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When You First Started BG

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  • XenowarXenowar Member Posts: 21
    I had a basic idea of how everything was working, but not the details.
    I was still very young when I started playing and for that it was a rather complex game (and still is).
    Trial and error I suppose. And reading helped, too.
  • paulsifer42paulsifer42 Member Posts: 267
    edited July 2012
    I had buddies who played table-top with me when I was eight or nine and they were ten or eleven (yeah, that didn't go super well), but I did learn what different classes were and what stats were good for what class, so I just went from there. I learned a lot as I went, but figured it out.
  • LekianLekian Member Posts: 108
    My brother borrowed it from a friend. I remember it was at the beguinnig of the summer 1999 and what a great summer we had! Years after I changed my copy of Neverwinter Nights for the copy of Baldurs we had played that summer! I still keep it as a treasure :-)
    I had previously played Eye of the Beholder with my brother so I understood part of the gameplay of Baldurs.
  • Tom_InfernusTom_Infernus Member Posts: 4
    Well - my first contact with the BG was just as it was released in '98 or '99.
    It was my first contact ever with AD&D so I had similar understanding problems just as @willmcclure72
    And what can I say - I've been in love with fantasy ever since :)

    After ferw years, as I had met few friends with similar interests, we started playing paper AD&D and it ruled even more :) Just imagine what Your imagination can imagin :P
  • EcthelionEcthelion Member Posts: 61
    I was 12 when my older sister offered me a beautiful box containing "Fallout" and "Baldur's Gate". My mistake was to OPEN the box and try the game until I was 14 years old because the game seemed too violent for me...

    Not reading the manual and trying to understand by talking with some NPCs. Then, adventure calling for me, I jumped outside of Candlekeep without knowing how to use a potion... the wolves I met were glad to have their first meal...

    Then I promised myself to not be under prepared for any kind of encounter and I leveled up my team by going back and forth from Nashkel to the Gnoll fortress... until I reached lvl 7 with my party (took me several days). I continued my game by following the plot, and entered the fearsome Nashkel mines with a fully equipped and high level group. The rest of the game was a piece of cake...
  • CheesebellyCheesebelly Member Posts: 1,727

    I remember a girl in my highschool calling someone a diseased gibberling And I was all like SOUL MATE!

    It is a classy way to insult someone at least XD
  • RenshtalisRenshtalis Member Posts: 136
    Lol it's a sweet way to use geek code!
  • RenshtalisRenshtalis Member Posts: 136
    Dude!!! You were there???? We fully should've hung out!
  • DrakhgardDrakhgard Member Posts: 13
    Back then I was like uhm 8, 9? I didn't actually read anything considering tutorials. Just wanted to start straight. Of course I was kind of failing, but I had fun. And some years later, I was able to do my first real playthrough.
  • levelwormlevelworm Member Posts: 41
    I didn't read the manual. But I knew some 2.0 rules and learned the rest through playing and reading in-game descriptions.
  • LemernisLemernis Member, Moderator Posts: 4,318
    I had an idea of the basic DnD D20 mechanics, but it had been a very long time since I had had a go at PnP as a teenager (which was briefly at that).

    The first PC I created was a mage who was promptly annihilated within an area or two of Candlekeep by bandits. Then realizing how devastating ranged weapons were in BG1, I tried out a fighter and got myself a bow! I found that more survivable. But I still wanted to be able to spellcast. I ended up making a half-elven fighter-mage for my first full run through the game.

    Most glaring ignorance of the game for me: For that first game I made an entirely custom party and played in MP mode, lol. As such I completely missed out on the NPCs! I still enjoyed the game tremendously, though. I mean, no, there were no the NPC banters. But still I rather liked the party. Even if just through their unique combinations of gender/class/skills/weapons abilities/custom portraits/custom soundsets, how I used them as a team in battles, etc., they still more or less assumed a distinct personality. With no frame of reference yet for what I was missing out on (i.e., the game's NPCs and their dialogs), I didn't feel deprived. And in a way, it placed the emphasis more on the main plot.

    Anyway, on the second run through I realized what a wealth of content there was with all the NPCs. So I was actually very stoked. It was clear what immense re-playability the game had.

    I would add that some of the most enjoyable games I played over the years were with custom parties in MP. An 'Arthurian Knights' party of 4 paladins, mage, and cleric-mage was great fun. And an all-specialist-mage party was another.
  • ZaccaroZaccaro Member Posts: 39
    When I was 11 I got to play bg1 just after it's release. Being a little kid who almost had no clue what they said in the game since English isn't my motherlanguage I Didn't go to friendly arms inn on my first try, I took the bottles of something or another from the tall green-wearing man with a child with him. Went to Nashkel with a two-man party. You can guess how well that went. Now, NEXT time I played I went to the inn, with the tall funnily speaking man with his mean servant with me. Took the nice couple with me. DID NOT like the woman but kept her around since the nice guy would've left. :D so THIS TIME at Nashkel, something happened while down in the mines, now what could that be?
  • SirrionSirrion Member Posts: 20
    edited July 2012
    i remember first time i beat the nashkel mines on my like 5th attempted playthrough, spanning years... i was like, holy f***, this is epic

    i had no idea about any of the rules, and i'd rest for a week to heal up my party using the first heal you get once you rest in nashkel

    heck, i even just found out what thac0 does a few days ago, and ive completed bg 1 and 2 more times than i can remember

    good times
  • MedillenMedillen Member Posts: 632
    I remember the first time our english teacher asked us to write an essay, I was 9 or 10 (english isn't my native language). How priceless her face was when she saw words like swords, daggers, morningstar, knight and thieves when her course where all about flowers, pretty colors and "where is brian ?" "Brian is in the kitchen".

    Epic educationnal win !

    But yeah first play I didn't understand a lot. But I knew I had to have good starting characteristics. I threw dice for hours. And my ranger proficient in small swords was armed with two handed sword because it was cooler. I didn't notice his missing rate xD I died against xvart, I died against the friendly arm inn mage, I died with wolves, and the half ogres after beregost, and I was afraid of Nashkel like it was literal doors to hell.
  • ArkinArkin Member Posts: 32
    edited July 2012
    THAC0 and AC were mysteries to me until WAY later. I simply couldn't get my middle-school brain around the reverse logic of a lower score actually being better (for this reason, I was glad they changed 2nd edition's THAC0 to a more intuitive 'Attack Rating' in the 3rd edition).
  • TonaraskyTonarasky Member Posts: 7
    I got the game about 10 years old too, didn't have much clue what was going on for a while. Played the game about once a year for 14 years now, my favourite to the end. I think Minsc and Edwin will stay with me until I'm a decrepit old watcher.
  • purebredcornpurebredcorn Member Posts: 77
    The first time I played BG it had been decades since I had played any kind of video game. I had some familiarity with the D&D rules, and what I didn't know was easy enough to figure out, at least to get started anyway. I loved playing the game I think the second I finished my first time through I instantly went through again, and again...so much fun. Can't wait to do it again with the EE.
  • EasysjrEasysjr Member Posts: 1
    Hi Guys I'm completely new to the whole BG scene and have noticed that some posts mention reading rules to help understand the game play etc. where do I start? Thank you.
  • FathuranFathuran Member Posts: 26
    edited July 2012
    I was 8 years old. I had no idea what was going on. I read the manual like it was a novel, but still had no idea. Unlike other games I played this one seemed so incredibly dark (And it is pretty dark) and gritty. I was almost scared. When I made my fighter I wandered into a building and was almost horrified when the first bounty hunter tried killing me. My heart was beating so fast as that music began and it was one of the first times I saw blood in a game. I attacked him only to see him explode into several large chunks, which mortified my little kid mind.

    Little did I know, now at 22 years old, BG1 would remain my favorite game of all time.
  • ElectricMonkElectricMonk Member Posts: 599
    @Easysjr Baldur's Gate is based on AD&D 2nd Edition rules, it's a Dungeons and Dragons ruleset. You don't really need to know these rules to play Baldur's Gate, as all the rules of the game are in the manuals and the game isn't completely true to D&D anyway. If you really want to understand the rules, just do a google search for 2nd Edition AD&D Player's Handbook (Revised, TSR 2159), which should yield some results, not really sure where it's available these days, as it's sort of an old system at this point.
  • BeredokBeredok Member Posts: 1
    Heya, i played baldur's gate originally when i was 5. I had played some AD&D with my brothers so i understood the basic rules of the game. I made a Dwarven warrior with 18/00 strength, 19 constitution and 17 dex. I lost all of my party in the candlekeep catacombs and then i proceeded to finish the storyline with just my main character only to fail hardly at Sarevok. In the end i just played BG2 knowing that i had reached the ending of the first game but without watching the final cutscene etc etc until last year hehe.
  • FillaFillasonFillaFillason Member Posts: 110

    Did anyone here have no idea about the way the game was played, stats, hit rolls and all of the AD&D Rules. I acctually had no idea until a couple of weeks ago. I was always like "OMG WHY ARNT YOU DOING DAMAGE" hehe

    HAHAHA! Well, I was an pen and paper player so I knewn the rules inn and out,exept that they had changed a couple of rules to make it compatible at an computer

  • AranneasAranneas Member Posts: 282
    I had the manual and skimmed through it while installing but mostly I just dug in and learned by first principles.

    Baldur's Gate got me addicted to D&D, not the other way around.
  • FillaFillasonFillaFillason Member Posts: 110
    I thought tac0 was taco, made my elder brother laugh himself silly,hehe. I knew the rules though, played dungeouns and dragons and d&d advanced on p&p, and bg impressed us crazy whit beeing almost the same as on p&p, ofcourse some thing they needed to change to make it playeble on a pc, but it was flaming identical to an p&p adventure whit animations:-) Amasing who many people who played this game not knowing the rules :-) Its that a good game!
  • CorvinoCorvino Member Posts: 2,269
    Is there any way we can get Winthal's reply stickied as a "BG rules for beginners" post? Good job on the wall of text, it does the job well!

    @Easysjr Winthal's reply has just about everything you need! Also, watch out on these forums as they're pretty spoiler heavy, especially for first-timers.
  • BugratBugrat Member Posts: 118
    I remember coming into the game knowing very little. I didn't know anything about D&D apart from what I learned from looking at my dad's old D&D books from the 70's. I didn't learn anything of the rules but absorbed some of the lore and enjoyed the illustrations, a lot of which I remember were pretty poorly done haha. Pretty much the main thing I got from those books are DROW ARE COOL!

    So I started up my first BG game with an elf ranger, not knowing what the stats were for I went with a very impressive 15-15-15-15-15-15 for those, and of course I went with the jet black skin.

    I don't remember that much about progressing through the game the first time, but I do remember my weird party composition. I had no mages and no thieves. I think I had the PC Ranger, Kivan, Branwen, Viconia, Ajantis, and I think Kagain. I don't know why I didn't pick up any thieves or mages, I probably thought they were too squishy. Despite all this Sarevok still died so what the hey.
  • The_New_RomanceThe_New_Romance Member Posts: 839
    I gave Imoen leather armor and a long sword, because I found that it'd do more damage than a dagger or short sword. Ah, proficiencies.

    I died so many times, to every assassin I came over, to Kobold commandos and what have you, and I believe I never even got to the Bandit Camp during my first playthrough before abandoning the game for a while. It sure has a steep learning curve!

    By now, it's one of my favourite games, one of the few I have actually finished. Way to tell what great a game it is that I got back into the ring again and again until I finally understood it. Maybe takes a certain age to really "get" it, and I guess most of us didn't have that back in '98 ;)
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