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Saving first characters in file names: best practices



While there are many different endings you can get for the nine main characters in The Quarry, getting the best ending where everyone lives will let you see the most story in your playthrough, while also unlocking the 'Rough Night' Trophy.




Saving first characters




It's important to note that even if you make all of the correct dialogue choices, and follow the safest paths, you can still die from a mistimed QTE (Quick time event). If you turn on 'Simple QTE's' from the options menu, this won't be a problem - however, succeeding every QTE closes some available paths, and can lead to the death of some secondary characters.


The first person that can die is Jacob while you're controlling Ryan, so don't shoot into the bushes either time when the group hears a noise. Emma can also die if you don't search the bags before opening the trap door, or choose to reel the zipline quickly later and fail the QTEs.


You'll only play as Laura in Chapter 7 and your goal should be to continue building a good relationship with the sheriff. It's important not to take his gun when the prompt shows up, and knock him out with a syringe so you don't hurt him. All of this will contribute to saving both Laura and the sheriff's lives later.


If a row of cells contains more than 240 characters, any characters beyond 240 wrap to a new line at the end of the converted file. For example, if rows 1 through 10 each contain more than 240 characters, the remaining text in row 1 is placed in row 11, the remaining text in row 2 is placed in row 12, and so on.


Columns of data are separated by tab characters, and each row of data ends in a carriage return. If a cell contains a comma, the cell contents are enclosed in double quotation marks. If the data contains a quotation mark, double quotation marks will replace the quotation mark, and the cell contents are also enclosed in double quotation marks. All formatting, graphics, objects, and other worksheet contents are lost. The euro symbol will be converted to a question mark.


If cells display formulas instead of formula values, the formulas are saved as text. To preserve the formulas if you reopen the file in Excel, select the Delimited option in the Text Import Wizard, and select tab characters as the delimiters.


This file format (.csv) saves only the text and values as they are displayed in cells of the active worksheet. All rows and all characters in each cell are saved. Columns of data are separated by commas, and each row of data ends in a carriage return. If a cell contains a comma, the cell contents are enclosed in double quotation marks.


If worksheet options are set to display formula results in the cells, only the formula results are saved in the converted file. To save the formulas, display the formulas on the worksheet before saving the file.


Most text formats are saved; converted text takes on the format of the first character in the cell. Rotated text, merged cells, and horizontal and vertical text alignment settings are lost. The font color might be converted to a different color if you reopen the converted SYLK sheet in Excel. Borders are converted to single-line borders. Cell shading is converted to a dotted gray shading.


In the core book it lists the expected wealth for each character level. Is there anywhere that lists the typical saving throw bonuses for each level? (I know this will differ by class, but I thought maybe there was an average set of saving throw bonuses by level)


Eventually I'll do an analysis of PCs averages for all the different elements. If you want an excellent analysis using the 3.5 data then you should pick up Trailblazer, as the first section goes into elaborate detail on how the whole system works and the underlying progression of the math.


Eventually I'll do an analysis of PCs averages for all the different elements. Cool! AUC.register('auc_MessageboardPostRowDisplay'); AjaxBusy.register('masked', 'busy', 'auc_MessageboardPostRowDisplay', null, null) KaeYoss Feb 7, 2011, 03:19 am Your best bet is to look at your players' characters' sheets to see what their saving throws actually are.


The saves depend on so much: General power level (which in turn depends on how generous you are with ability generation, character wealth and availability of magic items), the players' general optimisation ability, the classes, the characters' foci, the players' focus on saving throws.


After all, a defensively-minded master optimiser playing a defensive paladin on a game where you get almost godlike ability scores and several monarchs' ransom worth of magic items EACH will have much nicer saving throws than a RPG newblood's first attempt at playing a fighter in a low-powered campaign.


If your campaign's general power level differs from the standard guidelines by more than a little, you can adjust the guidelines for monster stats given in the monster creation section of the PRD/Bestiary accordingly. That's your baseline. It should be higher for high-powered campaigns. You should not go too far from the baseline, since that will mean the characters failing lots of saves (which will mean more bad stuff than recommended). Plus, it makes it hard to gauge CR properly (one of the main reasons CR was such a mess in 3.0 and 3.5 was that there were no such guidelines, and different stats were all over the place. It might average out, but that doesn't mean a monster that will not survive being actually attacked by the party but will kill a character with about 80% probability whenever it gets to act is appropriate)


Very strange behaviour!When I open any .odt file and save as .txt, the first character of the first line is asc(65279) (zero-width no-break space).Any reason for this? Can I prevent it?A bug?


Attack on Titan 2 is a video game that lets players relive the story of the anime Attack on Titan by playing as various characters over the course of the series. It effortlessly recaptures the show's essence by letting players play out moments from the anime. From playing as characters such as Eren and Levi to battling Titans, this game is a love letter to the anime's fans. And one prominent theme is present throughout the game like the anime: death.


The anime features lots of death as humans wage war against the giant humanoid man-eating Titans. Attack on Titan 2 does an impeccable job of replicating the anime, including the various deaths. But for those wishing to bring back those lost for the game's everyday life, there are ways to bring them back. Here is a look at how to save dead characters after completing the main story in Attack on Titan 2.


Before going back to save dead characters, players must complete the main story first. Afterward, they will receive a pop-up that says "save those who fell in battle on previous missions." For players to go back to past missions, they will need to venture to the barracks and talk to a person with the cadet icon above them.


That person is the key for players to revisit past missions. Now, in order to save previously deceased characters, players must complete special side missions. These particular tasks act like regular side missions encountered within the original missions, except they will be marked by yellow or gold icons. These icons appear within a specific timeframe and are hard to miss.


Once those are complete, towards the end of the mission, a yellow flare will signal Hannes' mission. Players just have to save him from his deathly fate and he will appear back in everyday life along with the other characters players have rescued.


Man of Medan is the first game of eight in the Anthology, and takes place on a boat - Duke of Milan - in the middle of the South Pacific Ocean. The four college students aboard and the captain are in hot pursuit of a ruined WWII aircraft, however, as is to be expected, things turn a tad awry when the group encounter pirates and a mysteriously ruined ship.


The original Mass Effect series is designed as a trilogy, which allows the player to import their characters from any completed Mass Effect playthrough to subsequent games. This means that several decisions Commander Shepard makes in Mass Effect will carry over and have the potential to impact the story of Mass Effect 2, which in turn affects Mass Effect 3.


After you beat the game, you can start your character over by going to "Create New Character" and selecting the bottommost option (Select Existing ID). You then restart the story with all of your experience and items intact from the previous game. All items that were equipped on other characters are transferred to you, and you gain doubles of anything you had equipped. For your main character, all of your talent points remain spent as they were before. Your party members all begin at the same level as you, but with no talent points spent and only the basic weapons / armor, allowing you to rebuild them as you like.


It is possible to reach level 50 on your first playthrough, but you won't achieve it without completing a majority of the side assignments. Since you are capped at level 50 for your first time through the game, you cannot reach level 60 until the second playthrough with your original character. If you're looking to reach level 60, it isn't necessary to reach level 50 in your first completion. You can also start a completely new character if you'd like to try a new class, gender, background, etc, and you will no longer be level capped at 50, but there is not enough XP available in the game, even with DLC, to reach level 60 in a single go.


Legendary Edition: There is no level cap on a first playthrough, and experience scaling is improved in various ways to make reaching level 60 considerably easier. There is also an option to scale character levels to the 1-30 scale used in Mass Effect 2 and Mass Effect 3.


If a player beats Mass Effect multiple times on a single Shepard, either by saving and re-loading or by starting a new game plus, each "victory" will be a separate Shepard that the player may import to Mass Effect 2. The player need not worry that they are over-writing one of their Shepards, and may review all the major specifications and decisions of a Shepard before they choose to import the file to ensure it is the right file. 2ff7e9595c


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