Out of curiosity, is your monitor able to mimic 16:9 like full HD by leaving borders on the left and right as a last resort?Then, it doesn't have ultrawide support. So Flawless Widescreen to the rescue. It now runs decently in ultrawide.
Out of curiosity, is your monitor able to mimic 16:9 like full HD by leaving borders on the left and right as a last resort?Then, it doesn't have ultrawide support. So Flawless Widescreen to the rescue. It now runs decently in ultrawide.
Yeah, that's what it does by default. But Flawless Widescreen is working perfectly fine. At least in-game. Some of the UIs aren't scaled for that, but it's acceptable.Out of curiosity, is your monitor able to mimic 16:9 like full HD by leaving borders on the left and right as a last resort?
They used to use a lower resolution for the cinematics and to change the screen resolution to play them. Perhaps that takes the software off guard. It's strange the new ones are a problem and not the old ones, though.Some of the cinematics though, and I'm not sure this is anything due to the widescreen software I'm using, are bugged out.
Thanks, I've had them since forever. But I've soured a bit on witcher with my save games being corrupted.In case you're interested, Blood and Wine and Hearts of Stone are -60%.
In TW1, Quen is used to buy time to recover or drink a potion during battle while you're being attacked. It ends if you perform a hostile action, so yeah, it's not as useful as it is in the later games imo.I also got a two more of the signs, and looking at the Quen one I'm starting to doubt if I ever got it in my previous playthroughs. I'm not sure I was ever this thorough in my exploration.
But, either I'm not reading it right or is the Quen sign almost absolutely useless in W1? The main issue is it apparently gets disabled if you do any combat while under its effect. And I checked all skills until the skill tree, and none seem to disable this.
So then what's its purpose? Just to serve as a safety device while running away or while exploring? If you can't use it in combat at all? Really weird. In W3 this was thankfully changed. I can't remember how it was for W2. But it's seriously disappointing for W1.
Unless I'm missing something. But I have tried it in combat, and indeed it seemed to go away immediately.
I don't think I've invested into signs anymore than 1-2 bronze points. And I've only barely used Aard and Igni. The others seem fairly useless or too particular.In TW1, Quen is used to buy time to recover or drink a potion during battle while you're being attacked. It ends if you perform a hostile action, so yeah, it's not as useful as it is in the later games imo.
It's been a long time since I played TW1 to completion, but iirc, you can't reach a high enough level to max out all the signs, so I'd be careful about spreading your points too thin. Focus on 2-3 of them. I think Aard and Igni are the best in TW1.
It's been a while, but I can't say it rings a bell. They are apparently from different composers.Here's a question now that I've reached the Trade Quarter of Vizima. Does anyone feel like they heard this song in Witcher 3? For some reason, at least the first minute, feels very familiar to something I heard in W3 most probably.
Yeah, I'm probably wrong.It's been a while, but I can't say it rings a bell. They are apparently from different composers.
You played TW3 more recently than me, so it could be a similar theme I forgot.Yeah, I'm probably wrong.
But from the moment I entered the trade quarter this started played and suddenly I was sure I heard this song before. I checked the couple of songs you hear in White Orchard, but it's quite a bit different.
I guess, even though it's a bit hard to believe, it might just be that I'm remembering it from the last time I played W1? Probably over 10 years since I last reached chapter 3 in W1.
But I do hear that sound and music, followed by smell, is usually the first ways nostalgia is triggered. So maybe that's it. But I could've sworn I heard it more recently.
But I didn't get further than White Orchard, and I checked, none of those theme songs are even close. Anyway ...You played TW3 more recently than me, so it could be a similar theme I forgot.
That's the only thing I don't like about TW1. There is a lot of backtracking. I didn't really noticed it the first time I played, but I found it annoying when I replayed it years later.It really took a long time. I can only understate how much walking around there is. I completely forgot about all of that.
Yeah, there's boat loads. I was even more shocked at the amount of back and forth in chapter 4, on the island where you get teleported to.That's the only thing I don't like about TW1. There is a lot of backtracking. I didn't really noticed it the first time I played, but I found it annoying when I replayed it years later.
I had same issue recently with Starfield.