Baldur's Gate 3 Vs. Pathfinder: WotR

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
  • Talking about some of the differences between two of my favorite cRPGs!
    Timestamps
    00:00 Intro
    01:15 Production Value
    01:48 Ruleset
    08:00 Quality of Life Features
    10:03 Progression & Roleplaying
    12:59 Conclusions
    15:57 Wrap Up
    Intro Music By Juan Andrés Matos, www.juanmatosmusic.com/
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    #gaming #gamereviews #bg3 #baldursgate3 #pathfinder
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @undeadamerican1107
    @undeadamerican1107 Před 9 měsíci +1425

    Both are great games. I really hope the success of BG3 spurs more growth in the genre!

    • @cykablyat3680
      @cykablyat3680 Před 9 měsíci +49

      yeah but bg 3 obviously had the buget for it , if pathfinder wotr was fully voice aced and has cutscenes for every npc character interaction it would have been insanelly good

    • @MirridonOnslaught
      @MirridonOnslaught Před 9 měsíci +62

      ​@@cykablyat3680i don't think it would be on the same level as BG3. Complexity isn't always a good thing. WoTR gives you many options, but it feels overwhelming. Its easy to screw up builds, magic isn't intuitive, among other issues.

    • @Matteroosky
      @Matteroosky Před 9 měsíci +45

      I hope Owlcat's Warhammer 40k Rogue Trader does well later this year.

    • @briankelly1240
      @briankelly1240 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@@cykablyat3680like OP, both are great games!

    • @MuppetLord1
      @MuppetLord1 Před 9 měsíci +10

      well its already better than BG3 from a rpg standpoint, BG3 has mass apeal through cutscenes & prettier graphics, thats about it.

  • @jon9725
    @jon9725 Před 9 měsíci +585

    Having played both, I found BG3 to be easier to get in to and much easier to understand all of the concepts. WotR has way more room for customization of your character and party. Almost too much for me to wrap my head around sometimes lol

    • @MirridonOnslaught
      @MirridonOnslaught Před 9 měsíci +10

      Saaammmeee

    • @mponce951
      @mponce951 Před 9 měsíci +9

      Me too

    • @Lefthandrightband
      @Lefthandrightband Před 9 měsíci +61

      The mythic system in wotr just blows anything in bg3 out the water. Being a lich king or a dragon or other things. I mean like what are we even talking about

    • @Hrafnskald
      @Hrafnskald Před 9 měsíci +62

      Baldur's Gate 3 is a great game once you get past the opening scenes on the Nautiloid. WotR is a great game once you get past the first few hours of creating your level 1 character :)

    • @fenharel2137
      @fenharel2137 Před 9 měsíci +25

      I bought Kingmaker recently as I wanted to get into the Pathfinder series but once I saw the character creation I was like "yeeaaah... maybe another time". There is too much of everything for me lol

  • @xaviertooker3287
    @xaviertooker3287 Před 9 měsíci +317

    Growing up with Neverwinter Nights 1 and 2, Pathfinder Kingmaker and WotR were jolts of lightning from a genre that changed my life for the better. With BG3, I get to feel that jolt all over again. There's definitely a CRPG out there for everyone.

    • @Beancp2
      @Beancp2 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Yes!
      BG3 is the only game to sctrach my NWN itch again
      That is not to say I didn't love the Pathfinder games though (well, except for House on the Edge of Time and Act V WotR)

    • @jaygerlach6884
      @jaygerlach6884 Před 9 měsíci +8

      i played neverwinter through a few deployments. defintely has a lot of sentimental value for me.

    • @davidfischer6630
      @davidfischer6630 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Love this comment; nwn 1+2 are absolutely underrated gems.

    • @adamgroszkiewicz814
      @adamgroszkiewicz814 Před 9 měsíci +3

      You gotta also try Disco Elysium & the Warhammer 40k CRPG Owlcat (Pathfinder studio) is about to release.

    • @matteste
      @matteste Před 9 měsíci +2

      Hearing of Neverwinter Nights just makes me wish for one of these modern CRPG's including an editor of some kind.

  • @hotdog77189
    @hotdog77189 Před 9 měsíci +209

    because of bg3, I have started playing shadowrun, underrail, and Im now looking at playing Pathfinder because of this vid. BG3 gave me a strong interest in the genre to the level that I can now appreciate other similar games with different mechanics and lore despite having less production value

    • @ikxius4404
      @ikxius4404 Před 9 měsíci +5

      I tried to play poE1,Poe2, kingmaker and all of them but it was hard to understand but now i found it more easy to play

    • @Blackwolf-gr6ch
      @Blackwolf-gr6ch Před 9 měsíci +6

      those are some gems, really hope we get more shadowrun

    • @DogukanSeptem
      @DogukanSeptem Před 9 měsíci +27

      Pillars of Eternity 1 and 2 hands down. PoE is basically the spiritual successor of Baldur's Gate 1 and 2. And another gem from Obsidian, Tyranny.

    • @buc991
      @buc991 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Try wasteland also, and don’t miss on bg2 it’s still the best

    • @kylerobinson6102
      @kylerobinson6102 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Don't sleep on Wrathfinder. Obviously it isn't the same as BG3, but damn, it's a really good game.

  • @B3n3f1t
    @B3n3f1t Před 9 měsíci +108

    I am a DM and I have two groups:
    The first one is a 5e group and all players in this group are new to pen & paper.
    The second one is a PF1e group that I play with for 11 years now.
    Both groups know about the other system and both groups have something they like about the other system. The same counts for me when I compare these two games.
    With that said there is one thing that makes BG3 the better game for me personally and that is when I play WotR I now and then think to myself: „Damn how many more fight does this dungeon have it’s starting to feel repetitive“ and that can annoy me now and then. BG3 on the other hand makes me feel like: „I wish there was a mega dungeon.“ especially because you could do that in coop with your friends and the combat is just pure fun. Another thing is that in BG3 you have way more options than in WotR besides abilities and class mechanics and these options are inspired from the table top. Push enemies off cliffs or daaamn beating up a goblin with another goblin… is just savage and fun and these are the moments tabletop players celebrate not the 110th time they killed 3 enemies in a row with their „attack“ but hey these are just my 2 cents.

  • @orarinnsnorrason4614
    @orarinnsnorrason4614 Před 9 měsíci +240

    I'm really happy that the crpg genre is having this resurgence or resurrection thanks to both of these games. Looking forward to what other adventures are in store in the near future.

    • @andy15881588
      @andy15881588 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Well said.
      I only got into CRPGs with Divinity OS 2. Since then, they've become my favourite genre!

    • @thebarbaryghostsf
      @thebarbaryghostsf Před 9 měsíci +5

      I'd say that Disco Elysium gave the genre a good jump start a few years back too.

    • @Rafifcahya
      @Rafifcahya Před 9 měsíci +3

      I started mine with divinity 2, then disco elysium, then pillars of eternity 1 and 2. Now i am saving for baldurs gate and pathfinder. So far I am glad playing these CRPG games

    • @adamgroszkiewicz814
      @adamgroszkiewicz814 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Lets not forget about Disco Elysium & Pillars of Eternity 1 & 2.

    • @iuliuslovin37
      @iuliuslovin37 Před 9 měsíci

      @orarinnsnorrason4614 worst thing ever with that shit boring gameplay...

  • @georgezachos7322
    @georgezachos7322 Před 9 měsíci +312

    I love them both.

    • @fistimusmaximus6576
      @fistimusmaximus6576 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Same, both different. One is class fantasy while other is cinematic.

    • @kahaterein7084
      @kahaterein7084 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Me too 🙂

    • @sd5919
      @sd5919 Před 9 měsíci +13

      WOTR in retrospect left me with the same feeling an epic fantasy novel gives me. The highs were so memorable they will stay with me. BG3 feels more like a game. Strange thing to say since it *is* a game, hell both are, but that's the feel I'm left with. BG3 is more player choice focused in trying to create a dynamic experience whereas WOTR is telling a sweeping epic. There's nothing in BG3 that at least to me matches the intensity of moments like when you first fight off Minagho, take Drezen, etc.

    • @kahaterein7084
      @kahaterein7084 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@sd5919 I agree with that, I had same feelings.

    • @Fastwinstondoom
      @Fastwinstondoom Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@sd5919 Ironically, for me it is the other way around. WOTR feels more like a game to me because of all the pre-battle buffing, the insane numbers stacking etc.

  • @poetic.voyage
    @poetic.voyage Před 9 měsíci +165

    I love them both. I want MANY more games like these.

  • @Tommy_The_Gun
    @Tommy_The_Gun Před 8 měsíci +37

    I still remember playing WoTR and it was amazing. It is one of those games that despite being just an isometric top view and not having a lot of cinematic cut-scenes, is one of those stories that I will probably remember for my entire live. Seriously, it is this immersive & that good. If you played BG3, then I would highly recommend WoTR.

    • @chrisathian5450
      @chrisathian5450 Před 7 měsíci

      is WOTR turn based?

    • @Tommy_The_Gun
      @Tommy_The_Gun Před 7 měsíci +9

      @@chrisathian5450 Unlike BG3, WoTR gives you options - you can play either with active pause (just like in old BG1 &2) or play in turn based mode. You just switch an option in game settings.

    • @chrisathian5450
      @chrisathian5450 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@Tommy_The_Gun thank you for the answer.

    • @mahmud7645
      @mahmud7645 Před 5 měsíci +1

      My angel run, though I‘m leaning more into the camp of finding righteous hero‘s being righteous and good rather played out, was so fun. I loved roleplaying a paragon of virtue smiting evil with the power of the good gods lmao so cheesy yet so over the top which makes it very entertaining.

  • @ianelliott9948
    @ianelliott9948 Před 9 měsíci +135

    As an avid enjoyer of both, I think that one other thing that BG3 does and WotR doesn't is all sorts of environment manipulation, like throwing objects, stacking crates, etc. (mostly copied straight from DOS 2, but nonetheless), and environment in WotR is completely rigid as it is in the old school CRPGs. Not a dealbreaker for most people but something to consider.

    • @vegemarkr4582
      @vegemarkr4582 Před 8 měsíci +3

      i mean it would also kinda be not implementable in wotr, since it doesnt work with the lay out. And making such features would make the game more damanding, which isnt that swell for people who have potatoe laptops and cant afford a gamer pc to run stuff like Baldur, like me.

    • @JW-dp4we
      @JW-dp4we Před 7 měsíci +9

      I'll take rigid environments over a 4-person party. :(

    • @Sotanaht01
      @Sotanaht01 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@JW-dp4we 4 is plenty in 5e where everybody is pretty much the same anyway.

    • @JordiOrta
      @JordiOrta Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@Sotanaht01 Not only this, BG3 is easy already, two more people in the party would make it even more of a cakewalk.

    • @GordonSeal
      @GordonSeal Před 6 měsíci +6

      No thanks, I already hated all the gamey barrel-mancy in DOS2, it doesn't fit with a mature theme like in WOTR.

  • @88oscuro
    @88oscuro Před 9 měsíci +98

    Both are great games, but playing BG3 makes me want to go back into DDO or Pathfinder for that more complex system design. Gonna be interesting how the next Pathfinder games turns out in a post-BG3 world.

    • @williamcase426
      @williamcase426 Před 8 měsíci +5

      hell yeah pathfinder all the way

    • @markgraham5971
      @markgraham5971 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I still wish DDO got a huge amount of cash influx to modernize the graphics.

    • @88oscuro
      @88oscuro Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@markgraham5971 Me too, they are talking about updatinging races. But I really wanna see some lag improvements and resolution scaling as well.

    • @Jibcutter
      @Jibcutter Před 5 měsíci +1

      Oh yeah. DDO. What is sad is I left ttrpgs before 3e but kinda experienced it with ID2 and DDO (calling DDO 3e is kinda a stretch though). But man have I sunk so many hours into DDO since open beta beginning of 2006 to even this year.

  • @capitanaredapple602
    @capitanaredapple602 Před 9 měsíci +49

    I actually liked the roleplaying part better in WotR. I never felt like my character in BG3 had much of a personality. You can ask questions, you sometimes have some dialog options related to your class or race; and then you have the very typical good and bad answers. But if you want to roleplay a good character, more likely it will feel and act like the good character of any other player. WotR, by having the alignment system, gave the conversations a bit more depth, and you can actually roleplay a character with a specific personality.
    Aside from that, I just felt like the quests and resolutions were more varied in WotR. Yes, you can do crazy things in BG3 mechanically speaking; make all sorts of strategies and the like for any encounter. But a lot of that, for me, doesn't add to the roleplaying of my character. Having my party pile up dozens of boxes to kill an enemy with one arrow is something that pulls me away from the immersion. That without mention that consequences in WotR felt more... heavy. And the ending felt A LOT less rushed than the one we had in BG3.

    • @kevinflanagan2543
      @kevinflanagan2543 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Other than not having completed BG3 yet, I agree completely. I remember hearing an interview with Larian talking about how they wrote each race and how with the elves it was going to lean in to their longevity and things like that, and I don't feel like that's come through at all. With WOTR I liked having your background, race, class, alignment, mythic path, and deity all possibly contribute to your dialogue choices.

    • @112523
      @112523 Před 9 měsíci +2

      You can litteraly change the outcome of all 3 chapters in bg3

    • @etheris4140
      @etheris4140 Před 9 měsíci +8

      There are different 'resolutions' to the acts, and major quests, but a sizable amount of dialogue is shallow. A class dialogue for druid that doesn't have any ramifications, nor does it resolve the present problem in any unique fashion. Some classes and races have neat unique interactions to resolve conversations in their own way, but some of them boil down to choices that you could already pick. Default good, default Evil.

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      @@etheris4140idk how people can expect a game with fully voie acted and mocap dialogue to have as much dialogue as a game where half of the dialogue is text.
      It feel better to roleplay in bg3 cause you’re more immersed in the world and feel for the character better, the decision feel more impactful cause the world feel more real.
      They obviously loose on some dialogue depth by going full voice acted and mocap + taking on very good voice actors but the boost in immersion and dialogue feeling more interesting since there is also the performance of the voice actor to take into account.

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      ⁠​⁠@@etheris4140shouldn’t call it shallow, it’s extremely good when compared to RPG with similar production value.
      Like I said making a CRPG with AAA budget and presentation require some sacrifice.

  • @spec0117
    @spec0117 Před 9 měsíci +212

    I love them both but I feel BG3 helped me understand Pathfinder a lot more

    • @niccoloparker3548
      @niccoloparker3548 Před 9 měsíci +30

      Yeah wrath of the righteous level up screen is just confusing

    • @soccercrazed13
      @soccercrazed13 Před 9 měsíci +45

      I had the opposite experience. Pathfinder helped me understand BG3 much better. After playing WOTR and then returning to EA I felt like I could see the matrix

    • @tonnytrumpet734
      @tonnytrumpet734 Před 9 měsíci +13

      @@soccercrazed13 Played WOTR and Divinity Original Sin 2, love both and now when I am playing BG3 I feel like I can really appreciate the design of it. BG3 feels like a really great fusion of those

    • @blushingralseiuwu2222
      @blushingralseiuwu2222 Před 9 měsíci +24

      Its a sacrifice for BG 3. They intentionally don't let you see what your class could do in the future so they don't want to overwhelm you at fhe start.

    • @johnsnow5125
      @johnsnow5125 Před 9 měsíci +9

      ​​@@niccoloparker3548 the level-up screen is the true boss battle. Weight your choices carefully, adventurer, because one wrong decision will spell disaster

  • @sohaibrazzaq2004
    @sohaibrazzaq2004 Před 9 měsíci +64

    Both are exceptionally well made games in their own right. WOTR is one of the only few games in which i have sunk over 500 hours in the past decade and i am 37 and no longer have dedicated time i used to have 15 years ago. Combat and mechanics wise WOTR wins hands down for me especially when you take into consideration 10 different mythic paths which gives immense replay value.
    The great thing about WOTR is that it was totally out of the blue for me, grabbing it out of steam sale and then enjoying it as much as i did was totally unexpected. BG3 on the other hand i already had high hopes as i already did multiple playthroughs of DOS & DOS 2 so my faith in Larian was already higher. In the end i enjoyed both a lot.
    BG3 is much more catered towards the masses which isn't essentially a bad thing while WOTR still keeps it hardcore.

  • @stanleykaczor3226
    @stanleykaczor3226 Před 9 měsíci +50

    Regardless of who wins or loses this "battle", I absolutely adore both games for their own reasons and ways. Because of WotR, I finally bit the bullet on learning other TRRPGs and now experiment with others on the regular. And BG3 still reminds me of the moments when I first started 5e and TRRPGs in general, and gave me that roleplay fix I didn't realize I was missing.
    I think it's good we are getting really fun CRPGs popping out left and right, whether its based off other TTRPG systems or something wholly their own. I hope this only encourages Larian, Owlcat, and other studios to keep experimenting with the properties they have and push each other to reach greatness together.

  • @elementz301
    @elementz301 Před 9 měsíci +47

    Both are great. If the next Owlcat game (after rogue trader) has the cinematic production value of BG3 it'd be the best game ever I think

    • @peterbernhard6087
      @peterbernhard6087 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Yeah BG3 had 50x the Budget 😅

    • @kvd9600
      @kvd9600 Před 9 měsíci +1

      If Owlcat decides to have a production cinematic for their game, they will need to trim down many aspects of it (classes, story, etc.) just like how BG3 was limited to cap 12 and certain choices in the branching narrative.

    • @MichaelWard-le1ck
      @MichaelWard-le1ck Před 9 měsíci +3

      Baldurs gate 3 really wasn’t that big budget a game. They funded the game themselves using the money they made from divinity original sin 2. Completely self funded with no publisher and they aren’t a wealthy company

    • @peterbernhard6087
      @peterbernhard6087 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@MichaelWard-le1ck Still, as far as my internet information goes its 100 mio. BG3 (which is much) and only 2 Mio. Pathfinder. (So 50x as i said)
      I have not played BG3 yet. I am in act 3 of Pathfinder... but i think it is a bit to big for me.. i don't know if i can find enough motivation to finish it.

    • @dontknowdontknow9769
      @dontknowdontknow9769 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@MichaelWard-le1ck so they made exclusive for stadia without getting paid? smart of them
      then considering all the voice acting,animation(like 240 mocap) and everything else?
      the game was atleast 100 milion the early access HELPED them

  • @Enos666
    @Enos666 Před 9 měsíci +23

    I feel like for many CRPG fans there is one more stealthy advantage that Larian has over the pathfinder games outside of production value and thats multiplayer.
    I suspect that while a lot of us play single player exclusively I personally know a lot of people who quietly play MP with their partners/friends and a somewhat streamlined character generation and levelling options helps with reducing the amount of time players spend on min-maxing their builds and more time adventuring and engaging with the story/party.

    • @thegrimsaxon790
      @thegrimsaxon790 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Seems like co-op might be on its way to becoming a standard in CRPGs as Owlcat just announced it for Rogue Trader too.

    • @progamasEjogos
      @progamasEjogos Před 8 měsíci

      I know a LOT of people that don't play games unless it have a multiplayer, It is really dumb for me, but idk maybe single player is not for everyone

  • @rythem17
    @rythem17 Před 9 měsíci +16

    Enjoyed both, hard one for me really. BG3 definitely more favorable for the masses, Wrath is deeper with mechanics and builds possible, plus I’m a 3.5 person also. In the end I don’t think BG3 will get as much play time as I put into Wrath. Imagine Wrath with BG3’s production value, one can dream.

    • @TheR6R6R
      @TheR6R6R Před 9 měsíci +5

      Imagine WotR with BG3's production AND multiplayer. That's something I'd play for years with my group.

  • @Blackwolf-gr6ch
    @Blackwolf-gr6ch Před 9 měsíci +19

    really hope the success of bg3 gives more interest for this genre, wotr is amazing and warhammer 40k rogue trader looks absolutely amazing, played the beta and it's just great

    • @waltblackadar4690
      @waltblackadar4690 Před 9 měsíci

      Don't forget Lamplighters League either. Not positive that's going to be awesome but Harebrained does have a good track record.

    • @Eskeletor_210
      @Eskeletor_210 Před 9 měsíci

      I’m really excited on rogue trader, just really want to get all the origin stuff and fluff

  • @paulthebored6782
    @paulthebored6782 Před 9 měsíci +57

    This is truly a clash between two Titans. I love them both and i dream the day when a game that combines the graphics and the full voice-overs of BG3 with the Pathfinder class and combat system is released.

    • @elementz301
      @elementz301 Před 9 měsíci +8

      I think this will become standard for bigger CRPGs. I certainly don't think Divinity 3 would backpedal away from the cinematic stuff. Owlcat will probably try to go that direction with the next Pathfinder after the huge success of BG3 breaking into the mainstream. InXile had a lot of cinematic scenes in Wasteland 3. Not nearly to the level of BG3, but it shows they were thinking about it.

    • @genevievec.8002
      @genevievec.8002 Před 9 měsíci +6

      I would love to have a Pathfinder game with some changes to the gameplay system more like BG3 did. Totally a personal preference though.
      I love Pathfinder, but the system is not built for a videogame, and while I deeply respect Owlcat for getting such a close recreation, I'd rather have the experience of it as a video game (specifically combat and map gameplay) be more accessible and enjoyable than have a close to 1:1 recreation of the system.
      I also feel like a lot of CRPGs are trying to fit the exact mold of the older CRPGs, and it's boxed then into some UI choices I think could be heavily improved (I hate drag and select in games like BG1/2 and the Pathfinder games - it feels like I'm moving desktop icons).

    • @paulthebored6782
      @paulthebored6782 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@genevievec.8002 Yeah, i mean when it comes to the class and combat systems it all boils down to personal preference. I played several campaigns in D&D 3.5 and never played any other version of D&D, so Pathfinder feels more familiar compared to BG3. I would be satisfied if Larian manages to release an expansion for BG3 with the lvl cap increased to 20 and the full spell list for all the casters. We shall see.

    • @DPtdryste
      @DPtdryste Před 9 měsíci

      Your favorite movies and some of the best movies of all time would be worse if some of the most tense narrative moments were delivered from a zoom out camera where the characters are all standing still with their hands at their sides.

    • @Denkart
      @Denkart Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@DPtdrysteThat's true but it's also true that there are a lot of books out there that are much better than most movies. Visuals really aren't everything. Nice to have good graphics and cinematics for sure but the lack of them in wrath really didn't bother me at all.

  • @novesix69
    @novesix69 Před 9 měsíci +19

    Gameplay is the main element that dictates my enjoyment of a game.
    In Pathfinder, you win with a pre fight plan (your build and your pre buffs), the encounter itself and how you play has a much lesser impact.
    Whereas in Baldur's Gate 3, you have fewer possibilities but the decisions you take during an encounter have a greater impact.

    • @blushingralseiuwu2222
      @blushingralseiuwu2222 Před 9 měsíci +2

      True, probably why I just end up playin on easy difficulty to not bother with buffs and focusing more on the fight itself.

    • @jRsqILVOY
      @jRsqILVOY Před 9 měsíci +4

      I hate the focus on tedious pre-buffs, and being forced to save-scum since you can't retreat from or avoid a lot of combat. BG3 is a massive improvement on that (I've been playing mostly Ironman).

    • @teongrey91
      @teongrey91 Před 9 měsíci

      The mechanics of concentration simply does not allow you to take all the buffs before the fight. Also, the arsenal of spells, especially the AOE in BG3 is very weak, in fact, only fireball is the only AOE with good damage that is available to us throughout the half game. And even at the end we don't have many options for big AOE damage. I started to get a little bored during the fights towards the end of the game. But you are right about WoTR, the result of most fights depends on the preparation of the party before the fight.

    • @jRsqILVOY
      @jRsqILVOY Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@teongrey91 But that's a good thing because pre-buffing is incredibly boring and tedious and leads to save-scumming.
      Yeah, my main issue with BG3 combat was that later in the game the enemies start to stack resistances, and there's still very few enemy mages or item usage compared to BG1+2.

    • @teongrey91
      @teongrey91 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jRsqILVOY i'm use BubbleBuffs mod, to get buffs in 1 click, but in a game without a mod, this is a real pain.

  • @yari4046
    @yari4046 Před 9 měsíci +17

    i do think crunchy systems like pathfinder 1e and 3.5 dnd are good for video games since games do most of the calculations for you, during a tabletop session it's fine if there are some complicated rules but you want to minimize the amount of calculations since you dont want to slow down the game unnecessarily

  • @Lemurion287
    @Lemurion287 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Great video, I love both games and agree with almost all your points. Can't wait for more from both studios--and yes, I have Rogue Trader as well.

  • @wraithalcon
    @wraithalcon Před 9 měsíci +23

    I definitely agree with your sentiments. To me, WotR is more like a "meatgrinder" session and BG3 is more of a "casual" session. I can also definitely say that I made the character I wanted in WotR, but I felt more immersed and connected with my character in BG3. Both are amazing games though, and the greatest part is we don't have to choose between them...we live in a world where both exist! =D

  • @sergeantamol497
    @sergeantamol497 Před 9 měsíci +95

    Something WOTR mostly lacks while BG3 excels at that you didn't mention is the environmental aspect to combat.

    • @danboyd6180
      @danboyd6180 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Thank you that is the best part of combat in BG3. WOTR is harder but the verticality make BG3 more fun

    • @RetVersus
      @RetVersus Před 9 měsíci +22

      As a predominantly action game player this is exactly why BG3 landed so well, where PF is always gonna be a hard sell. To overlook it is to misunderstand that some of us need physicality to connect with a combat system.

    • @Daniel92CZ
      @Daniel92CZ Před 9 měsíci +5

      Yeah wotr don't have a barrelmancer class :D.

    • @c0n33r
      @c0n33r Před 9 měsíci +15

      Immersive sim ftw. So much more fulfilling than winning through math and 30 minutes of buffing for me personally.

    • @sergeantamol497
      @sergeantamol497 Před 9 měsíci +3

      I really love how fun and useful pushing and jumping is in the game.

  • @mrverminski7914
    @mrverminski7914 Před 9 měsíci +36

    I love Wotr, but the game is much more of a hassle and a headache in general.
    And the dependency on buffs is obnoxious, since every fight you have to cast six hundred buffs on to win a fight X)

    • @chuckles471
      @chuckles471 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Yeah, my biggest problem with the game is buffing.
      Most games I turn the difficulty up for new playthroughs. But Pathfinder is the only game I turn down just so I not having to buff before every fight.

    • @Shrews85
      @Shrews85 Před 9 měsíci +6

      My 3 biggest issues with WotR:
      - Pre-buffing
      - The crusade system, which you can turn off but locks out content
      - Filler combat
      The first two I just fixed with mods, and honestly made the game amazing. I sunk sooooo much time into WotR.
      The filler combat is not as easy to fix. It just lead me to skip certain content on subsequent playthroughs. Never do Nenios quest. I also tend to burnout part way through act 3 and just skip a bunch of content to do finish the game.

    • @mikedelta1441
      @mikedelta1441 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ...and patching up after every fight. Level and ability drains etc. After every fight its a chore to get back to where you were.

    • @mrverminski7914
      @mrverminski7914 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Shrews85 Nenio's quest is the only shit that keeps me from playing the game again, tbh X)

    • @kano101435
      @kano101435 Před 9 měsíci

      what mods di you run for the balancing i actually liked the crusade but the 100 buffs combat is what made me stop enjoying it like halfway in@@Shrews85

  • @Vaytra
    @Vaytra Před 9 měsíci +26

    Great video! This really boils down to a comparison of Pathfinder and D&D 5e in a lot of ways! I have played D&D 5e for a while, but have some friends that played Pathfinder, and the things you have mentioned are always comparisons that come up. My issue... Pathfinder is intimidating! There are a lot of things in D&D 5e and then people say - but there's more in Pathfinder, and I get scared away haha! I like mechanics, but I don't think I am a mechanics-lord like you and other Pathfinder people. However, I think its awesome that we have both Tabletop games, for the different styles of players. I may someday try out Pathfinder WOTR just to see if I can hack it... haha!

    • @turdleyurtle
      @turdleyurtle Před 9 měsíci +6

      Honestly I think pf2e being made into a computer game will be an amazing sweet spot between "almost no choices 5e" and "very complex" pf1.

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Před 9 měsíci +5

      PF2 looks very intimidating but that's in large parts because it's very frontloaded. Once you understand the rules, it's much easier to work with.
      PF1 as an extension of 3.5 is just a system that started with a boatload of stuff already present. Though as somebody who grew up with the earlier systems, i find 5E to be the other extreme, being overly simplistic and often outright anemic, lacking clear rules for common issues. Saying it allows for more roleplay is missing the mark in my opinion. There are other systems much more focused on that, where the roleplay is actually relevant to things. 5E just has so many holes in its rulesystem that you pretty much have to make up stuff yourself to get anything done.
      This also makes the system far harder on a DM, as they have to come up with nearly everything themself. In PF2, they will always at least have a guideline available if they so choose.

    • @dalujo
      @dalujo Před 9 měsíci

      Mechanics lord is just artificer subclass tbf

    • @dsinemoi1mouton
      @dsinemoi1mouton Před 9 měsíci +1

      You have very good guides on the internet for a much more relaxed adventure. + there are a dozen of difficulty levels, so you can really choose something around easy / medium and having no problem for your first playthrough.
      For each class, there is a complexity level, which lets you know how easy it will be to mess up your class.
      So choose an easy class, an easy difficulty, maybe some guide, and the game will be a breeze. You'll learn things along the way and will eventually replay a new build on higher difficulty.

  • @maegrenofwithy2763
    @maegrenofwithy2763 Před 9 měsíci +7

    great video. So many people sleeping on Wrath, It's such a great game. You can get your own chaos dragon who loves cookies, you can become a lich, music is better, the battle for the city is brilliant, and Wrath has what BG3 does not, a clear antagonist, Areelu Vorlesh, and a truly hidden outcome that is very very difficult to pull off.

  • @CalculatorCulture
    @CalculatorCulture Před 9 měsíci +8

    This is a great comparison of the single-player experience of both games. BG3 also supports multi-player campaigns though which is a totally different experience and not really covered by the video.

    • @TheR6R6R
      @TheR6R6R Před 9 měsíci

      Multiplayer is the biggest reason why I'm now spending more time in BG3 than WotR, despite preferring WotR in pretty much every other aspect outside of presentation/production value. After all, even a bad game can be fun with friends, and a good game usually leads to cathartic moments you'll never be able to replicate in a singleplayer experience.
      I believe multiplayer and modding are two of the strongest factors that could keep a game's community alive. WotR has one, BG3 has both.

  • @killercat50y
    @killercat50y Před 9 měsíci +4

    Baldur's Gate 3 really introduced me into these kind of games and proved that I like them, so I'm gonna check this out next, thank you!

  • @witcherjohn3440
    @witcherjohn3440 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I’m a dnd 3.5 player for over 20 years now and even I find pathfinder overwhelming it’s crazy big.
    I wasn’t expecting that much from a video game plus seeing all those dlcs,that add loads of races classes
    It’s really intense.
    I feel like this would be the only game I play until I die

  • @AlphaPsionic
    @AlphaPsionic Před 6 měsíci +2

    I have just come off finishing my 2nd playthrough of BG3 in Tactician!
    Perfectly summarized video! Honestly, cant be a better attempt at explaining these differences.
    I think what you touched, but could not quite expand, is that in general BG3, has simply helped introduce and broaden the appeal of cRPG genre to a wider audience. That is its greatest achievement.
    On the other hand, it simply surprised me how easy the game was, and annoyed me that character creation did not show level progression like Pathfinder.
    As, i head into another run of Pathfinder to finish Azata(which i never did before), for me, having played a lot of cRPGs before, WoTR is simply the better game overall. Amazing role-playing moments in its own right for each path, great mechanical depth (spent my first 350 hrs making a hybrid skald to Trickster, before skalds were known to be OP), and a great looking game in its own right.
    I loved BG3. But i love Pathfinder more, and for me, is the better game.

  • @cameronharrington6608
    @cameronharrington6608 Před 9 měsíci +16

    Got into WotR from the Mandalore video and don't regret it. It was a big learning curve but the characters and storymade it worth it. Looking forward to playing BG3 just got to finish disco elysim first. Thanks for the video and your perspective on the subject.

  • @davidlopez6517
    @davidlopez6517 Před 9 měsíci +40

    Two of my favorite games of all time.
    WOTR felt like a very complete game. The content was incredible.
    BG3 is fantastic, but some parts do feel lacking, especially the later acts
    *edit* @mortisimal gave me a like. Definitely made my day

    • @hazeem6715
      @hazeem6715 Před 9 měsíci +2

      WotR feels complete until you play one of the more “alternative” Mythic Paths

    • @davidlopez6517
      @davidlopez6517 Před 9 měsíci +14

      @hazeem6715 you mean after sinking your teeth into over 100 hours of content?
      Bg3 starts feeling lacking early into act 2. Once again it's still a fantastic game, but comparing it to WOTR in terms of how complete it feels is night and day

    • @kringkingen
      @kringkingen Před 9 měsíci +4

      I really hope they fix up act 3 and quick, it could and sure as hell will be the best act if they fix all the issues there.

    • @alexjordan3830
      @alexjordan3830 Před 9 měsíci +1

      That's interesting, because I found Act 5 of WoTR to suck so much.

    • @davidlopez6517
      @davidlopez6517 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@alexjordan3830 Act 5 was hit and miss for me. Some of the best moments of the game coupled with a little bit of fatigue from doing so much. I think that's when I officially started getting tired of the game.
      With that being said, I love both games

  • @sreeko1
    @sreeko1 Před 9 měsíci

    This was the Most awaited video for me, can't believe it's been 2 weeks since this was out, was busy playing BG3 last weekend (Still in act 3, couldn't make much progreass as it kept crashing every save reload :/) and Starfield this weekend. It's good to know that even after playing BG3, WotR mechanism will be fun to try. BG3 is a fairly easy game, so I am hoping that WotR will be challenging. Great video.

  • @ralanbek95
    @ralanbek95 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Soothing content uploaded in my time of need. Thanks Mort 🥴

  • @kazmanne4972
    @kazmanne4972 Před 9 měsíci +18

    Godclaw blessing upon you. Helped greatly finishing two WotR campaign despite me being an idiot at math but loving the complexity and the stat reading nonetheless i think Pathfinder because of it's difficulty is deemed to stay this hiden masterpiece. While BG3 is a well awaited refreshing take with tremendous polishing thanks to Larian to the Crpg genre.

  • @T3CHN0M4D
    @T3CHN0M4D Před 9 měsíci +8

    cRPGs are in a great place at the moment. the first game I ever bought was wizardry 7 and it's amazing when you now look at BG3 the long way we've come. And I just love it that we can have games like WOTR, BG3 and Disco Elysium but also Cyberpunk and soon Starfield and they all have a good healthy customer base. yeah as I said a great place.

    • @waltblackadar4690
      @waltblackadar4690 Před 9 měsíci

      Don't forget Lamplighters League either. Not positive that's going to be awesome but Harebrained does have a good track record.

    • @T3CHN0M4D
      @T3CHN0M4D Před 9 měsíci

      @@waltblackadar4690 yeah that's right. I love the setting and really liked their shadowrun games

  • @dbuckley5302
    @dbuckley5302 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The genre is in such a great place! Thanks for the video. Can't wait for some Rogue Trader soon

  • @videogamesareforadults5710
    @videogamesareforadults5710 Před 9 měsíci

    Exactly the kind of video I was looking for !!!! GReat upload. I watch all your videos all to the end... Happy viewer here

  • @yari4046
    @yari4046 Před 9 měsíci +40

    you know that crpg fans are eating well when they start debating abt which crpg is better than the others

  • @spellandshield
    @spellandshield Před 9 měsíci +23

    I enjoy both of them. It really is apples and oranges. WOTR is a great power fantasy, one of the best, and BG3 is, how should I put it? A great adventure. I like them for different reasons, not too disimilar to the ones you laid out in your video.

    • @FelixGaunt
      @FelixGaunt Před 9 měsíci +2

      Wish BG3 used 1e, then it'd be perfect. Leveling in BG3 is....kinda depressing? :-(

  • @wolf1nsoul
    @wolf1nsoul Před 9 měsíci +1

    Been waiting for this one, since you did WOTW vs DOS2.
    Let's go!

  • @JLow6
    @JLow6 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I just have to say that the gamer in me loves you for how you go about your thoughts and reviews.
    The best "mind" for this sort of thing for games I've ever known was Adam Sessler, and you remind me of him.

  • @tekelupharsin4426
    @tekelupharsin4426 Před 9 měsíci +8

    The charm of Divinity Original Sin 2 (particularly Fort Joy) is still one of the most memorable experiences I've ever had in a video game (I've been gaming since NES). I haven't tried BG3 yet, but from the videos I've seen of the gameplay, I don't know how much of that DoS2 charm spills over into it. I'm anxious to find out when I have some time to play it.

    • @johnsnow5125
      @johnsnow5125 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Act 1 is definitely the highlight of BG3, easily. Act 1 is pretty huge on your first playthrough, if you do everything. The further I got into BG3, the less enthusiastic I was about it, but it's still a pretty great game - and way above D:OS2, for me, at least

    • @TheKingProto
      @TheKingProto Před 9 měsíci

      I foresee a BG3 Definitive Edition coming in a few years much like how they did with D:OS2@@johnsnow5125

    • @Trollstrolch
      @Trollstrolch Před 9 měsíci

      Curious if and how much they will polish act 3+ with patches

    • @skullreda2762
      @skullreda2762 Před 9 měsíci

      @@johnsnow5125 im in act 2 and so far i enjoyed it more than act 1 maybe because i prefer grim and dark over light xd

    • @johnsnow5125
      @johnsnow5125 Před 9 měsíci

      @@skullreda2762 all the extended Thorm familiy is really cool, they're definitely the highlight of the act and the nurses are hilarious. Most of the rest of the act is just annoying and monotone for me, though, I only really liked the town and tower

  • @zan1639
    @zan1639 Před 9 měsíci +42

    Kingdom management and Crusade is likely what holds Pathfinder back a bit.

    • @wex28008
      @wex28008 Před 9 měsíci +10

      Idk about that, I am currently in Act 2 of WotR and so far the crusade is one of my favourite parts of the game

    • @zan1639
      @zan1639 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Yeah some will like it obviously. But the majority are not looking for something like that in an rpg.

    • @johnsnow5125
      @johnsnow5125 Před 9 měsíci

      @@wex28008 the battles are very tedious and EXTREMELY unbalanced in later acts. The council discussions and choices you make in between battles are way more interesting than the actual battles, I really do recommend modding that part of game away. Btw, if you enjoy this gameplay, check out Heroes of Might and Magic, or the very recent and superb Age of Wonder 4

    • @BigBoss-rw4mn
      @BigBoss-rw4mn Před 7 měsíci +1

      You do not have to do crusades. I set it to auto management, so your complaint is really valid nor viable 😂

    • @zan1639
      @zan1639 Před 7 měsíci

      @@BigBoss-rw4mn not when they have an ending locked behind it
      Then again I quit around act 3 around the backer content area(forgot the name) because it got a bit too tedious with thousand buffs and all. I might give it a try again some time if i ever get the time. But it's not my priority.

  • @borat656
    @borat656 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I waited a few days to comment because I wanted to re-watch this video after some time has passed and I can really think about what is being said. Ultimately I think you present the best possible approach: they are very different games whose ultimate goals are quite different, although I admittedly think that we're ultimately dealing with shades of grey here. I've played both games and enjoy them both, so I'm not dunking on one game over the other. It's just a fact that Wrath of the Righteous has more depth and diversity to its system. However, it's an insanely deep system, so having less complexity than WotR is hardly putting you in being overly simplistic. BG3 is, relative even to something like Dragon Age: Origins, much more complex. Consequently, I do think it's fair to wish that the system offered more challenges to flex or lean into that complexity. That said, given the production values, it's difficult to imagine something going that hard, which is another thing that I think makes the discussion a bit more difficult. It's absolutely fair to say that Pathfinder has a lot more options in terms of mythic paths and choice, but given the difference in cost, I find BG3 to be absolutely fantastic with the amount of variation it presents.
    I guess the TL:DR is, when comparing these games to each other, it can get very easy to lose context. A lot will depend on individual preference, and that's FINE. The best part is that we have so many quality options to chose from. I would love to see what Owlcat would do with a BG3-size budget (which is highly unlikely). Not because I think they would do it better, or show Larian how it's done, but because I respect both studios and what each one excels at. I can't lie: the production of BG3 only confirms what I felt with Dragon Age: Origins: even as someone who reads much more than he games, the production value of fully voiced and animated characters draw me into a video game in a way that text-boxes cannot.
    Should there be another CRPG drought, lord knows we've gotten enough quality games over the past several years to keep us content for decades to come.

  • @dustinswafford9232
    @dustinswafford9232 Před 9 měsíci

    I've been thinking about this since I started playing BG3. I've been waiting to hear your take!

  • @TheLabecki
    @TheLabecki Před 9 měsíci +33

    One of the things I like about BG3 over WotR is that it designed to be turn-based and, as a result, there are far fewer battles, and many of the battles are at least somewhat memorable: most battles are unique and have a definite purpose. In WotR many areas just throw you into battle after battle, often against the same enemies, and I find most of those battles to be tedious and cannot remember them distinctly, because many of them are almost almost identical to one another (aside from that, I really did like WofR though).

    • @isthou
      @isthou Před 9 měsíci +5

      commented about the same, right there with you, as much as i like wrath, at this point i would disable all combats if I could lol

    • @TheR6R6R
      @TheR6R6R Před 9 měsíci +5

      Most encounters in WotR are just stat checks. Success ultimately comes through preparation and, dare I say it, metagaming. This is why the character building part needs to be perfect, and Owlcat delivers on that.
      Other than that, BG3 is clearly better in encounter design. Grym and Ansur come to mind as fights that maximize the potential of turn-based combat.

    • @geoDB.
      @geoDB. Před 9 měsíci +5

      BG better story and role play, pathfinder more combat and more build variety

    • @Edwardlloyd1
      @Edwardlloyd1 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@geoDB. lol bg is definitely not better for role play

    • @geoDB.
      @geoDB. Před 9 měsíci +1

      Ye man pathfinder math grind is more trench than the Somne... just how the game is

  • @ThundraBoy666
    @ThundraBoy666 Před 9 měsíci +31

    I have to say my biggest gripe with BG3 is actually the level cap, or rather how quickly you reach it. I was level 12 shortly into reaching the city and that area is HUGE. For me, leveling up and looking forward to power increases is a huge driving motivator, which pretty much made me rush all my companion's stories and the main story once I've reached the cap, skipping most of the side stuff. Which is a shame, as I've been really enjoying the game until that point, doing pretty much everything it had to offer (maybe my playstyle is also at fault here, I do need to discover everything and can't skip the smallest side quest).

    • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
      @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Před 9 měsíci +7

      D&D ultimately is more fun at lower levels. It's why I enjoyed BG1 more than BG2. I think being level 12 as you go into Baldur's Gate is a bit much. You probably should be level 6 or 7 in reality but Act 3 is the end game, so they need you to be able to reach the highest level..

    • @NineNoRouge
      @NineNoRouge Před 9 měsíci +3

      This was my main issue as well. I can't wait for a good mod that removes the level cap.

    • @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968
      @cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@NineNoRouge You cannot remove the level cap as it's impossible to level up beyond level 12 because Larian just haven't implemented anything beyond it.

    • @JohnnyStrelok
      @JohnnyStrelok Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@cmdr.jabozerstorer3968 You can remove the level cap, but no single class can go beyond 12, or the game breaks.

    • @antarath517
      @antarath517 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@NineNoRouge Levels 12-20 just aren't coded in for any class, so that's gonna take a REALLY long time to mod in

  • @anonj.9440
    @anonj.9440 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the well thought out comparison! Maybe I've been too focused on what both games don't have (imo), versus what they do great at.

  • @BlueShirtRedVest
    @BlueShirtRedVest Před 9 měsíci +1

    I love both. I think BG3 will actually lead to more people playing WotR and Pillars etc. I think people BG3 will get new people into CRPGS/ISO-RPGs and they'll look for more giving the a small bump in sales a few months from now. Also, I'd love for you to do a video that's something like "the parts I'd use from every CRPG I've played to make my perfect game." Like what you'd take WotR, BG3, Pillars, Divinity, Dragon Run(s), Tyranny, Encased and whatever other games you love. Just a fun light appreciative video of what you love from each of them.

  • @Stonepot113
    @Stonepot113 Před 9 měsíci +49

    WOTR unfair is one of the greatest difficulties in video game history. It’s brutal and unforgiving and incredibly satisfying. For me. 😊

    • @voidtalongaming4637
      @voidtalongaming4637 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I've done two full playthroughs but the amount of system mastery and exploitation required to do Unfair WoTR really killed my enjoyment. I went back to doing Casual runs and just having fun doing whatever on Real-Time combat. Turn based takes waaay too long.

    • @Stonepot113
      @Stonepot113 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@voidtalongaming4637 that’s what I love about it. You don’t need exploits. You can beat every fight in the game straight up, but you need system mastery.

    • @voidtalongaming4637
      @voidtalongaming4637 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@Stonepot113 Fair point, I would call myself lazy then. Most guides for Unfair I found pretty much had a spreadsheet of pre-fight buffing and while I may have done that 15 some years ago now I just enjoy playing.
      Makes me realize that the real reason 'easier' difficulties exist is for folks who don't have the time to burn or desire to burn.
      That said I'll still go hard core challenge mode on action RPGs for some reason. Personally, i'm glad you have found enjoyment from Unfair and that it's available for players like yourself. Everyone deserves a difficulty for them and WoTR does a fantastic job at letting you customize that experience.

    • @OldyAlbert
      @OldyAlbert Před 9 měsíci

      Yet to play WOTR but really enjoyed my blind unfair playthough of Kingmaker. Kinda too long, since battles take alot of time and the amount of the same encounters clearly balanced for right-click realtime gameplay not turnbased "i min-max every turn"-gameplay, but i still much prefer that then a game being boring. Wich tbh battle gameplay-wise alot of RPGs are even on hardest setting.
      I don't mind anyone playing on easier difficulties but let me choose my hard ones. Larian's OS1&2 is baby easy even on tactitian without mods, haven't played BG3 yet but sounds like nothing changed much in that departement. I'll wait for major patches and play with some hardmode mod maybe a year+ from now.

    • @Stonepot113
      @Stonepot113 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@OldyAlbert BG3 is so much fun. It is incredible. That being said, it’s max difficulty is like Daring on Pathfinder.
      I found Kingmaker Unfair to be harder in the early game that WOTR. Late game, there is no comparison though. WOTR all the way.

  • @Transcedant
    @Transcedant Před 9 měsíci +8

    surprised you didn't touch on narrative and character writing at all. im not done with bg3 yet, but i generally like and prefer wotr's (and kingmaker's) companions more than bg3's.

    • @roddbroward9876
      @roddbroward9876 Před 9 měsíci +3

      I'm not sure if I'm misremembering, but I feel like WotR companions had a lot more to say about things out in the open and more directly interacted with other NPCs. In BG3 they feel more passive and more like you're their spokesperson or something, unless you're doing one of their quests directly.

    • @Transcedant
      @Transcedant Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@mikeity2009 don't agree. wenduag and daeran are better written versions of the tropes lae'zel and astarion are respectively, and lae'zel is the best written companion in bg3. regill is also great. the rest are a mix of good to bad, the worst of which is probably either sosiel or greybor.
      that being said, kingmaker's companions are better than both games.
      larian has a bad habit of writing characters in an edgy way (which isn't necessarily bad) but also in a way where these edgy characters treat the world like a witty game they're playing, often throwing out nonchalant or aloof quips where it was inappropriate to do so given the circumstances the story. this problem was alleviated a lot in bg3 which i appreciate, however. like 4 of dos2's companions are all incredibly similar in tone and attitude, and i was hoping that issue would improve for bg3 and it did. lae'zel is evidence of that.
      edit: i'll also give owlcat tons and tons of credit for writing probably the best portrayal of a poly relationship i have ever seen in games in Octavia and Regongar. it's one thing to include one at all, but it's another to really nail it.

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      That’s very subjective, BG3 companions are a highlight just for the performance.
      They likely don’t have as much line of dialogue but the step up in performance compared to other RPG it what make them feel alive and interesting.

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      @@roddbroward9876Cause every line of dialogue written need to be fully mo cap and animated + voice acted by very good voice actors.

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      @@TranscedantAgain that’s very subjective, there are many reason to prefer BG3 companions other than pure writing quality, and bg3 companions will have less dialogue cause they are fully animated.
      Imo just the performance is enough.

  • @jbones1453
    @jbones1453 Před 9 měsíci

    Great video! I’m loving bg3 because I’m not as familiar with the genre as I should be. I e played others but never really take the time to fully understand the systems like I should. I also have WotR but haven’t fired it up yet. Hopefully will this year because I love the idea of the mythic paths.

  • @FM-ge3nf
    @FM-ge3nf Před 9 měsíci +1

    Agree with all your points. As someone who has been obsessed with CRPG's since Ultima 7 and BG1, I definitely missed the depth of mechanics and classes that WOTR has. But BG3 was still a phenomenal game regardless and when I look at where CRPG's were 10 years ago I am just thrilled to see games like both of these being made.
    Also I will just add that despite it being a simpler system than WOTR, it doesn't feel like they are actively trying to dumb RPG's down to appeal to a mass audience. Watching Bethesda, Bioware and many others do that to their games was heartbeaking, and I'm really hoping that doesn't end up being the way Obsidian goes now that they are shifting away from isometric (though I understand the need since Pillars 2 sadly didn't make money despite being a top tier entry to the genre). The fact that we have even two active studios making isometric CRPG's with giant scopes that can sit up there with the best of all time is fantastic considering the genre was all but dead for over a decade.

  • @gemodemplay415
    @gemodemplay415 Před 9 měsíci +30

    I was thinking about this topic but with Bg3 vs Solasta. I am a Solasta guy but I also enjoyed Larian's work in the past. I am 60+ hours in Bg3 and I can say that I like Solasta more as a D&D game but I like Bg3 more as a game overall.

    • @franBa22
      @franBa22 Před 9 měsíci +10

      I totally agree! When I started BG3 I found myself looking for things that Solasta does perfectly, like readying actions. Solasta's 5E implementation is really really good.

    • @jameyburnett2699
      @jameyburnett2699 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The lack of delay, for your initiative is really annoying in BG3, and reading in action is very nice in the other.

    • @Deathmvp1
      @Deathmvp1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yea I was hoping the vid would have been Bg3 vs Solasta. For me so far (still in act one). I think BG3 has a better campain but Solasta you can make your own campain for more replay.

    • @jonathanpickles2946
      @jonathanpickles2946 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Solasta is a great D&D emulator and I have had fun playing the designer dungeons coop even though there is next to no story. BG3 is a probably a better game and obviously a much more polished product. I always say Solasta is the heir to Icewind Dale which is a linear combat sim with a self made party. I like it much better than IWD though which bored me. BG3 is a worthy heir to BG 1 and 2.

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@jonathanpickles2946 I'd say the biggest strength of Solasta is the editor more than anything else, with the default campaigns being more a proof of concept. It probably has far more potential at longevity than BG3 has for that reason.

  • @_scytale_7620
    @_scytale_7620 Před 9 měsíci +64

    If they merged together it'd probably result in the best game of all time. Build options and branching story paths of WOTR with production value, writing, immersion and rp of BG3 would be nuts

    • @aravindpallippara1577
      @aravindpallippara1577 Před 9 měsíci +7

      Just finished pillars of eternity, and it's the 3rd in the philosophical games around after Planescape torment and kotor 2
      I will see if kingmaker is adept at the storytelling

    • @PainkRd
      @PainkRd Před 9 měsíci +2

      And coop option on top of that as well, would be a best game indeed.

    • @theredcomet5670
      @theredcomet5670 Před 9 měsíci +22

      WOTR has much better roleplaying and writing than BG3 in my opinion. Honestly I haven't really liked most of the writing in BG3.

    • @99Bobson
      @99Bobson Před 9 měsíci +25

      "Writing, Immersion" ?????????
      Have we played the same game?
      I played it twice now btw, one normal playthrough and one Dark Urge, and if you ask me, the game is great, but what carries it is definitely the production value, not the story/writing/plot.
      Also the "roleplaying" really isn't as big as people claim it to be, and I was saddened to find that out on my second playthrough.

    • @liviuperianu5499
      @liviuperianu5499 Před 9 měsíci +14

      The characters are more interesting in WOTR

  • @aafia3555
    @aafia3555 Před 9 měsíci

    Great video, I would like to add to something you touched on in the video and that is that wrath of the righteous is better at explaining how things work through tool tips and the combat log, I used those two alone to learn everything there is to know about mechanics, at the very least 90% of it. when I tried to do the same in BG3 I realized combat log doesn't fully explain everything, for example it can show you your attack rolls, but no where was I able to find damage rolls and how they are calculated. I and I am someone who was not familiar with crpgs when I first played Wrath of the righteous, my only experience in the genre before it was divinity original sin 2. so I would argue that wrath of the righteous is somewhat easier to learn even if it requires more time to do so.

  • @emceeunderdogrising
    @emceeunderdogrising Před 7 měsíci +2

    I just played both games. BG3 is obviously superior in budget and story. But there are some things in WotR that are actually better. The options for difficulty are really great. WotR also uses the person in your party with the highest stat for each check. Click a trap and your rogue goes for it automatically. WotR also has way superior animal companions and you can mount a horse. I really liked both. WotR was surprisingly good.

  • @MGMare
    @MGMare Před 9 měsíci +4

    Pathfinder WOTR will always be my favourite CRPG game. It introduced me to the genre and it will always hold first place in the CRPG games for me. Was a bit skeptical when I bought it and was afraid I won't like it but man am I glad I did. Both are great games and I hope we get to see more of these games from Owlcat and Larian.

  • @alsaiduq4363
    @alsaiduq4363 Před 9 měsíci +48

    Personally, i preffer Wrath because of ruleset of Pathfinder is way more appealing to me than 5E. There's just way more options.

    • @Shrews85
      @Shrews85 Před 9 měsíci +6

      I think this will always be based on personal preference for people just based on if they like the Pathfinder or 5e ruleset.
      Pathfinder: People love the customization and min/max potential. People bounce off of how obtuse and counter-intuitive the rules can be. It's very easy to make a bad character. WotR really taught me to enjoy the game, but I hated it on tabletop. I still prefer it as a video game. I'd love to see Owlcat to try 2e.
      5e: Easy to pick up and play. If you single class you can't really make a bad character. Bounding of numbers stop things from getting too crazy. People used to systems like Pathfinder often dislike inability to customize and lack of min/max potential. BG3 offers more chances with crazy items and house rules.

    • @Lefthandrightband
      @Lefthandrightband Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@@Shrews85 it really boils down do you like to do cool shit or do you want to do basic stuff. Wotr is the insanely awesome deep game. While bg3 is really not that in depth at all

    • @Lefthandrightband
      @Lefthandrightband Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@Shrews85 bg3 doesnt have many crazy items idk what are you talking about

    • @Shrews85
      @Shrews85 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@Lefthandrightband either you're not that far in, or we have very different definitions of crazy. The items do ramp up as the game goes on. There are some basic ones that just provide proficiencies or allow you to use CHA or such for melee attacks.
      There are a lot that provide unique buffs. Some might synergize well with alternating between melee and spell casting. There are a lot of unique weapon attacks on the game. People do some pretty fun theory crafting with mixing and matching different items and builds.

    • @Lefthandrightband
      @Lefthandrightband Před 9 měsíci

      @@Shrews85 i beat the game already and am on my second playthrough. The items left a lot to be desired. They could have done a lot more . I like the game and im having a ton of fun but I mean if we are comparing this game to wotr it really is a big gap. Only thing holding back wotr is the 30 buffs every rest which you can use a mod to skip. The crusade management is skipable but I heard you miss out on things by using it and the mod for it is outdated. So 1 of the 2 main problems can be negated with a mod and the other you can skip at create a character and use a mod to get what you missed or just say fk it. Wotr is literally the best game crpg ever with these 2 things fixed.

  • @JuanTorres-zo5xs
    @JuanTorres-zo5xs Před 9 měsíci

    Amazing video as usual I’m currently beating BG1 then 2 for the first time. What game should I play next to get more understanding of these type of games.

  • @jan-marekschneider9773
    @jan-marekschneider9773 Před 9 měsíci +3

    They both feel like different subgenres for me personally. I always only play on the highest difficulty and in BG3 I could just hop in and go for whichever build that I wanted without any challenge at all and roleplay the way that I wanted (took a bard specifically for that). For WOTR I had to plan out every single decision that I would make and I had to study almost more than I played (which I absolutely loved). Both are definitely really good games but fulfill completely different player needs. I will definitely replay BG3 for the writing (especially if they fix up the evil path and act 3 in the future) and play it together with friends again as well but since I am really into theory crafting I personally prefer WOTR overall currently. Hopefully BG3 adds a higher difficulty.

  • @Colston3
    @Colston3 Před 9 měsíci +34

    I think the aesthetic, art style and UI of Owlcat Pathfinder is amazing, I prefer to the realistic style. The big downside I would say is the balance and complexity is a bit of a nightmare and some of the balance design is nonsensical.

    • @cmdrf.ravelli1405
      @cmdrf.ravelli1405 Před 9 měsíci +8

      I went into pathfinder kingmaker with plenty of experience in this sort of game and I found it extremely difficult, to the point that I stopped playing. And I really liked many things in that game:the artstyle, the ui, the story, the complex mechanics. But it seemed that the game kicked my ass out of it

    • @youlookdifferent
      @youlookdifferent Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@cmdrf.ravelli1405consider trying WOTR, its certainly still not a balanced game but it is MUCH, much smoother than kingmaker

    • @Flyon86
      @Flyon86 Před 9 měsíci

      I just turned the kingdom management difficulty down to easy, also changed some other options like status decrease heal on rest.

    • @jonathanpickles2946
      @jonathanpickles2946 Před 9 měsíci +3

      To be fair to them I think they did a very good job of implementing all the huge mess that is PF1 into a game at all. I think a lot of the nonsense is in the PF core rules. I am not a fan of it to declare my interest :)

    • @romaliop
      @romaliop Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@cmdrf.ravelli1405 Kingmaker had some glaring issues initially that could make the game practically impossible to beat, if you made certain choices along the way or even just explored certain areas in the wrong order. There was for example a companion who you're supposed to meet and pick up from a certain location in a certain time frame. If you miss or decline him joining your party, the Kingdom management was basically doomed to fail, not instantly no, but literally tens of hours later in the playthrough.
      I think they fixed most of these issues in the enhanced edition and Wrath of the Righteous fortunately never really suffered from anything like that. They also let you manage the difficulty yourself and you should actually do that to a reasonable degree. The systems are so complicated that there really is no way to actually balance all the classes that well. Some are just naturally a bit weak while others have insane synergies that can basically break the game.

  • @hiei990
    @hiei990 Před 9 měsíci +22

    Personally I enjoy the more “compact” team and not having to buff to high heaven before each fight.
    Not to mention both games seriously need specific upgrades for their level up system:
    WOTR: NEEDS a build planner/saver, there are too many options/feats and having to go through that for 6+ companions is exhausting.
    BG3: Needs to present its level up features from the get go, not being able to plan a build from scratch doesn’t feel good, specially when the system is simpler and more digestible.

  • @clifcorcoran9917
    @clifcorcoran9917 Před 9 měsíci

    I appreciate how measured this video was about the strengths and weaknesses of both games. Like usual a fair and balanced opinion presented.

  • @firstclaw1
    @firstclaw1 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for the video. I also like both games. Relatively soon I noticed, that character generation in BG3 seems more simplified in some aspects even compared to Baldurs Gate I or II. For example all heroes will end up with pretty similar average scores in ability points as you don't roll dices, but allocate a fixed amount of points to them trying to accommodate your chosen class/profession. This could be based on the game design choices made when implementing DnD 5 system. I think the original titles were based on AD&D AFAIK, which had a little bit different and partially complex and/or complicated mechanics. Also, there are a few other points I noticed and you addressed well in this video, but I don't want to go in too deep for this post. I believe though, that the approach of BG3 is good especially for people, wo prefer story above hardcore rule complexity. Maybe it can even help to wet the appetite of people, who avoided previously titles of the Pathfinder based games or the Pillars of Eternity series, or (if not played yet) of course the Divinity: Original Sin titles.
    Actually, I wish there was a Shadow World game based on RoleMaster (some people call RuleMaster). If not that, then maybe a Middle-Earth cRPG - with applicable RoleMaster ruleset. I think a good computer adaption could make RoleMaster a relatively easy to play as a cRPG while offering a ton of more options for Character development, Skills and Spells compared to some DnD based games. Also I like the Magic system much better of RM better than DnD. Combat can be a bit more unforgiving with critical hits possibly dismembering not only enemies but also the heroes... (Only other system, which may be worse in that respect would be RuneQuest in my experience.) But in the end RoleMaster would have a lot to offer IMHO.

  • @ShikaStyle123
    @ShikaStyle123 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I recently played WOTR, haven’t played BG3 yet. I loved WOTR, I’m a huge RPG fan and love build crafting. WOTR is amazing in that aspect, and allows you to respec without much penalty. My biggest problem with it though is the performance.
    On my PS5 I had many crashes, the constant loading screens which take forever and just a very cleanly experience overall. I couldn’t get myself to finish the game, got halfway through chapter 4 and just gave up

    • @val7885
      @val7885 Před 9 měsíci

      The performance is probably better now than it was on release, but release WotR had some fascinating issues. Like stutter whenever you kill an enemy in turn based mode, memory leaks causing the framerate to get progressively worse as your session extends, saves keeping so much junk data that towards the end of the game, the loading times will be several times longer than when you begun...

    • @ShikaStyle123
      @ShikaStyle123 Před 9 měsíci

      @@val7885 They still have all these issues. It's honestly the worst performing game I've played on the PS5. And it's a shame, because the game itself is amazing.
      When I started and looked up all the classes, subclasses and options, I thought I might play the game several times. Then when I discovered mythic paths, I was certain I wanted to play the game once as each mythic path. But reality is, I couldn't even finish my first playthrough because of the performance issues.

    • @val7885
      @val7885 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@ShikaStyle123 That is a real shame. I must admit that personally I burned out on the game because I just don't enjoy the mathfinder part of it, so the gameplay was largely a bother and the story couldn't carry the massive game alone for me.
      But it's sad to hear (or, well, read I guess) that you actually enjoyed the game itself but the performance ruined it for you.

  • @groove-lm6uh
    @groove-lm6uh Před 9 měsíci +23

    For me the thing that takes it for BG3 is the encounter design and narrative behind those encounters. Every combat instance feels hand-crafted, like a set piece. In WOTR you run into a standard mob of spiders, say. Then a little further on you run into a group of giant centipedes. Then another group of spiders. And so on and so on. In BG3, most encounters feel like they have a reason, a piece of narrative behind them or that they connect to the larger narrative. They make sense within the context of the map and the story. It's rare that you'll just run into a standard mob of spiders and then another group and then another group. You'll get ambushed on the way to a location by a rival group looking for the same thing you are. Or you'll run into two groups fighting each other which has a little story about a struggle for resources or something. Larian are phenomenal at this and it makes the combat so much more interesting.

  • @noelight2900
    @noelight2900 Před 9 měsíci

    Absolutely amazing video to help new-comers (like me) to understand what else this genre has to offer.

  • @emregeylani
    @emregeylani Před 7 měsíci

    Perfectly put. As a hardcore D&D DM/player and someone who has played both games, I couldn't agree more with your observations.

  • @ivani7227
    @ivani7227 Před 9 měsíci +13

    I couldn't agree more, I really miss the leveling and customization systems from Owlcat games in BG3, the story roleplay is very strong but the class fantasy is very lacking in comparison. WotR really makes your character feel like the badass embodiment of their class. I did a Warlock run on BG3 expecting more class flavor but it was just "slightly flavorful Sorcerer"

  • @Bierserker
    @Bierserker Před 9 měsíci +6

    One of the gratest things BG3 has going for it, apart from production quality etc. is all the crazy stuff it allows you to do in combat. There aren't a lot of games that allow players to stuff a backpack full of explosives to throw at enemies as a sort of makeshift satchel charge or to use telekinesis to throw the enlarged owlbear druid for massive amounts of damage.

    • @Dryxxxa
      @Dryxxxa Před 9 měsíci +2

      Honestly, I appreciate the fact that such shenanigans are possible, and use them myself, but for me they seriously break the TTRPG vibe. I guess, putting a barrel of gunpowder in the midst of enemies, running away and exploding it would be an option in a nonsensical campaign just for the lulz. But in a more serious adventure, where enemies are actually reasonable and smart, it just wouldn't fly.
      Same with crate-stacking, extremely abusable invisibility, somewhat weird combat flow when half your party doesn't participate in combat. These all are okay'ish from a videogame perspective, but shatter the TTRPG feeling that BG3 gives off so well in other times.

    • @DeVitar
      @DeVitar Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah, some of those battle options feels like cheating to be honest. They are fun, but they break adventure`s impression:( Especially barrels vs scripted fights.

    • @Palarci
      @Palarci Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@DeVitar Well, the good thing is you can play whatever way you want. Do you want immersion? Play it fair and square. Do you want to go crazy and see what can be done? Try it on the next playthrough.

    • @Bierserker
      @Bierserker Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yes, there are some rather broken things that are easily abused too. My point is that the people at larian obviously tried to enable creative solutions, which, in my opinion, is an essential part of ttrpgs.

    • @DeVitar
      @DeVitar Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@Bierserker totally agree:) Feels like they play their own game and having fun^^ which many studios doesn't do anymore (at least it looks like)

  • @mortis106
    @mortis106 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Been looking forward to this video.

  • @andersonrosa6645
    @andersonrosa6645 Před 8 měsíci +1

    One thing I noticed about BG3's role playing aspects that possibly is its greatest selling point, is that Larian focused on allowing many "choices" to the players, in the DnD model.
    Given freedom of choice doesn't really exist (specially not in games), the feeling of being in an actual tabletop game is Larian's greatest achievement for the genre is there for most of the playthrough. Of course that's done by controlling the narrative in a way that the choices you have available are the only possible ones (usually by playing the mystery/tsundere card, Larian does that a LOT), but at the very least that speaks for the writers' skills.
    My main thought is that, as it goes with DnD, the consequences for making absurd choices cannot be truly measured - because in real life, stealing or murdering people on a whim is not an equally viable choice as talking to them. Many human reactions are impossible to mirror, so Larian simply took the CRPG route of making NPC interactions dumb when necessary. And by dumb I mean, recalling what I mentioned above about mystery, giving the NPC a reaction based on a background the player will never know about and covering it up with an air of secrecy. This strategy also helps to build shorter dialogues, which works wonders for a fully voice acted game. WoTR does not care for that, the characters will give you hard reasons for what they do, and while you're open to disagree you most likely won't have a choice to actually disagree with their opinions, unless it's an obvious part of the context.
    Wrath of the Righteous is much rougher on that aspect, it won't hide it's railroading you, as somehow you're expected to accept the overall "choice model" you've chosen when picking a Mythic Path. You still have the freedom to refuse a Mythic Path, for example, but simply due to the length of the game they've already done a lot.
    BG3's choice system was a gamble that paid off, and one which probably what gave them a lot of trouble fail proofing, and while some incongruities still passed, it's very solid dynamic storytelling that also manages to do the fan service part very well.

  • @aersla1731
    @aersla1731 Před 9 měsíci +16

    I have own pathfinder wotr since it came out, I have tried to play it twice, but it's just so overwhelming with the amount of stuff. I think bg3 did an excellent job making it really accessible. I love crpgs, been playing them since I was a kid but the amount of choices in wotr is just insane.

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Před 9 měsíci +8

      That's probably more down to Pathfinder than the game itself. 3.5 wasn't exactly new when Pathfinder was created, so it was rather stacked from the start, being essentially D&D 3.75.
      5E on the other hand is a massively cut down version. Larian likely had to houserule a lot of things simply because the actual ruleset doesn't have anything for things that a video game necessarily must.

    • @ColinGrym
      @ColinGrym Před 9 měsíci

      If you ever decide to fire up WotR again and just want proven, effective builds, I'd suggest @cRPGBro guides to both mains, companions, mods and even the world strategy/army mode. He focuses a lot on pets which isn't going to be everyone's ideal, but you can ignore that at your leisure (I mostly did) and still be confident you'll be very powerful. His guides will take you level-by-level through what to do and why for many different character archetypes. So you can just play and when you level up just fire up the video and within minutes you'll be back to kicking ass.

  • @MarcheseDelGrillo
    @MarcheseDelGrillo Před 9 měsíci +3

    I enjoyed Wrath of the Righteous a lot more.
    I had the problems of most people at first where it was hard to just pick anything to play mostly due to information overload, hovewer I just pushed through it, picked a class that seemed to fit what I wanted (I think it was a version of Druid) and just played on Casual difficulty, and honestly, I really enjoyed the game start to finish playing an Aeon path.
    In Baldur Gate 3, I don't know... after having played Divinity 2 like 4 times, I was familiar with the mechanics so I wanted to play this Larian game on Tactician... and well... WotR "Casual "is this game "Tactician" mode, the only fights that gave me some trouble were Malus Thorm*, Balthazar&Co.*, those 5 randoms Githyanki bodyguards in the Prism and trying to kill Gorthas at Wyrmrock Keep.
    * = means that the fight is incredibily easy if you use some barrels, because they start all clumped up at the start, but I just didn't want cheese fights, also you shouldn't really try to kill Gortash immediately because it skips a lot of content so...
    Almost every other fight in BG3 was a textbook fight, Mage blasts the chaffs, Support buffs who needs it, Fighter goes in and chops an "elite" enemy of the group round 1, and 4th character offers some versatility/utility whatever...
    I don't know, I just kinda steamrolled every fight? Maybe Wrath of the Righteous toughened me up or something... but I don't know, a lot of BG3 felt really grindy especially since it has a simpler combat.
    Also the dialogue options/choices in BG3 felt bland, the only choice that really counts is right at the start with the "Goblin vs Grove" one, because if you pick Goblins, you have just lost so much content with nothing to replace it, no joke.
    Companion dialogue is also meaningless, I mean I can say the most awful stuff to my companions and all it seems to do is detract like 1% off the Approval bar, like ok... I guess Gale really doesn't care that I just said to his face that I will enjoy seeing him blow up... after he just tried to romance me 2 times... huh???
    Also the ending in BG3 terrible, I was legit confused because I was expecting some after-math slides like Divinity 2 or WotR, explaining in what way I changed world... Did the Shadow-Cursed lands heal after I helped Halsin start the process? Was the Myconoid Circle able to expand back? What happened to the Druid's Grove in the end? What about those fish people in the Underdark, are they still following my teachings?
    ..Nope, nothing. You get literally NOTHING, it's just you and your 3 companions just smiling away at the sea making small talk in every "ending"... even if you're the most wholesome, goody two-shoe, "would never hurt a fly" type of guy and you pick the "bad" ending, does anything change? Maybe you could rule a layer of Hell instead? Take your war to Raphael? Nope, you are forced to betray everyone and start being the super villain effective immediately, no further choices... like what the hell???
    Even something normal, like if I want to take control of the brain to bait out even more mindflayers and force them to die, why can't I do that? I can order the brain to die but not to force its kind out of hiding like it was doing in the final fight? Like... man... BG3 was good at the start, but after Act 2 it is an utter nosedive... bugs, gameplay, story choices... all of it... I mean I know it's Larian so just wait for their Definitive Edition... but cmon...

  • @thatdude7102
    @thatdude7102 Před 9 měsíci

    I think you nailed it haven't played bg3 yet. But did play DOS enjoyed it then i tried wotr and it was just overwhelmingly complicated to me. Pretty new to these kinda of games.

  • @OriginalJDB
    @OriginalJDB Před 9 měsíci +2

    The mythic system in WoTR is so awesome.
    If I could just combine that with Baldurs Gate 3, level 20, 10 mythic, with all the animations and permutations…
    I’d never be able to leave my chair.
    An easy 500 hour play though.
    And 500gbs of data needed. Lol. I’ll leave it to my dreams for now.
    But I truly love both games. Very much worth the wait, and worth the price tag.

  • @chrisgibson8863
    @chrisgibson8863 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I'm not going to lie it's been hard for me to hear people act like BG3 is the first crpg of all time when there are so many modern games like Pathfinder or Pillars of Eternity that aren't mentioned with anywhere near the same praise from mainstream outlets.

    • @GeneralRenz
      @GeneralRenz Před 9 měsíci +3

      Agreed. And for what it's worth, hour for hour I had far more fun playing Pillars of Eternity than I have with BG3 so far.

    • @anaalvensleben789
      @anaalvensleben789 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Right? WotR also launched with no microtransactions, ya'll! And the amount of bugs seems to be about even XD

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      Cause it’s the first CRPG with high production value and focus on what mainstream gamer like the most (world design, level design, interaction, emergent gameplay, cinematic dialogue, character focus role playing…)

    • @ni9274
      @ni9274 Před 4 měsíci

      @@anaalvensleben789one of them is the first CRPG with AAA budget

    • @chrisgibson8863
      @chrisgibson8863 Před 4 měsíci

      @ni9274 I mean it's not that mainstream friendly. It plays like almost all those other games I mentioned other than the cinematics and voice acting. The combat is turn based for one which is usually a complete deal breaker for the mainstream crowd.
      I like BG3, I just wish that the other CRPGs were given a chance too because they are just as good and if people appreciated bg3 they would like a lot of those games I mentioned too.

  • @nicolasletellier6162
    @nicolasletellier6162 Před 9 měsíci +10

    One thing I have to say is your different guide helped me to enjoy playing Pathfinder even more by a lot.
    About Baldur's vs. Pathfinder. Even if I played all the BG at release, I really prefer Pathfinder mostly because of the number of classes and build personalization, and I don't know why I feel better when my character levels up and progresses in its build in Pathfinder than in BG.

    • @Lefthandrightband
      @Lefthandrightband Před 9 měsíci +4

      Yea don't forget the mythic system. This system needs to be a requirement in every crpg . Adds so much replayability

    • @Omegeddon
      @Omegeddon Před 9 měsíci +2

      Leveling up in Pathfinder is better because you actually get shit. in 5E there's a lot of dead levels where u dont really get anything. Espeically if you take score increases

    • @Lefthandrightband
      @Lefthandrightband Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Omegeddon lmao. Yea it is so unrewarding to lvl up and all you get is a spell slot and a spell you don't want Or a hp increase

    • @Omegeddon
      @Omegeddon Před 9 měsíci

      @@Lefthandrightband Yup. Even worse for martials. Barbarian in BG3 doesnt really pick shit after level 3

    • @johnsnow5125
      @johnsnow5125 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Omegeddon Ability increase, or sharpshooter (+10 damage per attack), or greatweapon master (+10 damage per attack), or tavern brawler (+damage AND +10 attack). Those are the most relevant feats. If you multiclass, you'll probably just get ability increase and maybe one of those aformentioned feats. The feats are just boring, nevermind the balance issue. I never understood why they make you choose between higher stats and feats in 5e, it's almost never a real choice

  • @greatpadinski
    @greatpadinski Před 9 měsíci +1

    BG3 has made me really excited for the future of CRPGs, hoping we see the genre grow more and more! But in the meantime, I've got plenty to play as I never got around to WotR and some other great ones like Pillars 2, Wasteland 3, etc.

  • @marcus6381
    @marcus6381 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Kingmaker, Wrath of the Righteous and Baldur's Gate 3 are all great and it is awesome that these three games exist and offers 3 different types of campaigns. Hope others take note and we can have many more, but for now I have three games that I can switch between whenever I want to play a great RPG!

  • @GurenEinzbern
    @GurenEinzbern Před 9 měsíci +8

    I love both of them TBH. I'm planning to replay Pathfinder:WotR once I'm done with BG3.
    Few things I like in WoTR more compared to BG3 are.
    * Lore terms are explained and can be viewed in a separate tab. I'm mostly unfamiliar with Pathfinder and Baldur's Gate lore since I don't play the tabletop games.
    * Music. For some reason WoTR had alot more memorable themes to me. Mythic Power and alot of the Mythic Path themes are so good there still stuck in my head.
    * Role playing feels easier to me in WoTR since there are alignment based dialogue.

  • @chuckles471
    @chuckles471 Před 9 měsíci +17

    I love the character options for Wrath, from your base class to your mythic path. You feel like you can make a very unique character. And I do love the campaign, you feel like you are fighting a war against demons. Also shout out to companions that are genuine surprises in the CRPG genre.
    But Baldur's Gate with it's insane world reactivity and scope. Is just the new level for CRPGs. It's as close to a TTRPG that you can get.

  • @spooty75
    @spooty75 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I love both games and completed both recently. Both have amazing strengths! I would definitely advise someone new to the genre or roleplaying to play through BG3 first, then try Pathfinder afterward if you want a more complex system and want more overarching grand strategy

  • @ryansta
    @ryansta Před 5 měsíci +1

    Was put off the Pathfinder games for a long while due to reviews emphasizing how difficult the system can be. Bought Wraith of the righteous to give it a try and didn't instantly click. Upon the recent release of Rogue Trader and watching the review I bought it upon release. What struck me almost instantly was how each character had a different background and beliefs but gelled together and more importantly felt realistic ( within universe of course ) as people / personalities, which games often don't get across very well. Since getting used to the basics i've been able to get back to Wrath of the righteous and understand it better, so much so I also bought Kingmaker on the strength, though this is an earlier game and you can tell. However all the Owlcat games have well developed believable characters in their own ways, similar to how Planescape Torment did but to a much greater extent and once the system clicks it's highly recommended.
    I have attempted Divinity 2 a few times but there the Characters just don't resonate in the same way.

  • @macus23
    @macus23 Před 9 měsíci +3

    This opinion is exactly how I feel! BG3 has been a great game to recommend to friends as a gateway to the crpg genre. If they grab on to the mechanics and builds, then they can explore the crunchier games.

    • @Jimmys_TheBestCop
      @Jimmys_TheBestCop Před 9 měsíci

      That's what D&D 5th edition goal was though. It's kinda hard to split the game from the ruleset

  • @paulianhodgson
    @paulianhodgson Před 9 měsíci +3

    I can't play BG3 until I either upgrade my pc or get a PS5, so you've inspired me to check out WotR, looking forward to it!

    • @fallout3fanboy1
      @fallout3fanboy1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      So, while WOTR isn't ad pretty it runs worse, on lower settings compared to BG3

    • @paulianhodgson
      @paulianhodgson Před 9 měsíci

      @@fallout3fanboy1 I got it on PS4, not my favourite way to play these kind of games but my laptop doesn't really cut it anymore...

    • @tavtav934
      @tavtav934 Před 9 měsíci

      I you have a good internet connection, you could play bg3 (and many other game) on GeForceNow (~10€/month subscription, there is a free version but too many people are queuing for it). With this, I can play with max quality settings without buying an expensive computer that would become obsolete after a few year.
      Of course, not everybody like subscriptions but i am just sharing in case you might be interested^^
      The game is still a little buggy though so waiting is not a bad option either.

    • @FM-ge3nf
      @FM-ge3nf Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@fallout3fanboy1 While I'm sure that might be true in your case, that definitely isn't across the board because my experience was the opposite. I'm running a very high end system and can run WOTR on max everything without the slightest hiccup or frame drop.
      BG3 for me, especially in act 3 in the city itself, really chugged a lot at times (I'm talking sitting at 5fps) and I found myself needing to drop a lot of settings down from ultra to run it with a semi decent framerate in 4k.
      That said, it's only just been released and I am sure these are optimization issues that will be addressed, along with the fairly frequent crashes I started to get in act 3...

  • @mbra8228
    @mbra8228 Před 8 měsíci

    thanks mate! I will certainly explore pathfinder going forward :)

  • @kaguana
    @kaguana Před 9 měsíci

    Both are good games, each in their own way, it will be nice to see more cRPGs games like that and maybe a combination of the good stuff in both into one game, that will be epic.
    Thank you for the video and for sharing your thoughts.

  • @DonAndrew
    @DonAndrew Před 9 měsíci +33

    I don't know, I felt better roleplaying in WOTR than in BG3 to be honest, and I think that Larian could've learned a lot by just looking at WOTR, but at same time BG3 is more compelling for me to play again just because of the overall quality and narrative.
    Still, I think Larian will put a lot of quality of life updates to make things more smooth and in a future Definitive Edition the game will be very "complete".

    • @mitchjames9350
      @mitchjames9350 Před 9 měsíci

      Is that due to the turn based combat in BG 3 or the able to switch between turn based or real time with pause.

  • @zagadkazakafresko5409
    @zagadkazakafresko5409 Před 9 měsíci +14

    after completing BG3 2 times i noticed that it really lacks evil options. Especially if you compare it with WOTR where it feels on the same level of development for both sides. BG3 just offers just good and chaotic evil options. You can really feel it at the ending where just for some reasons evil ending doesn`t have epilogue

    • @DGidel1089
      @DGidel1089 Před 4 měsíci

      Its my only problem alongside lack of customization...if bg had the customization of just divinity 2...I'd probably never stop playing it for years. I can see that I'll get like 2 or 3 playthroughs from bg.

    • @zagadkazakafresko5409
      @zagadkazakafresko5409 Před 4 měsíci

      @@Ezullof have completed game completed game for another two times since then. One of those was evil dark urge and nothing really changed exept ending. Now it exists and its pretty good.

  • @Scarygomez
    @Scarygomez Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great Video Morty son ! Always love your comparison videos.
    Two of the best CRPG's ever. I do love the scale and shere "epicness" of WOTR, and I also love the pathfinder 1 ruleset more than E5. Obviously BG3 is the commerical winner, but WOTR is still my favourite, 🦉🐈 are awesome developers. Everyone should own and enjoy hundreds of hours in both !!
    p.s. looking forward to your first thoughts on Starfield 08.31.

  • @Prospkt
    @Prospkt Před 9 měsíci

    Love both series tbh. Baldurs Gate, Pathfinder and Neverwinter are my favourite CRPG series. Keep em' coming!

  • @Homophonic
    @Homophonic Před 9 měsíci +5

    does pathfinder make combat look fun like dos2 for instance? or is it just a game of numbers? like if the spells and abilities have enough visual appeal that adds to the fun of combat it may justify trying to get through the game's steep learning curve

    • @TheR6R6R
      @TheR6R6R Před 9 měsíci

      Spell visuals at least look fantastic in WotR. Can't say the same for martials, there's really only two attack animations for every weapon in the game. It's one of the points WotR really loses at against D:OS 2 and BG3. I'd only recommend WotR's combat if you like seeing massive damage numbers and stupidly high DCs pop up above enemies. Most of the fun lies on the preparation part: theorycrafting builds, stacking buffs, etc.

    • @Homophonic
      @Homophonic Před 9 měsíci +1

      @TheR6R6R never Played a game like that lol, am playing dos2 rn and it's amazing but am not sure whether Pathfinder is for me

    • @TheR6R6R
      @TheR6R6R Před 9 měsíci

      @@Homophonic Then BG3, as Mortismal said, would be a great entry point if you ever want to try classic CRPGs and their spiritual successors.
      On D:OS2, after you finish one or two vanilla playthroughs, I highly HIGHLY recommend trying out mods, especially Divinity Conflux or Divinity Unleashed coupled with Enemy Upgrade Overhaul and some class mods (Odinblade's are well balanced if that's something you care about). Those pretty much added another 1000 hours to my playtime.

    • @Homophonic
      @Homophonic Před 9 měsíci

      @TheR6R6R bruh u sure dos2 mods are that good? Don't they only remix the combat? Or do they add new story content and stuff? Also this is a bit off topic but can u explain what custom campaigns are exactly?

    • @TheR6R6R
      @TheR6R6R Před 9 měsíci

      @@Homophonic My group was running a little over 100 mods so at that point it was just a playground for making builds.
      Enemy Upgrade Overhaul adds randomized upgrades and loot to enemies so you end up with potentially unique encounters each playthrough. There's an optional level scaling option as well so if you want to spice things up. We use it to jumpstart Act 1 at level 9, when tier III skills open up and more build options come online.
      Conflux adds new mechanics, skills, optional boss encounters, items, and the strategist difficulty, in case tactician wasn't enough.
      So far there hasn't been quest expansion mods on the level of i.e Skyrim, unless you take custom campaigns into account and I haven't tried any of those.

  • @taznx1509
    @taznx1509 Před 9 měsíci +6

    One thing that I think is underrated in BG3 is how strong the itemization is. There’s a necklace, for example, that lets you add your spellcasting modifier to elemental damage you deal with cantrips. The lengths that you could take this by combining it with other magic items like the Potent Robe and Spellsparkler was utterly absurd. This one item caused my Eldritch Blast to go from doing a solid 30 damage to ballooning into a 200+ damage ability. Most games, WoTR included, really just give you flat bonuses instead. I’m going for a Monk run next just because of the items for it you can find.

  • @designerdigest
    @designerdigest Před 9 měsíci

    I totally agreed with companion management and inventory management. And I also hope to see party wide skills so that we don't have to switch character around but the game pick the best character to roll the check.

  • @lillkvirran
    @lillkvirran Před 9 měsíci

    I'm just so happy that I live in a time, when we get to play both!
    Can't wait to get my hands on Rogue Trader next (and even Starfield before that, but it's a different game, aight!)