![]() ![]() Platinum gives the enemies a little more of a level boost and you get slightly better loot drops compared to Gold. I think your maximum level cap for this game is something around 200. By the time you finish Gold, you should be somewhere around level 100, preferably more. Gold allows the enemies to be slightly higher than your own level. A full playthrough on Silver might get you up to level 80. Silver lets you gain XP at a pretty steady rate so you are always improving and the enemies are never too easy, but also never too hard for you to handle. Then finish your first full playthrough on SIlver. You should definitely play Bronze at least to level 12 first. This means if you start at level 1 with the basic baby gear on Silver, you WILL DIE repeatedly from the very first enemy you meet. The first time you enter a new area, the enemies there will be set to within 2 levels of yours. Silver mode has the enemy levels tied to your own level. The yellow area WEST of the Colisseum, from Silver Creek out to Porto Vellum, is the area you want to stay in during a Silver game until you reach level 14 or 15, so the shops in further towns will carry decent weapons and armor from the time you first reach them. That area and the yellow area (where enemies WILL respawn) SOUTH of the pond are where you will want to explore on a Bronze game, while you test out the different characters to find one you like. Here, the area circled in RED is where enemies DO NOT respawn. If you want to experiment with several characters before you really get into the game, do it on Bronze. After a while, the enemies are at a level so much lower than yours that you only get 1 XP for killing them. A full playthrough on Bronze will only get you to level 48, maybe as high as 50. By that point, you should be wearing some half-decent armor and your weapons should be better than the default baby weapons they started you with, so you can switch to Silver. Bronze mode is useful only for getting a taste of the game with your chosen character, and leveling from 1 to 12 or so. The Bronze setting is "baby mode." Enemies in each area have a set level cap. Once you beat the game on Silver, you open Gold. At first, only Bronze and Silver are available. Below that it should say "Bronze" at first. You can NAME your character here, if you are not fond of the name "Dwarf" or "Seraphim" that they have set by default. Once you pick a character, look at the bar underneath. The second biggest manual change you can make to your gameplay experience is the difficulty setting. Be sure you are using the same character for each playthrough! You will want to start on Ancaria, unlock Gold and Platinum there, then move on to the Underworld. In Sacred Gold, there are two campaigns you can choose from when starting a new game. Each character is treated to a brief but thorough evaluation in the coming chapters.įirst, here is some advice for beginners that will help you out, no matter which character you choose. ![]() And since there are a whole bunch of characters to choose from and not much of a description given by the game before you choose yours, I'm here to de-mystify the character selection process for you. One of the biggest effects on your gaming experience here will be your character selection.
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