Baldur’s Gate 3’s huge launch has reignited the age-old debate about save scumming.

    • JackbyDev
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      32 years ago

      I’m so glad difficulty can be changed whenever.

      In Resident Evil Village I set it to hard. I was having trouble (partly because of a glitch of the game being stuck in black and white that I didn’t realize was a glitch at the time) and it suggests I lower it to easy. So I did. Then once I understood the game I was ready to increase it. Fuck you, you can’t do that. You can only lower it to easy if you die a lot. Can’t ever change it again. So stupid.

  • HairyblueOP
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    102 years ago

    Yea, I’m scum. And I don’t think I’m the only one. I’ve been doing it since there were D&D games. I remember doing it in Pool of Radiance.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      Yeah, I have to win. So I just put it on hardest difficulty to compensate then save scum away. Have to use every tool to your advantage, right? Plus it always eats at me to know I failed a check and whatever that content was is just gone forever now unless I do a new 150+ hour campaign.

  • Poggervania
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    882 years ago

    Bigger question is who gives a crap?

    It’s a single-player game, let people enjoy things the way they want to. I personally don’t save-scum the skill and ability checks, but I will save-scum on a tough fight if I’m in a losing position - and I ain’t gonna knock on people who do and don’t do that in a single-player game.

    For multi-player, I would discourage it since dealing with your friend’s fuckups is like, half the fun of a tabletop session.

    • Ready! Player 31
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      202 years ago

      Presumably IGN have not been able to generate sufficient clicks by saying ‘this game is really good and not very controversial’ so they’re turning to shit like this now.

    • Coelacanth
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      92 years ago

      I think reloading a difficult fight you’re losing isn’t necessarily savescumming. What’s the alternative, letting it play out until you get a TPK and then starting over with a new level 1 character because “that’s what would have happened in pen-and-paper”?

      • Poggervania
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        52 years ago

        Yeah, and that’s an extreme take I’ve seen some people take on games in the past - basically treating every game as if they had an Ironman mode.

        I personally don’t even see reloading the game after losing as “save-scumming”, but there are the rare individuals who would consider it as such.

      • HairyblueOP
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        52 years ago

        I think this is the challenge for some who don’t want to reload a save. But random dice --with 1 always failing and 20 always hitting are just that random. No play skill involved.

        • Coelacanth
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          62 years ago

          I agree. But hey, people do permadeath no-reload challenges of XCOM, too. Some folks are crazy.

          I just don’t think reloading a save after losing a fight counts as savescumming. That functionality is such a core part of games that we had to invent an entire genre to design around not doing that (Roguelikes).

    • @[email protected]
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      122 years ago

      Yeah, I have to agree. When it’s a single player non competitive environment, who gives a fuck? Even if it ruins the game for the person doing it, that’s all their are hurting, their own experience.

      • Dojan
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        102 years ago

        How is it ruining the experience for them if they shape the experience they want?

        • @[email protected]
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          92 years ago

          They’re not saying that it does ruin the experience, they’re just saying that if the argument is that the experience is ruined, it’s only the player’s experience that is ruined.

  • BigFig
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    262 years ago

    What debate? I will save scum and there’s nothing anyone can do about it lol.

  • Coelacanth
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    182 years ago

    First of all, I don’t think there is any right or wrong and everyone should just play the way they enjoy most, whether that is rolling with their failures or ensuring they get the outcome they desired (because they might perhaps not have time to do a second playthrough of a 150 hour game).

    Secondly, I think the desire to savescum usually materializes because of inherent game design issues. Failures are often less interesting and satisfying than successes, regularly closing the door on additional content which leads to the player feeling like they’re missing out. In pen-and-paper, improvisation between both players and the DM usually means there are other ways to access that same thing if the first option fails, but this is much harder to implement in a CRPG and so many checks end up being “succeed or miss out”.

    The only game I’m aware of that really tried hard to design around these types of problems is Disco Elysium (though even that game had several instances of fascinating content possibly missed because of a dice roll). Still, I really wish more RPG developers would study this example and adopt a similar “fail-forward” design principle.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    IMHO, no harm in a single/cooperative multiplayer game. If the player wants to go through the hassle of saving and loading repeatedly, that’s their decision. No harm to the community at large.

  • @[email protected]
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    62 years ago

    I do it but I feel kinda dirty about it, ngl. With inspirations there is little need to reload unless you get a TPK, but I save them in case I ever need it, but never use em anyway.

  • Deceptichum
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    222 years ago

    I’m not going to play the game 500 times to see every failed event or storyline I missed from a bad roll or lack of having the right spell equipped.

    I am going to play it a few times mins you, but I want to explore different paths.

  • CIWS-30
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    142 years ago

    I don’t think there’s ever been a save scum debate. Most people just do it, especially the game is unreasonable or has easily missable / permanently locked content that you lose out on forever after dozen or hundreds of hours of playtime unless you save scum.

    It’s more like most people do it without shame because they have lives, jobs, families, and limited time and energy to play, and a vocal minority of tryhards and internet trolls (who also save scum but lie about it) who try to force their twisted values on the majority for no other reason than to try to control everyone because of some personal dysfunction.

    • BadlyDrawnRhino
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      62 years ago

      The gripes I see about save-scumming usually come from those who would prefer not to but don’t have impulse control, so they’d prefer developers to take away from players who don’t care, and have valid reasons for doing so like you listed.

      • JackbyDev
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        22 years ago

        The debate often pops up in rogue like games when you say there should be a save and quit option.

      • @[email protected]
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        112 years ago

        Developers disallowing saving when I want make me so irrationally angry. Let me play the game in a way that I know I will have fun. Not allowing it has always been a way to extend your game artificially.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          Also it means I can’t pick it up to play unless I have a large block of time I know will be free and I rarely have that so basically I can’t play the game.

          • Nepenthe
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            2 years ago

            Octopath’s final battle is a gauntlet of eight or so bosses, followed by the last boss with two forms. One of those forms, if you don’t manage to dispatch a specific enemy at a certain perfect moment, runs the risk of actually trapping the player in an endless loop as everything keeps healing itself faster than the player is able to take anything down.

            This is a known possibility that forces you to restart the entire gauntlet again from the beginning just to have a chance, and you can’t save in that room. Guess whether I’ve technically finished Octopath or not. You’re goddamn right I’m going to figure out how to glitch it and save anyway, because I don’t and will never want to sink genuinely 2-3hrs of my life each time I try to beat that, with less than zero guarantee that I actually will. I get the feel they were going for, but who the fuck is responsible for this decision.

            Where Baldur’s Gate is concerned, I do clinically have difficulty making decisions but I’m mostly only doing it because I love the writing so much. 90% or more of my save scumming is dialogue related and I’d take it as a huge compliment.

            I severely dislike role-playing in a way that makes me choose options I don’t actually believe in, so every file I’ve ever played for any game tends to be identical. But in this game and this game only, I desperately want to see what happens if I do and it’s almost always rewarding. It’s SO good

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    I love that not a single one of us has a controversial take on this matter. Sounds like it’s not really a debate and just a trash editorial from a trash media outlet.

  • jpj007
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    132 years ago

    My philosophy on it, specifically for this game, is that the game is so damn huge to start with it’s impossible to see and experience all the content in one or even several playthroughs. I’d rather just put my completionist impulses aside, think of the game more as “D&D” than a video game, and just go forward, no matter what happens in game.

    But that’s just my thought for this specific game. As has been stated several times - it’s your save file, do what you want with it. No wrong way to play.

    • happyspark
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      32 years ago

      I would get bored of a D&D session that started the exact same way every time I fucked up and died though. I’m not great at these games and I am embarrassed to say I was killed more than once on my first playthrough before even leaving the crash site.
      Hoping mods or expansions (which seem unlikely) open the world up a lot more and allow for other starting scenarios.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      I’m doing mild save scumming, not to have a flawless playthrough but because like you say it’s a huge game and I don’t have a million spare hours so odds are I’m only going to do one good serious playthrough then take a break and maybe do a evil play through or something later.

      It’s not like I’m going to see everything so I might as well use the magic of time manipulation to explore alternate realities - the characters talk about that sort of weirdness all the time so for me I don’t even feel it’s world breaking.

      Though honestly the only mistake I wish I could go back and fix is completing pretty much the whole first area with only two characters because I missed talking to all the NPCs who’d join me - did make it more challenging tho which was fun I guess.

    • JackbyDev
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      32 years ago

      The only two times I’ve truly save scummed are

      1. I literally restarted the entire game when Dark Urge chopped off Gale’s hand on the option “fantasize about chopping the hand off”, that’s not the sort of gas lighting experience I want, I’ll just play the normal custom character first then maybe play that later
      2. I approached some goblins by a windmill and combat started with the narrator saying “you were warned to stay away”. Nobody said anything about that, so I reloaded my save and stayed away. The goblins let me into their camp even, why would I suspect these ones wouldn’t let me talk to them?
  • @[email protected]
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    222 years ago

    They didn’t put quick save and quick load on single-keys in easy reach because they expect you to live with the consequences of what happened. Anyone who doesn’t recognize that save-scumming is part of the design intent is lying to themselves.

  • There is no debate. If you think save scumming is wrong: you’re wrong; just don’t do it yourself at that point since someone else doing it doesn’t affect you at all. Saving and reloading is the one, universal thing about video games that makes them so great. You can keep trying different things until you succeed, without all the tedium of starting completely from scratch every time.

  • UnknownCircle
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    102 years ago

    Save scumming is the only way I can tolerate games like this. For as awesome as the game is (very awesome) sometimes consequences fall within the range of acceptability and sometimes they don’t. When they don’t, save scumming is what keeps me from putting the game down for good.

    • Jorgelino328
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      82 years ago

      I try to think of it in terms of how it would go at a D&D session.

      For example, if i roll perception well, seeing a tile is trapped, and tell the DM i avoid it, he’s not going to have some NPC trigger it because i forgot to tell them to stop following me, so i feel justified in reloading a save in that case.

      • JackbyDev
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        2 years ago

        I’m the first area with Withers I didn’t fully understand traps. I saw one and we avoided it then I turned off turn based mode. What I didn’t notice was the fireball traps on the walls. It was extremely confusing but hilarious watching it unfold. It wasn’t too big of a deal but I totally get what you mean. Even apart from that it’s annoying how they don’t just avoid ones other people saw.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        And if the DC is 10 and my bonus is 11, I’m passing that check no matter what. Critical failures feel awful.

        • 50gp
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          32 years ago

          I wish lockpicking would take this approach when your bonuses are high and skip the roll

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Lmao I often forget to unlock my party when dealing with traps only to have Shadowheart haphazardly wander right into the painfully obvious tripwire as the trap dice check is loading

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        Yeah, absolutely reloading after I click on a barrel to search but it’s not that kind of barrel so my character smashes it and explodes us all.