DC2 is absolutely a must play. Its a ridiculously big game though, be warned. You’ll be deep into the latter chapters with the game still throwing new mechanics at you like “omg, I have to play golf in dungeons now too, and fishing, and base building, and photography, and and and and”
I kind of do reccomend a guide for it as there’s some permanent misables.
twinklefruit@lemmings.world 5 months ago
I tried play DC1 recently because it looked good and was pretty disappointed.
It’s kind of a janky dungeon-crawler, not necessarily the adventure I was hoping for.
Cethin@lemmy.zip 5 months ago
DC2 is still fairly similar with the dungeons (though much less grindy, and far less annoying with running out of water or whatever, from my memory). 2 adds a ton of other things to do though. If you’re tired of grinding dungeons, go fishing, breed your fish for races and events, go golfing, find things to take pictures of for inventing, progress your town for more unlocks, advance NPC quests to add them to your group, etc. 1 is fairly linear with one way to progress. 2 has probably a dozen different activities to progress in, so you can do whatever you want in the moment.
a_pithy_name@lemmy.world 5 months ago
I’m not too surprised; it’s been a long time since I’ve played it, and I suspected my fond memories might not reflect reality. Did you give the sequel a shot?
twinklefruit@lemmings.world 5 months ago
No, but I might if you recommend it.
It’s actually the game that stood out to me on store shelves as a kid. I just thought I’d start with the first 🤷
a_pithy_name@lemmy.world 5 months ago
I remember it being a great game! Moreso than DC1; I think the former appealed to me so much because it was the first game I played with a base-building gameplay loop like that. If you’re looking for a game to play, consider giving it a shot. I remember being reeled in pretty quickly, so you ought to be able to make up your mind early on (although more and more interesting systems get introduced the longer you play, of course).