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News video games 11 April 2024, 04:32

author: Kamil Kleszyk

Inconspicuous Character From Baldur’s Gate 3 Was Guilty of Short Rest Bug. Larian Had to Teach It Good Manners

Another patch arrived for Baldur's Gate 3, further refining Larian Studios' last year's hit RPG. This time, the devs took on one of the companions, who didin't let us take a short rest.

Source: Larian Studios
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Last week, a small patch was released for Baldur's Gate 3, which was intended to eliminate the problem with the short rest option. However, it turns out that the bug was still occurring. Developers at Larian Studios discovered that the person responsible for it was a distinctive, walking-brain-like character called "Us," who refused to leave the party after the end of the prologue.

It would appear that Us is causing everybody a few sleepless nights, and that troublesome fleshy blob has been continuing to block some players from taking a Short Rest. We've given him some lessons in decorum, and leaving a party at the appropriate time, rather than hanging around like a loathsome houseguest, eating all the cheese from the fridge -- reads the typical humorous post from Larian Studios.

Besides that, the 25th patch fixes:

  1. a rare code crash when loading the Act I region.
  2. game freezing during a raid on enemies;
  3. a potential crash when loading a savegame made while trading;
  4. non-functioning splitting of items in the trade window when moving them from companion's inventory;
  5. context menu not showing trade actions on items that are in a companion's inventory.

The developers are once again promising ongoing support for Baldur's Gate 3 through future patches.

  1. Baldur's Gate 3 Review: BG3 Is Great, But I Hoped for Greater Miracles
  2. Baldur's Gate 3 - game guide
  3. Baldur's Gate 3 - official website

Kamil Kleszyk

Kamil Kleszyk

At Gamepressure.com deals with various jobs. So you can expect from him both news about the farming simulator and a text about the impact of Johnny Depp's trial on the future of Pirates of the Caribbean. Introvert by vocation. Since childhood, he felt a closer connection to humanities than to exact sciences. When after years of learning came a time of stagnation, he preferred to call it his "search for a life purpose." In the end, he decided to fight for a better future, which led him to the place where he is today.

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