Sentences with phrase «same class of character»

Not exact matches

The Muslim aristocracy was feudal in character, depending on levies enlisted from the middle and lower classes of Muslims, usually of the same nationality as the feudal leader.
The stories examine characters of a variety of creeds, genders and classes, yet the story remains the same.
The most prominent characters include Haven Hamilton (Henry Gibson), a socially conservative, arrogant country music star; Linnea Reese (Lily Tomlin), a gospel singer and mother of two deaf children; Del Reese (Ned Beatty), her lawyer husband and Hamilton's legal representative, who works as the local political organizer for the Tea Party - like Hal Philip Walker Presidential campaign; Opal (Geraldine Chaplin), an insufferably garrulous and pretentious BBC Radio reporter on assignment in Nashville, or so she claims; talented but self - involved sex - addict Tom Frank (Keith Carradine), one - third of a moderately successful folk trio who's anxious to launch a solo career; John Triplette (Michael Murphy), the duplicitous campaign consultant who condescendingly tries to secure top Nashville stars to perform at a nationally - syndicated campaign rally; Barbara Jean (Ronee Blakley), the emotionally - fragile, beloved Loretta Lynn - like country star recovering from a burn accident; Barnett (Allen Garfield), Barbara Jean's overwhelmed manager - husband; Mr. Green (Keenan Wynn), whose never - seen ailing wife is on the same hospital ward as Barbara Jean; groupie Martha (Shelley Duvall), Green's niece, ostensibly there to visit her ailing aunt but so personally irresponsible that she instead spends all her time picking up men; Pfc. Glenn Kelly (Scott Glenn), who claims his mother saved Barbara Jean's life but who mostly seems obsessed with the country music star; Sueleen Gay (Gwen Welles), a waitress longing for country music fame, despite her vacuous talent; Bill and Mary (Allan F. Nicholls and Cristina Raines), the other two - thirds of Tom's folk act, whose ambition overrides constant personal rancor; Winifred (Barbara Harris), another would - be singer - songwriter, fleeing to Nashville from her working - class husband, Star (Bert Remsen); Kenny Frasier (David Hayward), a loner who rents a room from Mr. Green and carries around a violin case; Bud Hamilton (Dave Peel), the gentle, loyal son of the abrasive Hamilton; Connie White (Karen Black), a glamorous country star who is a last - minute substitute for Barbara Jean at the Grand Old Opry; Wade Cooley (Robert DoQui), a cook at the airport restaurant where Sueleen works as a waitress and who tries unsuccessfully to convince her that she has no talent; and the eccentric Tricycle Man (Jeff Goldblum), who rides around in a three - wheel motorcycle, occasionally interacting with the other characters, showing off his amateur magic tricks, but who has no dialogue.
This closing chapter of the First Class trilogy falls into the same trap as The Last Stand, the final part in the original X-Men trilogy: it shifts the focus from character detail and social commentary...
Tika Sumpter as Michelle oozes class and a headstrong personality from the get go, and also makes sure to be distinct but, at the same time, showing more personality and gumption than most female characters written in this kind of role.
Ms. Huppert in particular adds a touch of class and humor, and her character could have easily been expanded... same for Mr. Abraham.
Like their leafy counterparts, the zombie characters are broken into classes and feature the same level of customization, progression and unique special abilities.
The story is comprised of four separate vignettes, following the romantic misadventures of various characters in Rome - a retired American opera director tries to make a star of his daughter's father - in - law to be, who can only sing in the shower; a pair of newlyweds are separated for a day and have their fidelity tested by a prostitute, movie star and a burglar; a middle - class office worker unexpectedly becomes a celebrity targeted by the paparazzi; and an architect runs into a young man who reminds him of a younger version of himself - and is about to make the same romantic mistakes....
Classes are much the same as they were in D: OS; you pick an archetype (wayfarer, inquisitor, knight, etc.) and can from there shape every aspect of your character as you see fit.
At any time during the game you're free to visit a tavern and recruit a new character in order to replenish your ranks, building the new follower using the same suite of options used to create your own character at the start of the game, giving you free rein to choose class and more in order to fill in any gaps you might have in your team.
Lots of people have rerolled the same exact character class all over again because they realize too late in the game that perhaps they would be much happier with a different class.
With twenty - two abilities per class, plus many of the abilities can have more than one point put into them, there's certainly plenty of choice in how to craft your character, especially as Amalur has taken the same approach as Skyrim and doesn't force you to pick one class, instead you're free to distribute points as you choose, either creating a specialised character who unlocks the most powerful abilities or a more rounded character who has a wider choice of how to approach a situation.
- the 18 returning classes were chosen by seeing which popular classes would fit with the game - they also wanted to include classes to cover roles that the roster was lacked - the Pugilist class was added because the first group of classes selected did not include any with bashing and binding attacks - War Magus was added because the Medic was the only healer class in the roster at that point - they couldn't simply include all popular classes as that would have skewed the balance of the game - as for the Hero class, they with balanced offensive and defensive capabilities, but this made things to similar to other classes - this was rectified by adding after - images and other skills with good synergy - when an after - image appears, it does the same skills as the Hero, except on the following turn - it becomes possible for skills that usually can not be used multiple times in a row to be activated multiple turns in a row - it also means skills that only have an effect for one turn can be extended to two - after - images use not only the Hero's own class skills, but also their subclass skills - if the subclass is an Imperial, the Drive skill can be used multiple times in a row - when using Hero as a subclass to Nightseeker, the character can cover the Nightseeker's weaknesses of having low defense - after - images can also help increase the chances of inflicting status ailments - subclasses can be used to make up for weakness - Swordsman, a class that can learn speed and accuracy boosting skills, would be a good subclass for the Gunner - Reaper as a subclass for War Magus would allow that character to use the scythe's skills to inflict status ailments - the skill tree is slowly unlocked as a character grows - there are more skills that make jobs» individual styles stand out more, or expand the player's choices - the skill tree is also made so that there are less requirements to learn specific skills as compared to 5 - this makes it easier for players to get the skill they want without spending large numbers of skill points on lower skills - it's now easier to put points into skills, which makes re-specing easier - the team faced difficulty in balancing classes that were never meant to be alongside each other - they are doing their best to ensure that they keep the individual classes» identities intact
I can agree about making characters into blank slates who all eventually turn into the same class / character with a different skin, that was rather annoying in a lot of games, and way too many developers use that to take a shortcut on character creation.
Players running multiple characters of the same class will receive rewards only the first time they run the raid or raid lair in a given week.
While this doesn't necessarily give a sense of individuality to your character, as every one who plays the same class as you will get the exact same abilities, the mechanic doesn't hinder the fun.
Even though there are a total of nine groups of characters sharing the same statistics, the official site divides the inital 30 characters in three weight classes dependent on the weight of the character: light, medium, and heavy.
A lot of this is very much the same as before, but given an extra layer of depth with the addition of class abilities that make each character class feel a bit different.
This isn't the disaster it so easily can be in the Fire Emblem series for instance, as all characters of the same class are of the same level.
But Diablo III instead pushes every character down the same rail, both geographically (this is an oppressively narrow world compared to Diablo II) and in terms of character development for each of the classes.
All characters of the same class will share a level, and switching classes will change a character's level.
While characters have proficiencies and unique weapon types, the game smartly allow variations of most weapons to be equipped by different classes — each has unique stats and special abilities but mostly share the same arsenal, allowing players to customise all heroes to their own preferred playstyle.
Some power levelers and hardcore players may create three characters of the same class to gear up faster.
Helping to usher in the beginning of the revolutionary esports league was actress Michelle Rodriguez, as she brought the same passion and intensity that her characters in the Fast and and the Furious and Doom film franchises possess to help kick off the intense action that was at the center of the 75 world class battle royale players competing all at the same time.
If you go into a discussion of the Best Downloadable Game of 2010 thinking that Monday Night Combat should win, you're less likely to think about its flaws (e.g., limited maps, repetitive comments from the announcer) and more likely to remember its strengths (e.g., class balance, fun character design) relative to someone who didn't hold the same assumption.
Destiny 2 players will also no longer be able to use multiple characters of the same class to attempt to grind Raid rewards quickly.
At the same time, the strategic gameplay is enriched with the addition of such elements as heroes of different classes and skills, a character progression system, and story - driven missions with subquests — like in a classic RPG.
And even if two players play for the exact same time, they're going to get different Star Cards that may or may not benefit their character class of choice.
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