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In the latest episode of our Video Serie -Reality -Check, the paleontologist Dr. Darren Naish back to evaluate his assessment of the Monster designs in Elden Ring. While they may not be surprised that Soft's opus is not exactly “realistic”, Naish praised the attention to detail and the commitment of the studio for his fiction.
Case and point: the universally loathless land ink -ink. With an eye for environmental storytelling, Naish praised how the beasts can often be found on coastal lines or in flat water.
The same applies to one of my favorite DLC bosses, Demi-Human Swordsmaster Onze. Provide that the tool will be predicted long before the rise homo sapiensIt is really just a hop, skip and a jump to a little monkey man who dominates the blade – and at that time we would all be in great difficulty.
Other designs do not quite pass on patterns, at least from an evolutionary perspective. The magical hedgehog stiles of the golden hippos put a strain on the credibility, as well as Bayle the Dread's ability to fly, even though he uses his wing as a crutch for a missing leg.
But before you all have an e -mail to Dr. Naish make these goods clearly Examples of the magic of the primeval crucif, separated from biology, one: I already have two: The good doctor had nothing but praise for the depth of Soft's fiction and freely admitted that evolutionary feasibility is an understandable second for cool, unforgettable monster design.
For other reality checks you can follow PC gamers on YouTube. We also received real parkour athletes for clamping in Assassin's creed as well as the assessment of drama and relationships by psychologists in the Sims.