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I m Worried Dune: Awakening Is Going To Make Me The Villain

From Prophet of AI


Beyond that variety and the hundreds of hours of content expected in the base game, I was interested to hear where Funcom sees Awakening going in the future. Conan Exiles has been active since 2017 and gets large updates to this


If you're wondering "What class is the strongest?" , well, it depends. Every development team aims to have balance when creating class-based games, but sometimes there are certain abilities and classes that just seem to stand out as being the b


The character class and skill trees in Dune: Awakening are some of the game's best qualities, as they allow for highly customizable character development and a really immersive experience right out of the g


Q: How does Dune: Awakening cater to the different MMO player types? You've mentioned builders, you mentioned crafters. If someone wants to be super passive or super aggressive, as a developer, how do you approach accommodating all t


Now, being a villain in general isn’t necessarily a bad thing in video games. It can be fun to do an evil run of an RPG like Baldur’s Gate 3 and make cartoonishly bad decisions. However, **Dune Awakening DLC tackles some serious real-life issues that feel very relevant to today’s political landscape ** . Elements from the gameplay reveal seem to suggest that players will be working both with and as colonizers on Arrakis. I’m a bit worried that Dune: Awakening isn’t just going to have me be the villain but that it doesn’t recognize that’s what it’s do


It’s exciting to hear that Funcom already has ideas for the future of Dune: Awakening. Working with such an established IP is exciting and limited, but Dune has plenty of variety to keep players coming back for ye

A: When we say MMO, we don't mean MMORPG . We're talking more about the amount of players that you're interacting with and this endgame system that's more social. We have different archetypes, as I talked about earlier, with building and crafting. At the start of the game, you need to experience all of these things. However, you can progress if you party up with other people to do things you don't necessarily want to


For example, there are various random and world events set to trigger in the game. Our demoist was at a Harkonnen base, and we got to see some Harkonnen soldiers preparing to execute House Atreides POWs. While some MMOs can have lifeless worlds because of the emphasis on a player and their faction, that doesn't appear to be the case here - though that's not to say players won't have a huge impact on the game wo


If you've seen the second movie [ Dune Part Two], there's a scene where they're shooting, and you hear the projectile spinning as it's interacting with the shield. We have the same thing. And what's neat is, in PVP, and especially in PVE when an enemy is shooting at you, you'll hear that noise when it hits the shield. You can actually dash out of the way and the projectile falls to the ground. And that sort of interaction wouldn't happen if we had bullets or if we had Halo shields . It's just one of the many things we've worked thro


When you're working with an IP like Dune, you have to have these narrative elements . That's what people expect, or it doesn't really feel like the IP. The narrative here is more important than probably any survival game that I've played. I'm sure there are maybe some single-player ones that have similar narrative elements, but it's important to us. It will be important throughout the player's journey. The post-launch will continue to expand the narrative by building on the story, eventually concluding at some time far in the future, and then starting a new type of story that takes o


Were **Dune: Awakening ** simply a survival game, I would likely have fewer reservations about it. The idea of trying to survive the harsh environments on Arrakis sounds like a fun challenge for a video game. However, if the way I’m forced to do that is by building settlements on Fremen land and working with colonizing forces like the Harkonnens instead of Arrakis’ native people, the game will feel like a betrayal of the warnings Herbert’s novels tried to instill in

These wild animals make menial survival busywork a lot more exciting, and spotting a sandworm diving above the surface in the distance is an incredible sight to behold. You’re torn between a desire to see what it’s found and also avoiding near-certain death. Get killed by a bandit and you can head back to the location of your demise to retrieve your stuff. Get eaten by a sandworm, though, and your gear is gone forever. It’s a constant treat that’s much more literal than the hunger and thirst meters survival games normally rely


Then, as you progress, things start to "elevate more into a story and become connected to the wider story and the wider story arcs. Players will develop their own storylines that will integrate and form larger clans, larger groupings, and drive things in the deep desert gameplay, where you want them to sort of create their own storylines, but there still is that big overlap in story that players will interact wi