*current
In the first one, you could drop in and out of each other’s games and you would share progress on relevant missions. In number 2 you would join one players game, only they would get credit for any progress and it tethered you together. So although technically co-op, it was a significant downgrade from the first game and didn’t lend itself to the open world nature of the game, more like being player 2.
I have a co-op buddy too and heaps of good suggestions from others here. Two that I’ve been enjoying as 2 person co-op:
Wartales: started this after completing BG3 and it was a real interesting change in thinking. This is fantasy party adventure, but you run a team of mercenaries, so it’s more about the team build and strategy, rather than the specific character focus that you have in BG3.
The Wild Eight: an isometric survival, crafting, set in a plane crash in the snow. Some story, discovery elements included.
But not 2, because the sequel doesn’t have true co-op
The dynamic story telling in Wyldermyth is fantastic, love interesting character arcs that can develop.
Obviously you just have an ugly family
I hear Boeing ordered 6 of these rockets all ready
They’re probably still around, definitely won’t have biodegraded
Maybe $11.99, they won’t actually confirm that till checkout
Our IT often use a Boolean as a shortcut for figuring out things in code. For example, if there’s a charge we don’t apply to some customers, instead of setting it to zero, they’ll have a Boolean on the customer to decide whether they skip that part of the calculation. On top of this, they then name it in a way that limits how many records they have to update, this leads to many settings phrased in the negative, such as “Don’t apply extra leg charges”. As an extra layer on this, more recently they were made aware of the confusion this causes for staff and their solution was to change how end users are the question, which causes the “yes/no” in the interface to read the opposite of the “true/false” in the database
It grinds my gears for so many reasons, but most of all, it creates a huge vulnerability with little or no benefit to the end user. Needlessly adding extra online exposure, just so they can data mine.
They probably change them to .com as they privatize them
Lol, I have virtually the same system, though my Craig is called Dan
The current plan where I live, is to chuck the bicycles on the footpath with pedestrians.
Thanks OP, you have hit peak shitpost
Too late, boomers already bought it all and are renting it out
I don’t think it’s about not wanting to hear it, more so about the language used, that feels overboard. I feel it’s a combination of a car industry regulator in need of updating their terminology and news outlets looking to make everything sound sensational - the end result leaving you feel like you’ve been mislead about what’s actually going on.
I’ve respecced her as a bard and I still get the shar choices
Not pulling out has changed many people’s lives