kmonster wrote:I disagree with VonDondu's recommendation about playing through BG1 several times before starting BG2.
The game should be cheap, so the most valuable thing it will take away is your time. It's not your duty to work the game just to make sure you did everything possible. It's not bad at all if you miss something. Spoiled replays are just entertainment you can still have after finishing BG2.
You've only one unspoiled first run, so make it as enjoyable as possible. Don't turn yourself into a walkthrough replaying robot or a save and reload machine to test which dialogue option grants a little more benefit. Don't try to get everything, that's not necessary. It's a roleplaying game, not work you have to do. Dare to play the game, don't work it.
I don't mind if you disagree with my opinion and my preferences, but I think you misunderstood the reasoning behind my suggestion. I did not say it's your "duty" to "work the game" and look under every rock and make sure you don't miss anything the first time you play the game. If you did that, then you wouldn't need to replay the game, and my suggestion wouldn't make any sense. I mean, duh.

If you play the game the way that you suggested--roleplaying, immersing yourself in the story, enjoying it as much as possible, not concerning yourself with game mechanics and the infinite number of options available, and not reloading like crazy--then you're bound to miss a lot of things the first time around. That's definitely what happened to me the first time I played BG1 and BG2. So it seemed like a very good idea to me to replay both games, partly to see if I came across anything I missed the first time around, but also to try a different
roleplaying idea--a new character, a new theme for my party, a new direction, new goals, etc. Lo and behold, it was a lot of fun to replay the game.
I sense that in your mind, new players should play BG2 as soon as they can, presumably because it's a better game. Maybe that's the right thing to do for a lot of players. But I really got a kick out of playing BG1 several times before BG2 was available, and it would be a shame for a new player to let BG1 fall by the wayside just because it is overshadowed by its successor. After playing BG2, BG1 does indeed suffer a little in comparison. I think that's the best reason not to play BG2 until you've had the pleasure of playing BG1 several times. If you pretend that BG2 doesn't exist, then you can get as much enjoyment out of BG1 as I did before BG2 was available. To put it another way, if you don't know what you're missing, then BG1 is a lot more fun. At least, that's one way to look at it.
Personally, I think that BG1 is superior to BG2 in some ways, mostly in terms of atmosphere and game balance. There is also a big difference in, for lack of a better word, "style". For example, the dialogue in BG2 was obviously written by a different group of people who have a more modern sensibility and vernacular than the people who wrote the dialogue for BG1. (At least, that's how the dialogue comes across to me.) BG1 strikes me as a more traditional D&D game than BG2 (although it has its share of cynicism and wryness, as well). I'm not saying that BG2 is inferior to BG1, but since BG1 has a less modern feel to it, it's easy to slip away into another world. At least, that's my own reaction to it. In some ways, BG2 forces me to think a lot more, but I feel like I'm thinking more like myself than as a fantasy character. BG1 simply has a "feel" to it that isn't present in BG2, and sometimes I miss that.
Anyway, you can certainly play BG1 once, then play BG2 (since the story in BG1 is already "spoiled"), and then you can either replay BG1 or BG2, or play a new game entirely, since BG2 is also "spoiled".

It just depends on the individual player.