The basic plot is that your character (whichever class you choose to be) wakes with amnesia, having forgotten a promise to help a black spirit. Personally, I’ve never been much for customisation, so I made my Dark Knight look somewhat presentable (with purple hair, because Third Street represent!), and went to work. The character creator is very in-depth, allowing you complete control over every aspect - or you can just click the “Apply Most Popular” button, which is basically a polite way of saying random. And in said cutscenes you don’t even see your own character. The update makes them even better, it’s just unfortunate that you rarely have a reason to get a good look at them outside of the odd cutscene here and there. I began playing this shortly before the Remastered update, and the amount of detail in the character models was undoubtedly stunning. The main thing that put this on everyone’s radar in the first place is the character creation. Of course, there’s the fact that I refuse to pay a subscription just to play a single game, but at least Black Desert Online Remastered only makes you pay upfront to play as much as you want. Massively multiplayer games like Black Desert Online have always appealed to me, but they never really grabbed me. Reviews // 9th Sep 2018 - 4 years ago // By Andrew Duncan Black Desert Online Remastered Review
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