Hmm in Eye of the Beholder, you could only read some runes if you had the corresponding race in the party (for example, a gnome to read the first level, a dwarf to read the 4th/5th etc) although even whithin those levels and beyond runes were readable no matter your party makeup so it was more of an exception to the rule ...Zork wrote:On a couple of occasions in posted videos I have seen rune inscriptions on the walls. When clicked with the mouse they're translated to English (or localized language). I was wondering if that is in the spirit of tutorial instruction or simply being the first inscription encountered. Will all rune inscriptions be automatically translated with a click? Perhaps Old School Mode will require some user decoding? As someone who will play without auto-mapping, I'd also welcome having to decode messages on my own. I suggest this as a future option if it's not already implemented... Petri?
DJK wrote:Hmm in Eye of the Beholder, you could only read some runes if you had the corresponding race in the party (for example, a gnome to read the first level, a dwarf to read the 4th/5th etc) although even whithin those levels and beyond most runes were readable no matter your party makeup so it was more of an exception to the rule ...Zork wrote:On a couple of occasions in posted videos I have seen rune inscriptions on the walls. When clicked with the mouse they're translated to English (or localized language). I was wondering if that is in the spirit of tutorial instruction or simply being the first inscription encountered. Will all rune inscriptions be automatically translated with a click? Perhaps Old School Mode will require some user decoding? As someone who will play without auto-mapping, I'd also welcome having to decode messages on my own. I suggest this as a future option if it's not already implemented... Petri?
I remember when playing Bard's Tale 3 on my C64 that I wrote every single word down beside the self made dungeon map in order not to miss something which I could have needed to solve a puzzle. Hell this was work...petri wrote:... because the engravings often contain important clues to solving puzzles.
I loved Riven soooo much. Discovered it in my college days when I used to smoke pot (don't do drugs kids). Me and a friend would stare at each screen for ages before clicking on anything just to take in any of the subtle animations like the wharks.Michael_ZZ wrote:Then there was Riven: A Sequel to Myst where you learned the runic numbers by playing some sort of hangman game.