There's a difference between knowing the game mechanics and understanding how to utilise them. "if games teach you everything in tutorials then where is trial and error?" What makes it even worse is that the tutorial doesn't teach the player everything, giving a false impression that the player has learned all the game mechanics when he has finished the first few chapters. Valkyria Chronicles - DirectX function - Fatal Error: Direct3D - createpixelshader Steamapi. Games like Valkyria Chronicles usually do. Valkyria Chronicles - Some fixes and learn how to fix starting errors. Grand strategy games rarely have extensive tutorials. A person can still be a total idiot when it comes to grand strategy games even if he knows what every slider does. If you have no idea how barbarian hordes works in EU Rome then it's the same thing you don't know how range affects damage in Valkyria Chronicles.Įven if you understand the game mechanics it doesn't mean you have mastered the game. Before you know how to play the game these decisions can often be wrong. The difficulty comes when you have to take so many little details into consideration when making decisions. The game has moderately steep learning curve (when compared to other generic strategy-orientated games), but that doesn't make the game hard, it just makes it slow to learn. If games teach you everything in tutorials then where is trial and error? Never played Victoria 2 but I own Europa Universalis Rome. Originally posted by Edwardlloyd:so if paradox games like victoria 2 actually tought you game mechanics on tutorials it would have a mild learning curve and it would be easy then :) because you know their games are all about playing hours and hours and learning mechanics.
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