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Baldur's Gate 3 dev spills the secret sauce: Players love finding a place, then 'ending up 2 hours and 3 puzzles later in a sacrificial chamber of a cult that murders giraffes'

Baldur's Gate 3 is a Larian Studios game, and boy howdy are those things dense—as CRPGs tend to be. A far cry from the open-world RPGs saturated with merry little tasks that succeeded them, most CRPGs put you in a large-ish area that's utterly rammed with stuff. Dungeons, quests, dialogue, sewers—on average a CRPG's world is smaller, but by Mystra is it full.

That's a sentiment echoed by worldbuilding director at Larian Studios Farhang Namdar, who spoke with our friends over at PLAY Magazine recently. In the interview, Namdar says Baldur's Gate 3 isn't «really an open world game in the modern sense. It’s more of a curated open world.»

This, Namdar says, is down to what he calls «one of the old Larian creeds», holding up the game's titular city of Baldur's Gate as a prime example. «Every building needs a story, a secret, a cellar—preferably also a little garden, but in Baldur’s Gate [gardens] didn’t make a lot of sense.»

I experienced plenty of this firsthand during my playthroughs, and the city of Baldur's Gate definitely surprised me the most. Every place you can enter has something going on, and despite nearly completing the game three times at this point, I'm still watching players turn over stones that I'd completely missed.

Act 3 spoilers incoming: Two recent examples skim off the top of my dome as I write this. Firstly, you can straight-up find Enver Gortash's parents in a house somewhere, just… hanging out. A little mind-controlled, but very much alive and accessible. Secondly, there's a touching tribute to a fan's father tucked away in a humble home I completely missed. I never saw these dang places, and I felt like I was pretty thorough, but here we are.

This kind of densely-packed design (which has a habit of also 'yes-anding' the players down a rabbit hole of questlines) is all on purpose too, says Namdar. «Players love walking into a seemingly innocent apothecary and ending up two hours and three puzzles later in a sacrificial chamber of a cult that

Read more on pcgamer.com