It's fairly dnd like. I'd say more so than most games, with the Stat and feat system, combined with the ability to interact with the environment to such an intricate degree. Also like dnd, you have room to be insanely creative in the way you handle problems, and there are a ton of little interactions between items that the game doesn't outright explain for you. As well as a fairly developed crafting system. Your decisions really matter quite a bit in this game too.
Start with Divinity original sin 2. It's by far the most expansive and polished. You don't need to know anything about it to jump in. It's really only a sequel in that it takes place in the same world as the first one.
Well if the court didn't engage in clearly partisan politics, maybe the liberal justices wouldn't have anything to criticize.
Does he realize how bad it looks when he voices that his problem is criticism and not like, I don't know, taking money from political interests? Or refusing to recuse in cases where there's a relative directly involved?