Pan Mateusz

Pan Mateusz

Joined Member # 989154
2 Posts 7 Replies 293 Reputation

[quote quoting="post"] #9 REMEMBER: FROM THEIR PERSPECTIVE, THEY ARE THE CUSTOMER, IT’S THEIR GAME AND YOU ARE A GRIEFING THEM The monsters in Elemental: FE have been written as if they are the main characters. That is, they have all the capabilities you do. They go up in level, gain new abilities, can get loot, etc. If you’ve ever read the original “I am Legend” you will understand Good luck! [/quote] Awesome, I always wanted

42 Replies 127,102 Views

[quote]A friend of mine who isn’t into video games but is into D&D asked me how I would describe Elemental: Fallen Enchantress. I said that imagine that instead of you and your friends being a group that runs around having adventures and wreaking havoc in the countryside of someone’s realm, you are instead in charge of said realm.[/quote] Birthright? I played that, was fun.

44 Replies 99,606 Views

So, I don't have a 64 bit machine, and I don't feel like getting one anytime soon. Which contains me to 32 bit Elemenal. And because of that I feel uneasy - is it worse, dubbed down version? Is the game primarily developed to work with 64 bit machines? What are the real differences between versions?

7 Replies 41,501 Views

[quote who="Nick-Danger" reply="116" id="2645725"]Quoting Sir_Linque, reply 83Those types of lakes exist, although not so big and in such a place as it is in the Elemental map. Lake Toba in Sumatra is such a lake and is roughly the same size as the one in Elemental. Also, lakes with no outlets can appear wherever, since there are a number of causes that could create one.I thought of Lake Toba (formed as the result of a super-volcano explosion and filled in with rainwater) as an e

126 Replies 340,987 Views

[quote who="Sir_Linque" reply="96" id="2644722"] Hey, this is pretty interesting. I did not know these existed. Finland I can understand since there are a thousand lakes that such a rare occurrence might be possible (heh, I'm actually from Finland and did not know about these types of lakes ... ). It requires very unique geography for this to happen, apparently. In finland this is possible because there are no watersheds in the area - it's not clear as to which general direction th

126 Replies 340,987 Views

Honestly, the lake issue would be borderline trolling, even if you guys were right. And you aren't. Bifurcation lakes are rare indeed, but that doesn't mean nonexistent. There are quite a few in Finland - I know, I was there. And there is one in Canada that is actually pretty big. All of them were stable enough to survive centuries.

126 Replies 340,987 Views