Swen Vincke and Mike Mearls were interviewed by Metro about Baldur's Gate III.
More information.GC: [laughs] I really enjoyed the combat in Divinity: Original Sin because of the obvious XCOM influence, but because it's an adaptation of existing rules does that mean it'll be very different in Baldur's Gate III?
SV: Yeah, that's the one that I'm not answering. [laughs] I will tell you what the idea is though. So, the reason why I'm not saying anything is because combat is something that is so sacred in this, when it comes to Baldur's Gate, so we want to show it to people rather than just talk about it. However, I can tell you what the idea is. When you play D&D you get thrown challenges that you need to overcome. Some of these challenges require you to go into combat. And to ensure player agency you have to give the player a whole bunch of systems so that they can use them in any way they want to overcome the challenges that are thrown at them. That's what we did in DOS2 because in DOS2 people come up with craziest ways of winning, unwinnable combat. That's also what we'll do in Baldur's Gate III. You're going to see combat that is very easy and you're going to see combat that is hard. You have an entire toolbox at your disposal, which goes beyond just a rule set. It also depends on your imagination, so that you will overcome situations in a variety of ways.
GC: There's always a sort of rule of thumb for me, for a good RPG, and it's whether you can resolve a conflict - a major story set piece, not necessarily fighting with grunts - outside of combat.
SV: Yes!
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