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The Witcher: Enhanced Edition
Description
The Witcher est un jeu de rôles dans un monde sombre et fantastique où règne l'ambiguïté morale. Dépassant le clivage entre le bien et le mal, le jeu met l'accent sur l'histoire et le développement des personnages, tout en proposant un système de combat en temps réel d'un grande richesse tactiq...
The Witcher est un jeu de rôles dans un monde sombre et fantastique où règne l'ambiguïté morale. Dépassant le clivage entre le bien et le mal, le jeu met l'accent sur l'histoire et le développement des personnages, tout en proposant un système de combat en temps réel d'un grande richesse tactique.
Incarnez le sorceleur Geralt de Riv et laissez-vous happer dans une mystérieuse toile tissée par les forces luttant pour contrôler le monde. Prenez des décisions difficiles et assumez leurs conséquences dans un jeu qui vous plongera dans une aventure exceptionnelle.
CARACTÉRISTIQUES
GERALT DE RIV : UN PROTAGONISTE UNIQUE
Entrez dans la peau de Geralt de Riv, un bretteur charismatique et un tueur de monstres professionnel.
Faites votre choix parmi plus de 250 capacités spéciales, compétences de combat et pouvoirs magiques pour créer un personnage adapté à votre façon de jouer.
MONDE FANTASTIQUE ORIGINAL, INSPIRÉ PAR LA LITTÉRATURE
Découvrez un monde fantastique rude, inspiré par l'œuvre d'Andrzej Sapkowski, auteur polonais réputé dans l'univers duquel rien n'est jamais blanc ou noir, bon ou mauvais.
SCÉNARIO NON LINÉAIRE
Plongez dans une histoire épique, pleine de rebondissements, de coups de théâtre et de décisions moralement ambiguës ayant un impact réel sur le déroulement des événements.
Accomplissez des quêtes de différentes façons pour parvenir à l'une des trois fins différentes de l'histoire, en fonction de vos actions.
ACTION TACTIQUE ÉPOUSTOUFLANTE
Livrez des combats en temps réel, complexes mais intuitifs, basés sur de véritables techniques de combat à l'épée du Moyen Âge.
Combattez à l'aide de six styles de combat, de dizaines de potions, d'un système d'alchimie complexe, d'armes modifiables et d'une magie puissante ajoutant tous une profondeur tactique à l'expérience de combat fluide en temps réel.
La capture de mouvements a été effectuée sur des experts du combat médiéval à Francfort, au fameux studio Metric Minds, ce qui permet au jeu de proposer 600 animations martiales authentiques et spectaculaires.
À PROPOS DE THE WITCHER: ENHANCED EDITION
The Witcher: Enhanced Edition reprend les bases du jeu original, récompensé par plus de 90 prix, tout en apportant une série d'améliorations dans le système de jeu et les performances techniques.
Dialogues et cinématiques améliorés : plus de 5000 lignes de dialogues ont été réécrites et réenregistrées en anglais, l'édition allemande a été entièrement remasterisée et plus de 200 animations ont été ajoutées pour rendre l'expérience plus cohérente et les personnages plus crédibles dans les dialogues et les cinématiques.
Inventaire amélioré : un sac séparé pour les ingrédients alchimiques et la fonction simple de tri et d'empilement facilitent l'organisation et l'utilisation des objets.
Améliorations techniques : parmi les nombreuses améliorations techniques, notez des temps de chargement nettement réduits, une meilleure stabilité, des combats plus nerveux, un chargement accéléré de l'inventaire, une option permettant d'activer ou de désactiver la sauvegarde automatique…
Système de différenciation des personnages : le système génère de manière aléatoire l'apparence de dizaines de modèles afin de rendre les monstres et les PNJ plus variés.
The Witcher Enhanced Edition contient les articles bonus suivants :
Bande dessinée interactive
Éditeur d'aventures D'jinni
Deux nouvelles aventures offrant plus de 5 heures de jeu
manuel
artbook
fonds d'écran
guide du jeu
cartes
calendrier The Witcher
The Witcher story
musique inspirée par The Witcher (MP3)
bande son (MP3)
avatars
scènes exclusives dans les coulisses
interviews des créateurs (Atari)
interviews des créateurs (CD Projekt RED)
vidéoclip
musique inspirée par The Witcher (FLAC)
bande son (FLAC)
manuel (German)
game guide (German)
manuel (Russian)
manuel (Italian)
manuel (Polish)
game guide (Italian)
game guide (Polish)
Digital Comic (App)
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Nous faisons vivre les jeux pour toujours ! Depuis 2008, nous améliorons nous-mêmes les Good Old Games afin de garantir leur commodité et leur compatibilité avec les systèmes modernes. Même si les développeurs originaux du jeu ne le supportent plus
Ce jeu fonctionnera sur les configurations actuelles, et futures, des configurations PC Windows les plus populaires. Sans DRM.
C'est la meilleure version de ce jeu que vous pouvez acheter sur n'importe quelle plateforme PC.
Nous sommes la seule plateforme à fournir un support technique pour les jeux que nous vendons. Si des problèmes apparaissent avec le jeu, notre support technique vous aidera à les résoudre.
Notre liste des améliorations apportées à ce jeu :
Windows Version Update (13 November 2024)
Added DirectX to dependencies, ensuring proper compatibility with required libraries
Set core affinity to the first 2 CPU cores, improving performance on modern systems
Validated stability
Verified compatibility with Windows 10 and 11
Update 1.5 (A) (22 March 2017)
Added support for Cloud Saves in GOG Galaxy 1.2 and newer
Gameplay: 9/10
Graphics: 9/10
Sound: 9/10
Voice:9/10
Art Direction: 10/10
Story: 10/10
Replay: 8/10
Simply you NEED to play this game if you love RPG's. It is flawless, or nearly so in every way.
My one gripe is that while I loved the Aurora engine in 2002 (NWN), by 2008 it was seriously out of date. To Witcher's credit, they modified the hell out of the engine to suit the game. But it does feel clunky by today's standards.
On to the goodness.
The story is as rich and complex as any I've seen in a game. Better than Bioshock, better than Dragon Age. Yes, that good.
The art direction is among the best I've ever seen. As good, at least, as Bioshock or Morrowind.
Sound and voice are first-rate. No audio problems, no lo-rez sound. Voice acting is phenomenal, considering it's a localization of a Polish game (of course, they also knew the US would be their biggest market).
Story-wise, I don't want to say anything except this a dark, gritty, ancient punk-rock, and ambiguous saga, and it's only the beginning.
Game-play is keyboard/mouse Aurora engine. It's real-time with auto-pause. Character development can seem ornate and over-done, but you get used to it. It's the same combo of attributes, skills, and spells we're mainly used to. Combat and spell mechanics don't suck, but they could be better.
The thing that really hooked me? You might not know the consequences of your actions for a couple of chapters. This is not a save/reload/repeat kind of game (unless you really screw up in combat).
This is simply a phenomenal game that you deserve to play. Despite a few minor things, this is one of the best RPG's out there.
If anyone buys it on my say-so, and doesn't like it after 10 hours, I'll personally refund your $1.50 :)
This is the beginning of the brilliance that CDPR had and it shows that they understood exactly what they were going for and what their ultimate goal is and there's so many things that can be noticed here.
So first off, the story is unmatched with the amazing chains of events and choices that are presented to the player that will play off in totally unexpected ways with many many beloved characters, some of them might be familiar and some new but all are equally fleshed out and have a ton of personality that they feel like real people.
The RPG aspect of the game is passable, not gonna lie, it's not the best in the series or even ever but it gets the job done, the traversing of the game is kind of bad but you get used to it. The music is top notch as with all Witcher games and the combat is simple but there's tons of customization to add more flavor to it.
Overall I would recommed this game for Witcher fans who want to go through the whole story after the books.
Exudes rare ambition and confidence for a RPG delivering a memorable experience despite flaws
Moral ambiguity is something which many RPGs over the years have struggled to get a proper grasp on. Treading the thin lines of the so-called "grey area" hasn't been an easy task for many RPGs so it was no wonder that in order to expand their accessibility many RPGs like Fable and Mass Effect began embracing a simplistic good/evil morality system in the recent years. The Witcher thus comes across as a rare creature due to a number of reasons. Firstly it features absolutely no morality system –you are left to judge your own actions on the basis of their consequence. Secondly it is made by a little known Polish developer who developed it on a highly modified 6-year old Aurora engine of BioWare. Most importantly however the Witcher occasionally exudes the rare sort of confidence and ambition that we've rarely ever seen from a European RPG.
Based on a series of novels and short stories from popular Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski, The Witcher tells the tale of a legendary monster hunter-a Witcher named Geralt of Rivia situated in a dark mature fantasy universe. It isn't dark only in the sense of it's atmosphere. It's dark in nearly EVERY sense –right from the major themes the game tackles to the smallest details of the universe. Sexism,corruption,racism,rape and prostitution and nearly every major evil runs deeply ingrained within every character you'll come across in this game. It is highly refreshing to see a fantasy universe that is built purely for adults and doesn't treat you like a kid even for the slightest moments.
Developed on BioWare's Aurora engine, the Witcher is naturally going to be a turn-based affair but CD Projekt, the developer modified it cleverly to make Witcher's combat appear like a highly clever twist between turn-based and action. It can be quick and hectic but it also utilizes the basic turn-based elements from the engine as well. Like most European RPGs, the Witcher's combat is not your everyday clickfest. It requires thought, precision and more importantly timing. Clicking on an enemy initiates an attack. Combos can be built on this attack by timing further clicks at proper time as indicated by a flaming cursor. To add the strategic component to the basic combat, Witcher introduces different stances. There are three different stances – Strong, Fast and Group. Strong does major damage but at very slow speed, Fast does medium damage but unleashes a good flurry of attacks and Group is for delivering minimal damage but to everyone around you.
All the stances won't work on all enemies. Like faster enemies will easily dodge your Strong attacks, so the combat does require a great deal of planning and thought even when you're right in the middle of the action. To add another twist to the combat, Geralt uses two swords – Steel and Silver Sword. Steel Sword is effective only on humans whereas Silver is effective only on monsters. This means that in addition to the action combat and the stances, there is thought and planning to be done even when it comes to equipping the proper sword. For instance, before going into a cave full of undead I wouldn't bother applying oils that upgrade my Steel sword since that wouldn't be effective. The Witcher rewards planning and strategy-making in advance and I can hardly recall any RPG in recent times that puts so much emphasis on that and rewards players accordingly.
Acting as the two support systems to the melee combat are magic and alchemy –both of which are as unique and unconventional as the rest of the game. Geralt's magic is limited to only 5 spells and these aren't your usual "pure offensive" magic either. These Spells (or Signs as they are called in the game) can be switched in between combat by simple pre-defined hotkeys. Instead of mana, they use up endurance. They are spells that generally aid your melee combat more than anything. These spells knock down, slow down enemies and blocks their attacks for a couple of seconds. As you can see, these aren't offensive spells by any stretch of imagination. The only offensive spell is Igni. Spells and parrying/blocking attacks use up Endurance. To prevent the players from spamming spells to defeat foes like in many of BioWare's games, CD Projekt kept the Endurance bar very limited. Even at an advanced level, using 2-3 Igni spells at once is more than enough to deplete your entire Endurance and it regenerates at a very slow rate.
This brings me to Alchemy one of the central components of The Witcher. The lore of the Witchers suggest they are expert alchemists and hence this part of the game gains importance. Alchemy is the chief support system to the game. On normal to higher difficulties it is absolutely necessary to have proper knowledge of alchemical ingredients. Thankfully the game does an excellent job of storing information regarding any potions, its formula, the ingredients required in a rather user-friendly format in the Journal. The Enhanced Edition also introduces a separate section of the Inventory for the alchemical components alone. Geralt can learn the formulae of potions by reading various books available across the Witcher's world. He also needs to learn about how to extract ingredients from a herb or a monster before he extracts it. Potions also can only be prepared by meditating. So if you need a certain potion before a fight, you will need to meditate and mix the potion before it's ready. Potions can last for several hours to a day so preparing in advance is once AGAIN rewarded in this game.
Since the Witcher uses a dynamic day/night cycle, meditating can often become useful to skip time until a required point. Meditation can only be done at certain designated fireplaces when there's no monsters around. Meditation also serves as a portal for leveling up your stats. Leveling up in Witcher is rather unique. Instead of traditionally increasing stats, Geralt learns new abilities and in doing so he unlocks higher levels of expertise. The same applies for the Sign/Spells upgrades too. The Witcher's character customization is relatively complex enough to please most RPG fans.
Questing is another aspect where the Witcher truly shines. There are often two or more ways to finish a general storyline related quest each leading to a potentially different outcome. Even basic bounty-hunting quests have an added layer of uniqueness surrounding it. If you're tasked to kill three vampires and bring their hearts as a proof just killing three vampires won't do the trick. You'll need to look up in books before hand with the town's booksellers to see if they've got any information regarding how to extract vampire's hearts. The game only hints you in this and there's always little to no hand-holding involved in most of the quests. The game respects its gamers' intelligence and doesn't treat them like a low-IQ idiot.
As if it weren't enough already to further demonstrate the talent that these newbie Polish developers have within them, the Witcher has some absolutely fantastic storyline quests that with the added role-playing component strike pure gold. There's a detective quest that runs central through the second chapter and with the game's heavy/moody atmosphere it often resembles a fantasy film-noir of sorts. There is another quest that involves an autopsy of a dead body which can lead to wildly different conclusions all depending upon how smart and observant the player is and how much he has researched regarding the biological abnormalities. There are a couple of more brilliant quests that one doesn't generally come across in RPGs and it's refreshing to see them in one. The game rewards you with a rare degree of satisfaction found in RPGs when you complete such smartly designed quests successfully.
The Witcher's story is broken across 5 chapters excluding a Prologue and an Epilogue. It tells the tale of Geralt of Rivia as he travels in search of a mysterious mage who has stolen the Witchers' secrets. A relatively simple premise breaks into something more devious and soon Geralt finds himself caught up to the neck in political skullduggery. Corruption, lies, betrayal are the mere beginning of this rich enjoyable tale. The game doesn't hesitate from presenting player with an array of moral dilemmas none of which fall into the good/evil category of the Fables and Mass Effects. In fact, Witchers' moral dilemmas often don't fall into even Dragon Age's "relatively good and relatively bad" system. Rather in the Witcher, everyone is evil and selfish and it's upto you to judge whose evil is apparently greater. It's often hard to judge none so greater than the end of the Chapter 1 which poses one of the most complex moral dilemmas I've come across in a game. The narration also takes a couple of risks half-way through which pays off in rather surprising ways. Witcher's narration can be hectic when it wants to but it can also slow it down to a calming stroll when it wants to.Breath-taking in both scope and execution, the Witcher's story is one of its key strengths.
The world is also highly believable and dynamic. Besides a dynamic day/night and weather cycle, the NPC behavior is something that deserves a mention. When it rains, the NPCs take cover under a roofed passageway or run for shelter. They just don't walk around pretending everything's normal. They also go about their daily chores (not to the same level of sophistication as in Elder Scrolls games) and slowly retire to home or to tavern when night falls. Since this is made on a pre-console BioWare era engine, the player has freedom to kill any NPCs that don't directly break a quest. This can be occasionally useful for getting into areas that you usually aren't allowed into. In that sense, the Witcher is certainly quite open-ended compared to the newer BioWare games.
All of this may lead one to believe that Witcher is a perfect RPG in nearly every sense. Unfortunately that is not the case. The Witcher is plagued with problems that it inherits from it's own Euro-RPG genre--namely clunky controls, broken quests and glitches galore. The fact that the Witcher is made on an engine that is almost crumbling under Witcher's modifications doesn't help it's case. Crashes, graphical glitches still exist even in the Enhanced Edition. You'll occasionally run into broken quests just because you didn't reach some point at the proper point in the story. Witchers' multi-act narration kinda escalates the questing issues. Some quests get carried forward to other acts but there's almost no way to finish them since you can't access that particular area you were in the previous chapter. This leads to making your journal look a lot messier and crowded than it should be.
Add to this the controls. The Witcher was modified to a massive extent to make it seem like an action game. SEEM like one. Unfortunately Witcher's dodging is clunky and animations often don't match the damage you sustain. All of this is quite simply because Witcher is still a turn-based affair given an action-RPG polish over it. The illusion works for most of the time but when it does break one's frustration is justified.
One of the major overhauls in Enhanced Edition is the vast improvement in the Polish to English translation. The original's dialogues sometimes made little to no sense and this lead to a decline in the quality of it's rich storyline. It was a disappointing aspect of the original. However CD Projekt decided to do something about that and retranslated and re-recorded over 5000 lines for the Enhanced Edition. Many of these lines are meant for Geralt and one can immediately sense a much clearer sarcasm in the retranslated dialogues. Some of the story and quests also make greater sense than they did in the original.
The Witcher is a rare beast in nearly every sense. Exuding a rare degree of confidence and ambition that few of it's fellow Euro-RPGs have shown over the years, it exhibits the developer, CD Projekt's pedigree and understanding of what works in RPGs and what doesn't. Their emphasis on the often-ignored aspects of planning and strategy as well as in introducing a rare form of moral complexity is commendable. Their balancing of magic as a support system rather than a complete destroyer of enemies is another plus point in their favour. They also don't miss the key aspects of RPGs-the storytelling and decision-making and come out with some highly memorable quests. The game stumbles at a lot of places and it does require a bit of patience to overcome it's Euro-RPG inherited rough edges and clunkiness.
The Witcher ultimately could have been a lot more if it knew how to iron out it's irregularities and address its shortcomings. It certainly doesn't lack the ambition nor does it lack confidence and for a large part of the game it successfully executes its unique elements into a memorable role-playing game of a high caliber.
The age of the game shows on several occasions. Firstly, repeated character models with clunky animations. Secondly, the engine wasn't optimized to handle large number of NPCs. So the game is lagging in crowded areas.
The movement is pretty limited. You can walk only on paths. You cannot cross bushes, water or jump even over small fences. You simply must go around. It is noticeable in areas outside the city, like marshes and fields. It can be pretty annoying.
However, for me it has the best atmosphere in the trilogy. You really feel like the Witcher. The alchemy is integrated pretty well in the game. Something, that I lacked in the sequels.
The combat is hit or miss. It took some time for me to get used to it. But in the end, I enjoyed it. Geralt has really sick fighting animations that were pleasure to watch.
The story, the characters known from the books, choices that are not black and white... Those are things that hooked me to the screen.
Despite its flaws and age, the Witcher holds special place among my favourite games.
Me and my wife just finished Witcher 1+2+3 and we have plans to start them again.
I've played and finished probably hundreds of games since the age of 15, and this is by far the deepest one i've ever played. So much thought has been done about the story, that it's absolutely amazing.
You make choices, moral choices that make A HUGE difference on how the game evolves.
The game is funny, thrilling, interesting, evolving ...
Playing the witcher for the 1st time, was like seeing Lord of the rings for the first time. You KNOW you're in the middle of a "one of a kind" experience, and you cherish every minute.
I highly recommend on buying Witcher 1+2+3.
Enjoy
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