Sigourn
uooh afficionado
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2016
- Messages
- 5,736
No idea why the game was called Baldur's Gate 3.
Lambchop19 described a bunch of elements that were found in previous Baldur's Gate games, which at the time made them stand out from the rest (such as romances, and a huge amount of party members you got to pick and choose from). But over time many other games started picking up these elements, so the essence of a "Baldur's Gate" game is somewhat lost. Truth is this game isn't even a sequel to Baldur's Gate 2, so being named "3" is weird. Unlike Fallout, Baldur's Gate consisted of two games very closely connected. Meanwhile, Fallout 2 is only related to 1 in that you start in a village founded by the Vault Dweller and the game takes place in the same area but at a later time, i.e. it's not an actual "sequel".
Lambchop19 described a bunch of elements that were found in previous Baldur's Gate games, which at the time made them stand out from the rest (such as romances, and a huge amount of party members you got to pick and choose from). But over time many other games started picking up these elements, so the essence of a "Baldur's Gate" game is somewhat lost. Truth is this game isn't even a sequel to Baldur's Gate 2, so being named "3" is weird. Unlike Fallout, Baldur's Gate consisted of two games very closely connected. Meanwhile, Fallout 2 is only related to 1 in that you start in a village founded by the Vault Dweller and the game takes place in the same area but at a later time, i.e. it's not an actual "sequel".