Should i replay dragon age 2
The near "infinite" replay comes from the great story, choices, characters including the great dialogue , and origins themselves so if those are not your thing then ya it won't be replayable to you. Last edited by LukanGamer ; 18 May, am. Try a different build and increase the difficulty. Worked for me, because I really liked the combat. Also in my opinion the story is way too generic, which also quickly makes me tired of the game.
Whatever I do, my character becomes always a brave hero who defeats the evils and saves the world. My character and companions are always good, darkspawns are always evil. I always try to save the world, while darkspawns always try to destroy it. It becomes way too generic and boring after completing the main storyline once. Have you tried any of the DLC yet?
The awakening expansion is pretty damn good IMO along with pretty much every other piece of dlc although the quality ranges from great to just okay on some Also a couple things get saved over from previous playthroughs such as the classes you unlock so you can try them at points in a new game where you couldnt before. Plus the bonus gear from beating certain dlc's really makes spices up the early game.
Me personally I kept coming back for the characters and the world, it just sucked me in everytime I started a new character. Originally posted by freeustand :. Senf View Profile View Posts. It's 6 years since my initial run, so there's that. Inquisition I have 4 play throughs and would play again. While it probably has the most replay value in terms of experiencing new things you might have missed in your first play through and story, origins to me was the best.
Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Dragon Age Wiki Explore. Dragon Age Series. Obelisque In my headcanon, a Highever accent was always scottish. DA2 has too, I've replayed that one several times, but as time goes on, I find myself less and less inclined to do another playthrough. I'll come back to Inquisition from time to time, it's more casual than Origins and nowadays is kind of meditative for me to play.
Only problem is that I don't like to leave something half-done, so deciding to replay Inquisition with all it's DLC is a hour commitment I'm not often willing to make :P. I mostly replay Origins.
Partly for nostalgia, partly because I enjoy the gameplay and the challenge. I generally prefer physical combat over magic. Animations in Origins are not as over-the-top as in the other games and each hit has a certain weight behind it instead of just chipping away with a lot of super fast hits. Plus, DA2 and Inquisition don't let me decapitate people, so there's that.
After seeing everything the game has to offer, there's no point for me to replay with any of the others. I just don't take them as seriously, so I'll end up skipping most of the dialogue, which in turn breaks my immersion and kinda defeats the purpose of the game.
I agree with your point Ursuul. Dragon Age II is the game with the most replay value. You see, I had mentally been preparing space to sit down and devour CD Project Red's latest outing, but as news of its state at release started to come out I decided to wait until the game's in a better condition. This left me with a big game-shaped hole in my mind. After stuffing a few different things in there I realized that it's about time I replayed Dragon Age: Inquisition.
It's even more relevant now that we're starting to hear the early rumblings about the next Dragon Age game. Now, to be clear I no longer have any real confidence in Bioware or what they'll be able to produce.
And that's unfortunate as I'm a huge fan of this franchise. Despite all of that I only ever played through Inquisition once. Something about the sheer scale of it made it too vast a project to quickly hop back into. And as time moved on other things caught my eye, as it usually goes.
Replaying felt like a low priority compared to other things I could be doing. And in my opinion it couldn't match The Witcher 3, which I have played twice despite its size. And I understand that the DLCs introduce some pretty interesting revelations about the setting's lore and heavily hint at what awaits us in the next game.
As usual I'll just be plonking down my thoughts as I rumble along. There will be spoilers. However, I ask those of you who will join me on this journey to not discuss the DLCs until I get there, please. Not even in spoiler blocks as I can't resist peeking. I've somehow managed to avoid pretty much all major spoilers about the contents of the DLCs and it will be interesting to go in there fairly blind.
Go nuts about the main game, though, as I've played through it once before. Yesterday evening I sat and noodled around with Dragon Age Keep. I saw that my previous world state was already in place, which was nice.
It was a real trip down memory lane to go through all of those decisions again. And it's cool that you can even have Varric narrate your world state! I must've missed that feature the first time around. My Warden was a male human mage who did not romance anybody, put Alistair on the throne and had Loghain kill the Archdemon. In the Awakening expansion I also went with killing the Architect, although it's one of the hardest choices in the whole series, if you ask me.
Unlike so many other decisions there is no "ultimate golden path" there. In the end I'm focused on the fact that Darkspawn are corrupted creatures and that they ultimately can't bring about anything good.
In the next game my Hawke was a female mage who romanced Isabella and supported the mages. Carver became a Grey Warden and Anders lived, despite his terrible act of terrorism.
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