What's the longest, hardest fantasy rpg out there?
from Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 03:32
https://lemmy.world/post/40169763

I am looking for the longest (in terms of hours) and most difficult (in terms of complexity).

I’ve played a lot of Final Fantasy, Diablo Series, WoW, Everquest 1 and 2, Skyrim, Divinity Original Sin: 2, etc…

Older gameplay styles are preferred, but not a requirement.

So, what’s the hardest shit out there?

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 03:38 next collapse

The 7th Saga. SNES.

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 14 Dec 04:25 collapse

For it’s time, possibly… but I’ve played through it. There are others from slightly later that have so many possible endings and characters that I never felt like I fully completed them.

lordnikon@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 03:39 next collapse

Wizardry IV

Godort@lemmy.ca on 14 Dec 03:56 next collapse

It’s gotta be one of the early ones, before they figured out how to balance things. Something like Avernum, Geneforge, Wizardry, or Wasteland

Rhoeri@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 04:21 next collapse

Not really fantasy, but the Kingdom Come: Deliverance games are downright punishing and can take a long time.

Think realistic Middle Ages sim where your character is a weak little blacksmiths helper and has no clue what they’re doing.

Donjuanme@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 04:42 next collapse

Longest grind? Runescape? Phantasy Star 3? disgaea if you don’t know what you’re doing

andros_rex@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 04:49 next collapse

Daggerfall is long as fuck (in universe, the adventure takes at least ten years.) The dungeons are massive serpentine mazes. Multiple guilds and factions, although they don’t feature overarching questlines - lots of radiant quests, but they never really feel boring.

It’s also fairly difficult - especially if you build a character without cheesing it with a guide. You need to be juggling multiple saves to prevent yourself being trapped in a certain death situation, mess up a quest, etc.

There’s a modern remake, Daggerfall Unity, which a lot of people say is a good way to play it nowadays. The original DOS version is quite playable through DOSBox though, and there’s lots of little quality of life tools that you can find online.

Lasherz12@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 04:53 next collapse

I mean, if you’ve played everquest 1 I feel like you’ve already hit the lore duration jackpot. It’s also more complex than most by far if you include classes that take a lot of skill to play well. Big difference between skilled and unskilled players for sure

taiyang@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 06:17 next collapse

You could get into Dragon Quest games, if you want old school JRPGs. Complexity might be a bit lacking given the era, but doing the old NES ones without a guide is excruciatingly difficult and you can lump on RetroAchevements to add more pain. RA generally adds additional challenges to any older game so you have to play a little min maxing to accomplish them.

I mostly thought of it since RA is beta testing multi sets with DQ9 and getting every accolade might be one of the most insane things I could ever suggest.

Rappe@sopuli.xyz on 14 Dec 08:43 next collapse

Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous takes hundreds, for some thousands of hours to complete due to the complexity and sheer scope of it.

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 13:47 next collapse

Thousands? Now we’re talking. I’ll check it out.

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 01:08 next collapse

Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck. This is my life now.

Thank you!

Rappe@sopuli.xyz on 15 Dec 05:49 collapse

Happy to help!

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 04:18 collapse

6 hours. That’s what I logged today, and I honestly am only stopping because I have to go to work in the morning.

Cevilia@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 14 Dec 11:59 next collapse

I’d toss .hack//IMOQ into the mix, such a grindy game and borderline impossible if you don’t over-level yourself, several allies, and your gear

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 14 Dec 13:19 collapse

Is that the PS2 game they split into four parts and put an OVA DVD in each one, and charged $50 for each? If so, I only played the first one, and it was not hard. But, I only played a quarter of the full game.

For anyone who hasn’t heard of .hack, it was an anime series that famously inspired Sword Art Online (first a book series, then an anime, and later it had games of its own). .hack was an original animation, meaning it wasn’t based on a manga or light novel, like most anime. It itself was an amalgamation of existing MMORPG tropes, based around a loner who couldn’t log out of the system. But SAO copied .hack wholesale, though SAO fans argue that the author of the SAO books, Reki Kawahara, merely started writing the SAO books while .hack was airing and didn’t actually watch it, despite being a Japanese citizen and professing to love both anime and RPGs. But of course he never watched a show that merged him, and all the exact similarities between his books and that anime are entirely coincidental. In fact, the writers of .hack may have read his stories and used them to steer the direction of their show! /s (if the sarcasm wasn’t obvious).

I mean, don’t get me wrong. SAO is way better than .hack. The books, the anime, and the movies. (The games are trash, though. I got one on sale for like ten bucks and feel like I got ripped off.) There are over 2 dozen books in the main series, to say nothing of the spinoffs, and the first 17-18 of those books have been made into audiobooks, featuring the lead voice actors from the anime. Someone optioned the series to make a Hollywood movie of it, but nothing’s ever been announced and that option may have expired by now.

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 14 Dec 13:32 next collapse

Hack, or its modern incarnation, NetHack. (No relation to the .hack comment. That’s a game based on an anime. Hack is a Roguelike from the 1980s, came out shortly after Rogue itself, follows a very similar format, and is arguably if not definitively the oldest true Roguelike currently developed. I mean, you can get NetHack on iOS and Android, not to mention all modern computers, and it still looks like it’s running on UNIX in the 1970s. ASCII art and all. Though there are “tile sets” that give it graphics, the original does not have any [graphics] to speak of (aside from the icon, I suppose). You are the @ symbol (well, that’s the symbol for humans), floors are periods/full-stops, walls are dashes and pipes and plus symbols for corners, dirt paths are pound/hashtag, and most monsters are letters (and uppercase is not the same as lowercase; d is dog and D is dragon, IIRC).

It’s a procedurally generated game. You start on floor 1 of a dungeon, and you have to find stairs down (>) and advance to the 35th or 37th (I forget) floor, at which point the Amulet of Yendor has a chance to spawn. The game is won when you exit the dungeon via the first floor. The bad ending is doing it without the Amulet (including right at the start!). You live a long life in obscurity. The good ending is exiting with the Amulet, in which case you live a long life, rich and famous. If you die, you get a tombstone showing what you accomplished. And you can potentially leave a ghost behind which you can fight in later runs (and get all those items if you defeat it).

The game is based on D&D, so you can level up. It’s also based on Tolkien lore, and there are a ton of neat things you can do (for example, engraving the name Elbereth, IIRC, into a floor space means certain enemies treat that space like a wall. Walking over it gives them a chance of being able to pass over it. It’s also turn based, you pause the game by not doing anything. Time only advances when you move. Hunger is also a thing, so you have to find food, or eat what you kill (some enemies are poisonous, and some give you perks, like eating a Floating Eye sounds disgusting, but you can see life forms through walls from pretty far away.

Did I mention the game is 100% free? And actively developed?

www.nethack.org/common/index.html ← Latest version released February 2023. So not actively actively develped, but updated more recently than, well, most games in this thread! Considering this is a game from the 1980s, that’s pretty impressive! They’re still fixing bugs and adding features.

sem@piefed.blahaj.zone on 15 Dec 05:28 collapse

I tried playing this in high school. It is hard!

More recently I was watching let’s plays of Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup. Is this desendent from nethack/hack in any way?

ivanafterall@lemmy.world on 14 Dec 15:07 next collapse

Daggerfall, maybe? Beat the game, side quests, visit every location.

canadaduane@lemmy.ca on 14 Dec 20:52 next collapse

Caves of Qud

EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com on 15 Dec 06:14 next collapse

Since you included the Diablo Series, I’ll assume that ARPGs are in consideration. Path of Exile

early_riser@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 14:07 collapse

Never played it but I’ve heard good things about Darklands along the lines of what you’re looking for.

I wish I were young enough to enjoy sprawling RPGs again. I bought BG3 but I don’t have the time to devote to it like I used to so it molders in my Steam library.

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 14:14 collapse

Well, I’m mid-forties, work full time, and have a child. However, I was miserable and it got pretty bad. Eventually, with the help of a lot of therapy, I began to understand the importance of taking care of myself in an actual and meaningful way. When you sideline BG3 in lieu of other priorities, the thing that gets deprioritized isn’t the game, it is you. This concept seemed crazy to me at first, but I am now starting to understand it and believe that it is important enough to share.

It’s okay to tell people that you have gaming time between 6pm and 7pm nightly. No phone, no chores, just you and an adventure.

early_riser@lemmy.world on 16 Dec 14:27 collapse

It’s not for lack of personal time. I just have way more things to fill that personal time. Playing with my radios or messing with my homelab or building out grammar and lexica for my conlangs and so on. I think I’ve also discovered my tastes have changed. I don’t want video games to frontload all the complexity anymore. How am I supposed to know what this or that class or race or stat does before even starting the game?

My vision being what it is a lot of games are unplayable now anyway.