Baroque (PS2): Walkthrough pt. 1

Important things done in this part -Start of the game -First Dungeon (depth 500): *death (you can complete it for extra dialogues but death will advance the story as well) -Second dungeon (depth 1600): *traversed 0-500 *important scene at 400(you need to get it in order for story to advance) I decided to make a speed walkthrough for anyone who's stuck in this confusing as hell game. By speed walkthrough I mean: I'm going to be focusing on getting the bare minimum required to beat the game, I may do some things that are unrequired like talk all people just to be on a safe side since certain aspects of progression are quite unclear (one of the events before the next dungeon extension may or may not trigger I'll point out which once I get there). I'm going to be editing out the unnecessary deaths however I wont be speeding up or cutting out portions of the dungeons ( if you feel the need you can just set the player to 2 x speed yourself or skip ahead in the video, the number on the floor/ depth is always displayed under lifebars and what not). Take in account the dungeons are randomised but events/ people will always be located on the same floor so you just got to keep looking. if you want to see all the extra scenes, I have them on a playlist on my channel together with requirements on how to get them. This version of the game doesn't have native widescreen support however I implemented it using a cheatcode (It actually makes the game easier to play since you see allot more what's going on). This is also a test for how my scaler (DVDO VP30+ Upgrade) handles reduced horizontal rez/ flicker filtered/ field rendered 480i@30 in Game Mode 2. I must say I'm very, very happy with how it turned out. It looks pretty much like the emulator would without all of the weirdness going on. When it comes to the odd graininess it's just how this game is, it uses a very limited color space similar to the one in PS1 games. If you have any questions about this game or it's mechanics or you're stuck just ask, it is just as fascinating as it is confusing.

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