Dragon Age: The Veilguard's big blowout at this year's Summer Game Fest surprised me in that it looked like it was taking cues from its intergalactic sibling Mass Effect - see: ability wheels, three-man (three-qunari-dwarf-elf?) squads, and no open world - but Veilguard's director says the game's RPG progression is "almost the total inverse of that."
In an interview with RPG Site, Dragon Age: The Veilguard director Corinne Busche called the upcoming game's progression "incredibly deep," while comparing it to BioWare's other long-running series, Mass Effect. "I really view Mass Effect as an ARPG," Busche added. "Big action, minor RPG. We're almost the total inverse of that." A big emphasis on the RPGness, then, rather than the bombastic spectacle that Mass Effect's firefights eventually evolved into.
Busche continued to explain that, surprisingly, Final Fantasy 10's Sphere Grid and Final Fantasy 12's License Board "heavily influenced" Dragon Age: The Veilguard. The player character's skill trees are apparently sprawling, "web-like" menus that you work outward from, while still offering tons of flexibility.
Each class has its own "bespoke" skill tree that eventually branches off into another three specializations that you can choose from. Specializations aside, the regular skill trees are also divided into three sections to let fixate on particular builds. "In the case of Warrior for instance you have a section that's more defense-oriented, one that's more weapons-oriented, and one that's more ability-oriented," Busche explained.
Gamesradar's hands-on Dragon Age: The Veilguard preview said the game's character creator is the best in BioWare history - add on what sounds like a really deep skill tree, and we should have tons of roleplaying options when the game comes out later this year.
Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Baldur’s Gate 3-style romance has “limits,” according to the series’ original co-creator, but “if they unapologetically lean into it as BG3 did it should be fine.”
echolog on June 16th, 2024 at 17:25 UTC »
A good RPG has a balance of the three pillars:
Walkie Walkie (exploration) Talkie Talkie (interaction) Stabby Stabby (combat)If the game is lacking in any of these three areas, it won't live up to the DA games of old.
SellaraAB on June 16th, 2024 at 15:21 UTC »
I dunno, it seemed to have parrying and dodge rolls, and you seemingly could only control one character? Don’t get me wrong, I’m in on day one probably, but I’m confused at what is being claimed here.
Rumpullpus on June 16th, 2024 at 15:15 UTC »
Does Bioware even remember what an RPG is?