that nobody has suggested grinding a few days before advancing.
I fill it with Cloudkill and Stinking Cloud. Possibly Acid Fog and Incendiary Cloud too.SCENARIO:
Your party is exploring a dark dank dungeon and is standing in a corridor which leads ahead into the unknown. Ahead, you can see a door to your right at about 10 feet distance. Another ten feet beyond that is another corridor which branches off to your left. Near the end of the main corridor it looks like there may be a large open space.
Which do you explore first? Which last? And, most importantly, why?
Discuss!