dluketic: Don't say it's not a demo. It's 1 map with all kinds of environments packed in it, a demo. A demo that costs 60€.
I realize that people here are tired answering this question, so probably it's my turn...
No, the demo doesn't cost €60.
For €60, you are buying the full game, which will be shipped to you as soon as it is ready. That is called "pre-order".
Full. Game. For. €60.
As a free bonus, you are also granted access to the beta-test of the game at a very early stage of its development.
Which is what is going on right now.
No one forces you to participate, though. You can just wait for the full game to be released.
Which is exactly what I'm doing BTW, because after one play-through I decided that at this early stage the game is not yet worth investing my time.
Your choice.
We're in the Sword Coast, right? Mostly human settlements.
Ah, another of *these* questions... Well...
Zevlor's people are not just some random tieflings - they are refugees from Elturel, the city that has been through Hell and back... literally - it had been transported into Avernus and eventually retuned to the Prime Material Plane in the very recent past of the game's setting.
Is it so surprising that, with all those lovable baatezu being around, the percentage of tieflings in the city's population is now so abnormally high ?.. Or that a lot of them would become pariahs after the city's return to the Prime and be forced out of the city ?..
The existence of this particular group of tieflings in this particular place is not only perfectly justifiable - it is a direct link that connects BG 3 with the previous installment in the franchise, "Baldur's Gate: Descent into Avernus" adventure module, which is the direct prequel to the game. And, quite probably, also serves as a hint of some of the game's later plot. The short trip of the protagonists through Avernus aboard the Nautiloid in the prologue was hardly accidental, as well.
J Lo: You are complaining about historical accuracy in a game with dragons, magic, teleportation, and people with octopus heads...
No, for the sake of fairness - he's actually complaining about historical accuracy in "For Honor" game, which is supposedly set in a (pseudo)historical setting, AFAIK.
He also complains about poor writing & storytelling in the game with dragons etc. Which is not a completely inaccurate claim in the case of BG 3 in its current state, I have to say. But, well, complaining about "swamp next to dry land next to green land" seems to be somewhat over-the-top...