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The Witcher 3 in Wine
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Pangaea May 20, 2019
That's a great shot!


I've been going about in the game and trying to wrap up stuff here and there, but it's just too much. There are so many side quests and question marks everywhere, that it became a little boring going hither and tither trying to 'close them', as I usually do in RPGs. So I moved on with the story instead. And holy mother of all that is awesome. Obviously won't spoil anything, but it was quite something else. Presumably much the same impression that most others had on their first time through the game. Sat back in the chair and felt like I was watching a movie, getting emotional.

In a vast amount of games, all these cutscenes just feel tacked on and cheesy. Not here. A friend of mine is playing through it as well, and I can't wait to he gets there too (in two months, haha!) so we can share our impressions about it. Ofc I wouldn't want to ruin it for him either.

You have something to look forward to shmerl ;-)
Pangaea May 20, 2019
Then to something completely different.... Geralt trying to hide! :D


Shmerl May 20, 2019
78 honeycombs :) I'm usually using water for quick food / healing effect. I got tons of raw meat from hunting, but apparently there is no way to cook it, to improve its effect.

I like how CDPR work on different environments. Farcorners feels quite distinct.
Shmerl May 21, 2019
Just got to Novigrad, where many say performance dips due to complex city layout. I tested it - the game runs at 75 - 80 fps for me when I turn vsync off (Sapphire Pulse Vega 56) which is even better than in the wilderness. dxvk and radv are great!

Pangaea May 21, 2019
Quoting: Shmerl78 honeycombs :) I'm usually using water for quick food / healing effect. I got tons of raw meat from hunting, but apparently there is no way to cook it, to improve its effect.

I like how CDPR work on different environments. Farcorners feels quite distinct.
I normally use Water too, but I went through it all! Also went from 78 honeycombs to 40-ish in a whiff. I should probably cheese out by using potions and sleep to heal, but I prefer to rely on food and not meditate all the time instead. As in BG, I only meditate when absolutely needed. At some points in the early game I had to buy water everywhere I found it, and at some points I was still down to various alcohol, which did have some negative effects during combat ;)

Haven't checked FPS on my end, but it feels really smooth, although the Geforce 770 is a few years old now.

As in all the other games, I wish they had the Cat "potion" as a toggle instead of needing a time-based potion for it. It's something witchers can do naturally. And if you chug down a Cat potion and happen to walk outside, you can't see crap. That particular mod is something I always used in the original Witcher. Simply made more sense, also lore-wise.
Shmerl May 21, 2019
Quoting: PangaeaAnd if you chug down a Cat potion and happen to walk outside, you can't see crap. That particular mod is something I always used in the original Witcher. Simply made more sense, also lore-wise.

Yeah, you'd need to drink White Honey to remove the effect.
Shmerl May 21, 2019
Sun and Stars ability is quite useful for faster healing. I'm usually using it, unless I need to stack combat only abilities for specific reason.

Also, if you often rely on food instead of potions, you can try Gourmet.
Pangaea May 22, 2019
I decided to *not* pick Sun and Stars, because I read people saying it made everything so much easier, kind of removing one of the main challenges about picking a higher difficulty. So I knew about that, just didn't want to choose it :) It was actually fun to need to manage the health, instead of insta-healing at sleep or when combat is over.

Finished the main story yesterday actually, and HOLY SHIT!!! I shan't say anything this or that way, only that I was impressed. Like before, I kinda sat back in the chair and enjoyed some of the stuff happening. I've no idea who much of the story will change based on whatever you do throughout the game, though.

Am now thinking about whether to try a New Game+, or to go right into the expansions. Effectively playing through the whole game again may be a bit much, but I'm probably leaning that way anyway. Partly because I read that if you first do the expansions and then go for NG+, everything will be pretty easy again, because you are overleveled.

May need to fickle about with settings, however, as the game has been crashing from time to time suddenly, which it didn't do before. Typically when loading a new area after using fast travel, or when the game goes into a major cutscene. Not such a big deal that the sound started crackling every 10-20 hours or something, but the game crashing is a good deal worse, because then I need to start saving a whole lot more than I have done for fear I will lose important progress.


As usual I spent quite some hours just wandering about talking to people, climbing up wherever I could get some nice picturesque views, and doing various side quests and hunting "question marks". Still hundreds of them left, and I'm kinda surprised the hour count isn't even higher, but yeah.... <3



I mostly went for sign skills, though I did prefer to often use the sword against foes, instead of just blasting them with fireballs or whatever. Quen is an absolute life saver, though.
Shmerl May 22, 2019
I use Sun And Stars sparingly, but yeah it makes healing easier. What difficulty do you use? I went for Blood and Broken Bones which looks like equivalent of Hard in TW1 and TW2 and I always pick hard in them (otherwise it's just too easy). I'd say, that "hard" is really normal :)

As for story - I agree. I'm very impressed with it, it's immersive, touching and you care for characters, unlike in some generic Bethesda-like games. You can see how much effort went into making it. The world itself is also very immersive.

I usulally turn off those question marks in the UI, since that's too spoilery, I prefer to explore and discover things unexpectedly, kind of what real Geralt would do. Knowing where to go from the start is not RPG-ish enough for me :) Though I guess once you play long enough, you'd want to see what's left to do, then those marks can come handy.

In my first run I focus on sword skills, though I did bump Yrden sign skill, mistakenly thinking that "increase sign intensity" buff goes on all signs in it. I don't regret though being able to place 2 traps and make them last 10 seconds longer - it's quite handy for slowing down multiple foes. Quen is surely a must, but what I find very useful is Axii. It amazingly works almost on anyone and stuns them in combat. So it's way more useful than in the first two games. I use Axii way more than Aard and Igni, which were in contrast the most common signs for me in TW1 and TW2.

Since I play in a "traditional witcher style" about which Geralt even makes a comment to Vesemir, i.e. avoid using the crossbow unless completely necessary (like shooting those drowners underwater), Axii is very useful against flying creatures, since once stunned they fall down.

By the way, that inventory screen doesn't look standard. Is it some kind of mod?
Pangaea May 22, 2019
I went with Blood and Broken Bones too, just couldn't remember the name :P Mostly it felt like a good balance between challenging and story elements, and there isn't instant healing upon meditation.

The question marks weren't there from the beginning, at least I don't think so. When I pick up some board notices they are added, I think. Mostly I just go around and sometimes come over stuff, but if I were in an area with question marks I would often try to pick them up on the way to other stuff. There were way too many though, especially when I made an effort to read all those board notices. They sort of respawn on the boards, but pretty soon they are just generic notices, not tied to actual quests.

The inventory screen is standard btw, it's just the stats part (hit "C" I think it was? from the inventory screen). The only mod I'm using is to disable those videos when reloading. That got annoying pretty fast, as I keep dying. The most dangerous thing in the game, by far, is heights! :D

The skills is a bit unusual in this game, where you can only fit so many into the "tree", not like in Witcher 1 for instance. Especially if I start a NG+, there will be way more skill points than slots for skills. Right now I mostly have sign related skills, a few generic ones (like for Griffin), plus a few sword skills. All in all that probably means I played very ineffective since I mostly used swords with some signs here and there. Mostly Quen for protection, and the odd Igni. And much more rare, Aard and Anxii. And Yrden against those very dangerous noon wrights and suchlike. Died sooooooooooooo many times in those quests early on.

Funnily enough I never used any of the slots on swords or armour either. Like a typical RPG hoarder I picked up one after the other, saving it for later, and never using any of them. I did try to apply oils though, as it was much less of a pain in this game compared to the previous ones.

Sometimes I did use the crossbow to get Sirens out of the sky, but mostly I used it like you, only in the most needed drowner situations. Kept hoarding every bolt under the sun too, and stashing them away (they actually get quite heavy, when you have hundreds of the buggers! :D). So I just used the very plain ones.

Very fun game, you can definitely tell they put their heart and soul into the game. It is colossal, though, and I haven't even touched the expansions yet. And I also ignored gwent and mostly boxing. The former took way too much time and wasn't fun, and the latter is kinda silly when Geralt takes 2-3 hits and is knocked out, while your opponent needs 50 or something nuts like that. Although the QE stuff in Witcher 2 was kinda crap, I actually preferred that over the boxing in Witcher 3. It's too unfair and punishing.
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