

You next choose your class: Warrior, Rogue, or Mage (Dwarves can’t be Mages) each class has a few sub-classes, with Race being a small factor. You start out choosing from one of 4 races: Human, Elf, Dwarf, and Qunari (I went with Human). The animations were also pretty nice, especially with dialogue – the characters actually had expressions during conversations, such when a certain Elf snatched my hand to force close a breach: my character glared at him. I didn’t notice too many hangups or glitches that weren’t caused by anti-virus software (Avast doesn’t always play well with games, so I disabled it for this game). I didn’t change any of the default visual settings I did change some of the key binds (I like moving with the arrow keys and ‘looking’/turning with W, A, S, and D). Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 3GB Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-7400 CPU 3.00GHz, 3001 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s) There will be a few mild spoilers however, I didn’t get far enough in the game to have any ‘game-ruining’ reveals. With school technically on Winter Break, plus me being on vacation from work, I took a couple of days to play up to the end of the ‘Tutorial’ portion of the game. Well, it took over 6 years, but I finally purchased “Dragon Age: Inquisition” for the PC (and not only was it on sale for $10 on Steam, it was the Game Of The Year Edition!). ‘First Impressions’ are quick recaps and reviews on video games (and, sometimes, books) that I am playing for the first time.
