![]() I'm really enjoying the utility of the dream class with its Crowd Control and debuffs. Its my first time with a Dream class and second time with defence (though i didn't even finish act 1 with my Conqueror). After 9 years without playing TQ, it feels fresh and exciting all over again. Otherwise I'd be happy to bring the Soothsayer over to Anniversary Edition, if it doesn't affect the original Titan Quest game. If importing it removes it from the original game, I'd prefer to just leave it be. Or can I safely import their Soothsayer without stripping the original Titan Quest of the character? If I accept to import this character from original Titan Quest over to Anniversary Edition, will it remove that character from original Titan Quest? Is importing like how migrating a pokemon from an old game to a new generation, would permanently remove them from the old game?Īlthough they likely would not care, I wouldn't want to remove their Soothsayer character from their version of TQ. Also a level 2 character I made an hour ago. It's just one Soothsayer (Spirit, Nature) character, that's close to the level of my friends Sage. The game was asking me if I wanted to import the characters from the original Titan Quest into the game. I installed Anniversary Edition, since I want to play that version. Their version is the original Titan Quest, prior to Anniversary Edition. As long as it is effective with Sage and makes for some fun co-op, I'm all in.Īlso, my version of TQ is shared with me via Steam, by someone who doesn't play the game anymore. I played the game casually when I was too young to understand it particularly well, so I'm not too concerned about the greatest possible class/build. I'm currently thinking of doing a Templar (Dream, Defence), but am open to suggestions. I'm looking to do some co-op with him, and wondering about ideas for a class that would work well with Sage. ![]() I've been getting really nostalgic for the game (it's been 9 years since I last played). Sage Hall's $38 million renovation, expected to be completed early next year will gain the Johnson School 60 percent more space and access to the latest technology.So I got a buddy into TQ, and he's been enjoying it and playing a Sage (Storm, Hunting). In the letter, written nearly 125 years ago and titled "To the Coming man & woman," Cornell stated that: "sectarianism must be forever excluded, all students must be left free to worship God, as their concience shall dictate, and all persons of any creed or all creeds must find free and easy access, and a hearty and equal welcome, to the educational facilities possessed by the Cornell University." Sage Hall's original cornerstone, unearthed last March during renovation work on the building, contained a historically significant letter from Cornell founder Ezra Cornell. The cornerstone also will include a Hewlett Packard 12C calculator, copies of the student newsletter Cornell Business, campus maps and photos of Sage, McGraw and Malott halls. ![]() Among the items will be letters from Rawlings, Swieringa, Cornell and Alan Chimacoff '64, lead architect for the Sage Hall renovation. Using the cornerstone laying as an opportunity to preserve history, officials will place various items inside a box that will be encapsulated in the cornerstone. The Johnson School is named in honor of his great grandfather, who founded S.C. Bisha, who chairs the Johnson School's student-faculty committee. Slated to participate in the ceremony are Cornell President Hunter Rawlings, Cornell Board of Trustees Chairman Harold Tanner, Johnson School Dean Robert Swieringa, Trustee Ezra Cornell and MBA candidate Delfina M. ![]() ![]() Cornell officials will lay a cornerstone at the new home of the Johnson Graduate School of Management, a restyled Sage Hall, during a ceremony Oct. ![]()
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