Been making good progress with Final Fantasy XIV over the last few days and once again I’m pleasantly surprised by how much I’ve taken to the multiplayer-centric endgame content.
Tonight’s job — the last-but-one step in the quest to acquire the almost-but-not-quite-ultimate weapon for my level 50 Black Mage class — was to fell Titan in his “Hard Mode” fight, a notoriously difficult boss battle that I had a considerable degree of uneasiness about going into — and which I was terrified of the prospect of jumping into with strangers.
As it happens, the fight wasn’t all that scary if you know what you’re doing — much like every other fight in the game. You’d think I’d have learned that by now.
Titan, like Ifrit and Garuda before him, is one of the “Primals” — major bosses that crop up over the course of Final Fantasy XIV’s main story, and a good opportunity to test your party’s skills against one very strong opponent without having to run through a long dungeon first. The battles against them — known as “trials” in game parlance — tend to be unfold in deceptively simple boss-fighting arenas, but the simplicity of the environment is to ensure there’s nothing to distract you from the important thing: paying attention to what your opponent is doing.
Ifrit, Garuda and Titan all have abilities that are far beyond almost anything else you fight in the game, and a party that doesn’t know what it’s doing can wipe out very quickly if they’re not careful. They’re highly mobile fights that demand you recognise your opponent’s attack patterns and know how to counter them — and how to avoid them. Titan in particular is highly dependent on the party being able to avoid a relentless string of devastating attacks — and the healers being able to deal with the few, less-damaging attacks that are unavoidable for the whole party.
Aside from Titan, I spent a bit of time playing with the Conjurer class earlier — this is the healing class that later becomes White Mage, but also has a few offensive skills, too. It’s an interestingly distinctive class to play when compared to Black Mage, and a good demonstration of how Final Fantasy XIV makes even ostensibly similar classes play markedly differently from one another.
Black Mage and its predecessor Thaumaturgist involve highly destructive spells that cost large amounts of magic points to cast. The key mechanic to get your head around with Black Mage is the balance between “Umbral Ice” and “Astral Fire” — the former causes your ice-based spells to cost more to cast, but increases your magic points regeneration enormously, while the latter causes fire-based spells to cost more to cast and deal considerably more damage, and also stops all magic points regeneration. Essentially, Black Mages have a limitless pool of magic points that mean they can continue casting indefinitely, so long as they make the switch between Umbral Ice and Astral Fire at appropriate junctures — and, at higher levels, make good use of the MP-free, instant-cast spells that occasionally trigger.
White Mage and its predecessor Conjurer, meanwhile, are very different. Spells are considerably cheaper to cast, but there’s no Umbral Ice mechanic to quickly regenerate magic points in a hurry — so you have to manage your spellcasting a little more carefully. The class also has an interesting “stance switch” option, allowing the white mage to swap their Intelligence (determines spell damage) and Mind (determines healing power) stats around, effectively making them either damage- or healing-focused at the touch of a button. And then, of course, there’s the fact that white mages are mainly regarded as healers rather than damage dealers, and as such you have to be a lot more aware of people around you so you can heal them. The tradeoff for this, of course, is that people tend to like you because you can stop them from dying — and, once you reach a high enough level, you can even bring them back from the dead.
I jumped into one of the short party-based “Guildhests” earlier on to have a go at healing as part of a group with a relatively straightforward challenge. The party I was with was clearly very inexperienced — the fighter charged ahead without waiting for me to cast protection spells on him, and the damage-dealing mage seemed to take as much damage as he inflicted. I managed to keep everyone alive, though, and my reward from these random strangers whom I’ll probably never see again was three “Player Commendations” — a new system introduced in the latest patch which allows players to show their appreciation for random teammates they were matched up with through the Duty Finder system. It’s a very nice, friendly addition to the game, and I can’t deny feeling a pleasantly warm and fuzzy feeling inside after a successful dungeon run when I see that little “You have received a player commendation” message in my chat window. Even better when there’s more than one.
Anyway. With Titan down, the only thing left for me to do to get my Black Mage relic weapon is to collect 400 more Allagan Tomestones of Philosophy by running dungeons — should be easy enough. Once I’ve done that, I’ll be well on the way to being appropriately geared for the Binding Coil of Bahamut, the most difficult dungeon in the game… or I can just start working on one of the other classes, with the eventual goal of getting their Relic weapons, too.
This post was probably indecipherable to those of you who don’t play Final Fantasy XIV but eh. Whatever. Tomorrow I’ll write about kittens or something.
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