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Okay, yes, if the WPS would kill without doing the thing I described then absolutely go for it. However, if the WPS isn't going to kill, it's definitely worth stepping outside and attacking from range a bit until you get them down to where it will kill instead of taking the WPS and letting them get up and run around again. It's definitely worth it against The Imprisoned, for instance, since in most of the encounters against him your first WPS isn't going to kill him unless you tack on more damage.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 05:42 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 21:49 |
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Shadow Ninja 64 posted:Okay, yes, if the WPS would kill without doing the thing I described then absolutely go for it. However, if the WPS isn't going to kill, it's definitely worth stepping outside and attacking from range a bit until you get them down to where it will kill instead of taking the WPS and letting them get up and run around again. It's definitely worth it against The Imprisoned, for instance, since in most of the encounters against him your first WPS isn't going to kill him unless you tack on more damage. And the Imprisoned is actually one of the easier bosses to deal with because, despite it's endurance, it's attacks are nothing noteworthy once you get used to them and it's WPG-revealing gimmick is one of the easiest things to do.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 06:46 |
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Folt The Bolt posted:And the Imprisoned is actually one of the easier bosses to deal with because, despite it's endurance, it's attacks are nothing noteworthy once you get used to them and it's WPG-revealing gimmick is one of the easiest things to do. True, he's not hard, which is why it's nice to only have to deal with destroying his toes twice and taking out his weak point gauge once since he's ultimately a big dumb boring thing to fight.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 06:54 |
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What on earth are you supposed to do in the square three left from the beginning in the regular adventure map? It starts off with 3 bombchus with very short trips and 3 messengers who gets reinforcements. Unless I'm missing a "nuke from orbit" button, it's literally impossible to get all of them, and when just a single one of them succeeds the enemy gets a morale boost and destroys the allied base. I just don't understand it, you also need to get a fairy, get a key, get to the keep on the other side of the map and kill the enemy commander and I haven't even gotten halfway through this before our keep gets taken. Hell, it gets taken even if I'm inside of it the entire time.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:00 |
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Shadow Ninja 64 posted:True, he's not hard, which is why it's nice to only have to deal with destroying his toes twice and taking out his weak point gauge once since he's ultimately a big dumb boring thing to fight. Except just doing the WPS is significantly faster and easier, especially on higher difficulties because Weak Point Smashing stacks damage against Giant Bosses so long as you don't go out of the WPS circle. Indeed, just doing the WPS when you're able to might take off enough HP so that you're at the final HP stage where all attacks do significantly higher damage against Giant Bosses, meaning you could potentially chip of the rest of the Imprisoned's HP in one go without even needing to get the WPS down. EDIT: Your Computer posted:What on earth are you supposed to do in the square three left from the beginning in the regular adventure map? Pay attention to the order the Bombchu's start to move and systematically track them down and destroy them in that order.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:10 |
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I'll just agree to disagree then.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:19 |
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Also, anytime The Imprisoned is charging up his lightning strike attack is a golden opportunity to get underneath him and bust some toes because standing underneath The Imprisoned means the lightning strike will miss 100% of the time. The Imprisoned is literally standing there, unable to do anything as you turn it's most dangerous attack into a toe-breaking WPG-revealing freebie.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:30 |
ThisIsACoolGuy posted:Weak point smashes on the bosses are obnoxious until you max that tree out, then a lot of characters can break them easily and clean house fast. It's annoying. How are they changing him?
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:39 |
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tithin posted:How are they changing him? From the sound of it, I think they're removing the "automatically gets up at half weakpoint gauge" annoyance.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:42 |
Oh good. I hope they also remove the "won't get up from chasing you while horizontal until it hits you" annoyance alternatively, they can just get rid of the fucker
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:46 |
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tithin posted:Oh good. I hope they also remove the "won't get up from chasing you while horizontal until it hits you" annoyance If you dodge him for long enough, he'll get up.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:47 |
Long enough seems to vary wildly and has for me taken up to 45 seconds (i timed it) of constant dodge hopping
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:50 |
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I finally got Agitha so now the game is good again, but I have a question; How do I go about grinding rupees, weapons and/or levels? I'm getting my rear end kicked in a lot of adventure mode spaces and I figure it probably has something to do with my characters being low level and having poo poo badges and weapons. Do I just do the same (easy) adventure mode spaces over and over or is there a better way?
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 07:51 |
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Your Computer posted:I finally got Agitha so now the game is good again, but I have a question; How do I go about grinding rupees, weapons and/or levels? I'm getting my rear end kicked in a lot of adventure mode spaces and I figure it probably has something to do with my characters being low level and having poo poo badges and weapons. Do I just do the same (easy) adventure mode spaces over and over or is there a better way? The best way to grind up your first character to max is probably to take Young Link if you have him and do the bottom left square of the Adventure Mode map repeatedly. I think that's the right square anyway. It's a ten minute Rack Up KOs mission, and Young Link is probably the easiest character to keep Focus Spirit running for the EXP gain boost the entire time thanks to his ability to convert special meter into Focus Spirit meter with the Strong Attack button (the ocarina playing thing). Having EXP+ on your weapon and getting the EXP boosting potion from the Apothecary is also recommended, obviously. The best way to earn rupees is to repeatedly try for the Max Rupees Glitch until it works, since even if you only get it a couple times a day it still far outpaces the amount of rupees you can earn in any conventional grinding method. All you need is a weapon with Rupees+ on it for a character with the ability to take out a Giant Boss weakpoint gauge and also harm them from outside the WPS halo. I have videos of triggering the glitch with various characters, but the one I recommend in general is Cia for speed of attempts: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRkIqA1Gjkw Earning good weapons requires playing the hardest squares on any of the adventure maps, the ones that are highlighted or outlined in red before you unlock their area. The best map for this is the Majora map since that one lets you earn 6 weapons per stage instead of 3. One of the weapons you earn should always be the appropriate rank version of whatever weapon you're using on that stage, so if you want to earn more Link Gauntlets, use Link Gauntlets in stages.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:01 |
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Wow, thanks! Another quick question; what level ranges are you "supposed" to be in for the various maps? So far I've only tried the regular Adventure Map but even there it seems like difficulty varies wildly and I haven't seen any indication of how difficult. There's the red areas that you mentioned, and I've also seen that some maps have a "Level: x" on them but I have no idea what that actually means. e: since I haven't made much headway in Adventure Mode, most of my characters are probably between 1 and 20 with a couple around 30 Your Computer fucked around with this message at 08:31 on Mar 23, 2016 |
# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:23 |
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The map that gave people the most trouble by far is probably the Twilight Map. At that time, I think the level cap was 200, and some missions were still hard even at that max level and with good weapons. The Adventure and Master Quest maps were both out when the cap was still 99, but I don't think it's particularly necessary to get characters up to that level to tackle their harder stages. Also, the stages that say like "Level: 1" or whatever is really just an ordering of difficulty of stages that all have the same gimmick or theme, so like the Rack Up KOs level 1 stage is the easiest of the Rack Up KOs stages on that map and the level 9 or whatever is the hardest. Edit: At the levels you're at, you're best off just playing through levels and progressing normally, really. If you really get stuck, a Rack Up KOs map is generally the fastest way to get some levels, even if it's not the 10 minute one I mentioned before.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:32 |
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Your Computer posted:Wow, thanks! Another quick question; what level ranges are you "supposed" to be in for the various maps? So far I've only tried the regular Adventure Map but even there it seems like difficulty varies wildly and I haven't seen any indication of how difficult. There's the red areas that you mentioned, and I've also seen that some maps have a "Level: x" on them but I have no idea what that actually means. Level: x means the map is easier or harder in comparison to other versions/variations of the same mission on the same map. It has nothing to do with the actual level you need to be. Also, to add to the Young Link thing, the map he's referring to is on the Master Quest Map. If you only have the base game Adventure Maps, you may want to get the True Partners illustration since getting any illustration unlocks a mission for a whole new map in Adventure Mode as a reward, and that mission is the best way to grind if you don't have Master Quest. (Actually, Rack Up Your KOs missions tend to be really good for grinding low-level characters in general if you don't want to use the Rupee Glitch.) Once your warriors are high-level, you will want to use the Twilight Map missions that require you to defeat Dark versions of player characters who can split themselves. In fact, since your experience and Apothecary bonus is retained whenever you die as long as you don't quit, you may want to actually "fail" that mission once your character is powerful enough to KO the characters in those missions since it saves on materials and time.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:37 |
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Oh yeah, I forgot about that Twilight Map leveing method since I didn't really use it much, but that one's really good, too. Edit: And yeah, Master Quest map for that Rack Up KOs mission, my bad. Shadow Ninja 64 fucked around with this message at 08:43 on Mar 23, 2016 |
# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:41 |
Is there any actual point to the rewards maps?
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:46 |
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"Rack Up KOs" maps being the "kill X mooks in Y time" type maps right? I totally have all the DLC even if I've barely played this game, probably because the kid in me is dying of fanservice shock
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:56 |
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Your Computer posted:"Rack Up KOs" maps being the "kill X mooks in Y time" type maps right? I totally have all the DLC even if I've barely played this game, probably because the kid in me is dying of fanservice shock Nah, the Rack Up KOs maps don't end when you hit a certain number of kills, they continue on through their entire timer. I'm pretty sure the game calls them "Rack Up KOs" too.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 08:58 |
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Your Computer posted:"Rack Up KOs" maps being the "kill X mooks in Y time" type maps right? I totally have all the DLC even if I've barely played this game, probably because the kid in me is dying of fanservice shock Rack Up KOs is kill as many mooks as you can until timer runs out, which is somewhere around 10 minutes or lower. To help you out with this, you're given lots of chances to activate Focus Spirit which makes you invincible until it runs out and speeds up your attacks. This coupled with the Focus Spirit bonuses (like more EXP) make these maps prime material for levelling up low-level characters and if you die, it's no biggie: You keep the EXP, so it's a simple matter of doing this over and over after each failure until you finally clear them.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 09:40 |
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tithin posted:Is there any actual point to the rewards maps? One of them is a good levelling map. maybe the others are also good for levelling/material grinding?? E: Apparently HWL is getting bad reviews. If that's true, I can't be happier.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 09:46 |
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Dizz posted:One of them is a good levelling map. maybe the others are also good for levelling/material grinding?? It's getting about the same reception as the original Hyrule Warriors i.e. review scores being all over the place. Standard for musou games, actually.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 10:04 |
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Please do not ruin my day.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 10:08 |
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If something like that is enough to ruin your day, then I have no words. For the record, if you're the type to care about Metacritic scores, the original HW sits at a 75 while HW:Legends sits at present on a 71. It's not that much of a difference and the way Legends's content is set up means that the experience is tailored to take advantage of the strengths of a handheld console anyways. Legends is the game I'm currently hyped about, and I know I'll enjoy it.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 10:20 |
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Folt The Bolt posted:It's not that much of a difference and the way Legends's content is set up means that the experience is tailored to take advantage of the strengths of a handheld console anyways. How so?
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 10:36 |
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Bruceski posted:How so? The new gameplay features lets you do stuff in a shorter amount of time and decreases time spent hauling your rear end to get to the spot where you need to do it in the first place, and gives you more time to actually think out your game plan in a mission even if you're in the process of doing said mission. The addition of a customization-based feature that can support you in the core gameplay also gives the player a way to personalize their experience and makes it more accessible, which are both things that helps make a good handheld game great. Also, the way the previous Adventure Maps are done in this game: In Hyrule Warriors, you only had one Adventure Map at base, with one additional map and missions unlocked through Gold Skulltula illustrations. In Legends, Adventure Maps are unlocked as you defeat the previous map's Demon King (besides the last two maps which are unlocked by defeating Master Quest's Demon King). Besides being better for rebalancing, it means less time spent using the same missions to grind out a character over and over (which can be quite the chore) and more time spent on actually earning the rewards. For things that happen due to the other way around: HW:Legends being a handheld game means that if you could pick up the game, grind/attempt a mission for a while, then put the 3DS in Sleep Mode when you get bored, do something else, then resume from where you stopped playing some other time. I find that being able to do that with handheld games helps with long boring sessions of grinding, and keeps me from getting burned out on a handheld game like I occasionally do with home console games.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 12:24 |
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Bruceski posted:From the sound of it, I think they're removing the "automatically gets up at half weakpoint gauge" annoyance. That's almost enough to sell me on the game by itself. If they removed the Imprisoned entirely that would make it the definitive, must-buy version of the game, though
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 13:23 |
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Suaimhneas posted:That's almost enough to sell me on the game by itself. Same but also Manhandla Folt The Bolt posted:If something like that is enough to ruin your day, then I have no words. I'm more salty over the fact that I spent $60 on the game, i THINK another $20 for the DLC, and now that it's gonna be somewhat obsolete content wise over it's portable coutnerpart, that I'd have to pay $40 if I wanted to continue playing. Not to mention that if I didn't own a 3ds [you'd want to get the {new}3ds if you want it running smoother, you know.] then that would cost me another pretty penny. E: But from what I hear, Koei always does this so I guess I brought it upon myself. Dizz fucked around with this message at 18:54 on Mar 23, 2016 |
# ? Mar 23, 2016 18:46 |
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I'm really excited to play Hyrule Warriors Legends on my New Nintendo 3DS XL Majora's Mask Limited Edition handheld gaming system tomorrow
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 19:16 |
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Dizz posted:I'm more salty over the fact that I spent $60 on the game, i THINK another $20 for the DLC, and now that it's gonna be somewhat obsolete content wise over it's portable coutnerpart, that I'd have to pay $40 if I wanted to continue playing. How are you having to pay $40 for a sequel/enhanced port/expansion in order to continue playing? Your Wii U copy of the game is still there. You only "have" to pay for Legends in order to play Legends.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 19:19 |
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I got my copy early. It's good! I'm surprised at how well it runs on the New 3DS, I couldn't imagine how terrible it must be on an old one, though.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 19:19 |
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jivjov posted:How are you having to pay $40 for a sequel/enhanced port/expansion in order to continue playing? Your Wii U copy of the game is still there. If I 100% the Wii U copy and want to do the Legends content, I would have to buy it.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 19:45 |
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Dizz posted:If I 100% the Wii U copy and want to do the Legends content, I would have to buy it. Yeah...but you're buying a new game....you aren't forced to spend more money to continue (your word, not mine) playing the one you already have.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 19:48 |
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I already bought an old thing, so why should I ever have to pay for a new thing?
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 19:57 |
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Indigo Cephalopods posted:I already bought an old thing, so why should I ever have to pay for a new thing? It would have been nice to get a discount or something for already having the game (and DLC). Mind you, i played the demo and was having fun clearing out the map until the boss showed up and it reminded me that nah, 100+ hours in the original is enough. I can't imagine trying to stomach playing the whole thing again from scratch.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 20:06 |
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Dizz posted:Same but also Manhandla Manhandla's kind of easy too though. On the subject of Legends, it was never gonna be a straight port of the original from the start. Who knows, maybe they'll never increase the level cap on this version as well. Which suits me fine.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 20:11 |
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Kin posted:It would have been nice to get a discount or something for already having the game (and DLC). I can agree with you on this. I would have preferred if the maps and adventure maps and the DLC were able to be purchased as DLC for the Wii U game in addition to characters. But as stated earlier, this is pretty much just how K-T do.
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 20:19 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 21:49 |
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Well plus, its not like Nintendo has any sort of precedent in place for discounting a sequel in exchange for buying the previous iterations. I paid full price for Smash Bros and Mario Kart despite owning all the previous installments...
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# ? Mar 23, 2016 20:24 |