Baldur's Gate 3 is a hit with most people, giving us an exciting world to explore and a character to customise however we like. While you'll struggle to find anyone with any major problems with the game, there is one thing that quite a lot of people would like to see implemented in a future patch or update, and that's more in-game details surrounding class progression when making a character.

Right now, you can't really see what sorts of abilities or spells your character can learn in later levels unless you deliberately look up your class or race outside of the game. Given that Baldur's Gate 3 is an RPG, having to constantly flick in and out of the game when creating a character every time you want to see what level you learn a certain spell is not a thing that players like doing. Not everyone has the patience to flick through six different wiki pages when they just want to play a game.

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The issue is particularly evident when you check out the game's subreddit, as one particualr post about the topic has been gaining a lot of traction. It was first brought up in a Reddit post by u/igniz13, who laments how inconvenient it is to have to leave the game and look up what spells each class learns past level 1. The post has garnered almost 3k upvotes at the time of writing, with hundreds of other players agreeing with the take.

Some players even suggest that Larian Studios could add some kind of in-game encyclopedia like other games of the same genre do, like the Pathfinder games by Owlcat. Another even suggests having a built in copy of the Player's Handbook that people could refer to since the game is set in the universe of Dungeons & Dragons. Those are some possible solutions, though Larian is probably busy doling out hotfixes at the moment to worry about beefy updates.

In any case, players are clearly crying out for some kind of in-game resource they can refer to if they need it, not to mention the newcomers that may not be familiar with how Dungeons & Dragons' levelling up system actually works. Just like u/Nimewit plainly puts it, knowing nothing about D&D and being pummelled with 8 different specializations you can go down once hitting level 2, with zero explanation or details on what does what, is probably enough to give anyone trying the series out for the first time a full blown panic attack.

Next: Baldur's Gate 3 Is Overwhelming If You're Not A Hardcore Dungeons And Dragons Fan