In base elden ring no, the DLC is specifically stated to do so I believe.
Shiggles
I believe part of the issue is you can only really level vigor to 50 before it stops mattering, but the enemies will do more and more damage based off your total level. So if every stat is 50, you’re way less tanky than if you were level 150 with some normal stats.
“I cannot reasonably purchase anything not connected to China, this is an issue”
“Wow guys, he just admitted to buying things from China! What a hypocrite!”
C’mon.
At this point, I just use someone complaining about the national debt as a secret code for them saying “I have zero idea how economics works”.
In their defense, I was also unsure until I checked the sublemmy.
I would actually be somewhat understanding of that, if for no other reason than I would be very concerned with what the orange man would do to someone already in prison.
Isn’t it laughably easy to mod? I’m okay with them saying “this is what we balanced for, anything else is on you”, though it should be like those divinity “prepackaged mods” like the zoomy boots
I would love for them to bring back places like the Bell Towers in DS2. Does elden ring even have a mirror knight type boss that can summon people?
It’s not that they can’t still be profit driven, it’s that they can’t be sued by investors for not being ruthlessly profit driven. Private just means that they have the choice at all
A lotta zoomers have phone cases with their id and stuff in them, which might be the alternative? Personally I never trusted myself to not lose my phone and be really fucked.
Flip gay and straight in your post, and try to think about how the statement could ever possibly be justified.
Being anything other than an ally in such a place is absolutely reprehensible, I agree. Existing there is not quite as high of a crime.
Garfield’s injection of +c reminds me of when I was a wee little shit and, annoyed at losing points on a test for forgetting to write “+ c”, decided to exclusively write “- c” for the rest of school. Dropped the habit in college because I stopped caring, but I am always tempted.