Isn't that Marcin?wndrbr wrote: ↑ March 21st, 2023, 02:29yeah i know this guy doesn't work at CDPR anymore, but still.
He's still CEO at CDPR - I believe he's transitioning to a new management role in Jan but he's still there..?
Isn't that Marcin?wndrbr wrote: ↑ March 21st, 2023, 02:29yeah i know this guy doesn't work at CDPR anymore, but still.
It's cynical corporate PR. CDPR's "brand" is being the good guy devs, the ones that care about their product. The absolute trainwreck that was 2077 on release, along with the preceding marketing campaign, made even the most inbred reddit mouthbreather take pause and call bullshit, so CDPR needed to take drastic measures to fix their failing brand.Val the Moofia Boss wrote: ↑ December 4th, 2023, 20:11Releasing a mod editor for a game almost a decade old is way too late.
I love how in this dystopian world everyone is sooooooo oppressed by the evil corporations but somehow everyone can also afford to look like they escaped from a futuristic circus. Don't even get me started on the tranny shit they shoved in.Love this team and our dystopian IP!
i mean, if in your opinion the game is so shit you need to completely overhaul it, then why even bother with a remake?The Witcher remake was announced in October 2022, and is being developed by Fool's Theory, a studio of CDPR veterans. Those veterans include CEO Jakub Rokosz, who worked on The Witcher 2 and The Witcher 3. Speaking to Edge, however, Rokosz expresses his disappointment that he never got to work on the first game in Geralt's trilogy; "it always bothered me that I missed the first. I wanted a chance to give it the justice it deserves."
The Witcher does hold some degree of cult classic status - and has some genuinely excellent storytelling sections - but it's certainly difficult to recommend it in 2024 (personally, I'd opt for The Witcher 2, but The Witcher 3 is also a perfectly fine starting point). Those difficulties are multi-faceted - there are aspects of the game's visuals, gameplay, and pacing that definitely don't hold up, as well as tonal elements that raised eyebrows in 2007 and are almost certain to not be included in the remake.
Rokosz is already taking aim at some of those aspects, stating that "first and foremost, we need an honest, down-to-earth analysis of which parts are simply bad, outdated, and need to be remade." That will come at the same time as "highlighting the parts that are great, should be retained, or are direct key pillars that can't be discarded," but it's not hard to work out which aspects he's hinting will likely be removed.
Fans of The Witcher were quick to bid farewell to its most controversial feature - within a day after the project was announced, they were already bidding farewell to its 'sex cards', a bizarre spin on the romance options that helped shape subsequent games, in which players would collect artwork depicting Geralt's many, many paramours in various states of undress. Even the system's creator has expressed their regret over the system.
The Witcher's romance options aren't likely to be the only thing that gets left out of the remake. The confirmation that the remake will be open world is also likely to fix the notorious swamp section in the game's second chapter - some excellent storytelling marred by the need to travel, via a cutscene, back and forth between a large and broadly featureless stretch of marshland. I'll also posit that combat is in for an overhaul, the timing-based melee-fighting system pretty much guaranteed to be removed in place of something akin to The Witcher 3's combat.
Having sex with someone in a position of power in the company. It even has a built in retirement plan of accusing him of rape in 10 years.
How amusing that they left out the fact that the original American version of Witcher already had them censored.wndrbr wrote: ↑ January 31st, 2024, 01:03https://www.gamesradar.com/the-witcher- ... ing-block/
i mean, if in your opinion the game is so shit you need to completely overhaul it, then why even bother with a remake?The Witcher remake was announced in October 2022, and is being developed by Fool's Theory, a studio of CDPR veterans. Those veterans include CEO Jakub Rokosz, who worked on The Witcher 2 and The Witcher 3. Speaking to Edge, however, Rokosz expresses his disappointment that he never got to work on the first game in Geralt's trilogy; "it always bothered me that I missed the first. I wanted a chance to give it the justice it deserves."
The Witcher does hold some degree of cult classic status - and has some genuinely excellent storytelling sections - but it's certainly difficult to recommend it in 2024 (personally, I'd opt for The Witcher 2, but The Witcher 3 is also a perfectly fine starting point). Those difficulties are multi-faceted - there are aspects of the game's visuals, gameplay, and pacing that definitely don't hold up, as well as tonal elements that raised eyebrows in 2007 and are almost certain to not be included in the remake.
Rokosz is already taking aim at some of those aspects, stating that "first and foremost, we need an honest, down-to-earth analysis of which parts are simply bad, outdated, and need to be remade." That will come at the same time as "highlighting the parts that are great, should be retained, or are direct key pillars that can't be discarded," but it's not hard to work out which aspects he's hinting will likely be removed.
Fans of The Witcher were quick to bid farewell to its most controversial feature - within a day after the project was announced, they were already bidding farewell to its 'sex cards', a bizarre spin on the romance options that helped shape subsequent games, in which players would collect artwork depicting Geralt's many, many paramours in various states of undress. Even the system's creator has expressed their regret over the system.
The Witcher's romance options aren't likely to be the only thing that gets left out of the remake. The confirmation that the remake will be open world is also likely to fix the notorious swamp section in the game's second chapter - some excellent storytelling marred by the need to travel, via a cutscene, back and forth between a large and broadly featureless stretch of marshland. I'll also posit that combat is in for an overhaul, the timing-based melee-fighting system pretty much guaranteed to be removed in place of something akin to The Witcher 3's combat.
American journalists still got mad about it because of the act of collection itself. It's a mechanic that encourages you to sleep around with as many women as possible to fill that collection.rusty_shackleford wrote: ↑ January 31st, 2024, 04:21How amusing that they left out the fact that the original American version of Witcher already had them censored.
I'm sure the response would be something like "nooo but we do it for righteous reasons!!!!!"
I have replayed it just last year. Still the same game. Looks, runs and plays exactly like in 2007. Only reason to "remake" it, is to actually make a new game while not having to worry about the story.KnightoftheWind wrote: ↑ January 31st, 2024, 04:54Remaking bad or mediocre game with a lot of potential is why you would even 'do' a remake in the first place. Remaking something that people already like, and is already good, is just a waste of time and resources.
I haven't played the first Witcher, but it looks like it could benefit from a remake if done well.
This since they adopted the ESG crap. Now, Polish man will face discrimination in a company created by Polish man and incompetent diversity hires will only produce woke bugfests.
Isn't Witcher 3 also considered a good game? Aren't the story, having multiple solutions to quests, choices and consequences praised there? What about the exploration? Is there even a point to having an open world or is everything marked on the map? I liked the open world in Elden Ring, precisely because it allowed the freedom to explore due to the lack of map markers. I would assume that Witcher 3 went in the direction similar to Skyrim in this regard? I also like the Slavic and general European folklore vibe the game has, which is one of the many reasons why I would want to play it eventually. Not to mention the fact that human racial demographics in this game resemble medieval Europe, which at the time of this game's release was a thing developers were slowly moving away from in favor of creating modernized race mixed worlds in which it's impossible get immersed in. It's the world themed after European folklore, free from diversity, that primarily draws me into this game, it's something that's impossible to find in a huge budget games with large production values nowadays. I guess there is also Kingdom Come: Deliverance, which I also look forward to playing one day.revenant wrote: ↑ January 31st, 2024, 19:34Agree with all that except I would suggest against replaying The witcher 1 if you did that years ago, I made the mistake by doing it recently and the game seemed much smaller than I remembered it being from playing it back in the day. In addition, the sequels aren't worth playing as The witcher 1 is the only good witcher.
I remember being very confused in TW1 when Shani didn't join the party.rusty_shackleford wrote: ↑ February 1st, 2024, 04:11Speaking of Witcher 3, did anyone ever make a companion mod?
It's obvious it existed at some point but was cut, because there's a quest with Keira that has a full companion system. It even includes a party HP bar for her that (iirc) never shows up again:
You need to change that pfp dawg almost blasted nut all over my computer screenOyster Sauce wrote: ↑ February 1st, 2024, 04:22I remember being very confused in TW1 when Shani didn't join the party.rusty_shackleford wrote: ↑ February 1st, 2024, 04:11Speaking of Witcher 3, did anyone ever make a companion mod?
It's obvious it existed at some point but was cut, because there's a quest with Keira that has a full companion system. It even includes a party HP bar for her that (iirc) never shows up again:
Happy Nigger Worship month!Vergil wrote: ↑ February 1st, 2024, 04:24You need to change that pfp dawg almost blasted nut all over my computer screenOyster Sauce wrote: ↑ February 1st, 2024, 04:22I remember being very confused in TW1 when Shani didn't join the party.rusty_shackleford wrote: ↑ February 1st, 2024, 04:11Speaking of Witcher 3, did anyone ever make a companion mod?
It's obvious it existed at some point but was cut, because there's a quest with Keira that has a full companion system. It even includes a party HP bar for her that (iirc) never shows up again: