The role-playing game promises to deliver an enthralling experience, on the level of Dragon Age: Origins

Oct 14, 2014 13:56 GMT  ·  By

Developer BioWare has hosted another Dragon Age: Inquisition gameplay streaming sessions, showing us more footage from the highly anticipated role-playing game.

This time around though, the developer has streamed gameplay from the PC edition of the game, showing how the menus look and how players will be able to interact with the interface and the game world.

Moreover, the devs have even included a mouse and keyboard camera, so that PC gamers get a better idea of how the game controls function during action-packed sequences.

A true sequel to Dragon Age: Origins

The first entry in the series, Dragon Age: Origins, was received with high praise by players and critics alike, but the second installment was criticized for its many faults, and now the developer wants to make things right.

Granted, it's hard to make a solid follow-up for what is considered one of the best role-playing games ever created, so it's understandable that Dragon Age 2 scored lower than its predecessor with many gamers.

Now, BioWare is looking to deliver a truly compelling continuation to the franchise, and a truly new-gen experience on the PC, Xbox One and PlayStation 4 platforms.

Here There Be Spoilers

The video shows BioWare's Mike Laidlaw playing the game using the previously unseen Knight Enchanter class.

The stream begins right after the game's prologue, so if you don't want anything spoiled for you, you would do well to skip it.

If, however, you're eagerly waiting to get your hands on the game and you'd love to see some questing, dialogue, and a bunch of developer commentary on a slew of subjects related to the game and its systems, then jump right in.

The video covers a lot of ground, from the dialogue wheel and the war table to the many customization options available to you while immersed in the game world, and the varied experience that combat will offer.

While the plot and dialogue are not on the level of George R. R. Martin's books yet, the game looks like one of the most promising titles that role-playing game enthusiasts can aspire to enjoy this year, or at least until The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt comes out, in February next year.

Dragon Age: Inquisition is scheduled to come out on November 18 in North America and November 21 in Europe, headed to PC, to the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 computer entertainment systems from Sony, and the Xbox 360 and Xbox One home consoles from Microsoft.