I'm a casual player playing on casual. Yes indeed.
It's good and fun. Not half as good as everyone I know say it is or was going to be. My friend Joe, before I bought it, was telling me how it was comparable to crack. Now I simply think he was on crack and had the two confused.
It's an excellent game, but nothing revolutionary as some people would make you think. I believe I'm farther than you are, but I haven't played in days and I'm on the easiest setting so it's not surprising. When I'm finished, I'm going to do a re-play with a mage (I'm a warrior, human) and use the arcane warrior specialization which seems nothing short of awesome. I only need to unlock two classes, Blood Mage and Reaver. Since the entirety of my gameplay was based around being as good as a person can possibly imagine being. Even when there was nothing to gain from it. (selflessness only equaled by my Fable II character)
I'm playing the Xbox version, I realized after I bought it that I should have got the PC version, but I'm cool with it. I got some of the extra content free with the game off a code that came with it. I already had Microsoft points from before, so I used some to get the other bonus content which was cheaper than the bonus content I was getting free. Pretty lame to begin with, but I hate not having the entire game.
I didn't expect there to be any bugs really, but I was a bit surprised when I went to Orzammar to find a decent few weird little bugs there, in comparison to the rest of the game. Just weird shit that doesn't really matter. With the exception of one thing I found in the elven camp. The game always freezes on the storyteller's face for a few seconds when exiting the conversation. lol. It would always freak me out because I thought the game froze up.
I like the different beginnings though. That's pretty bad-ass. My very first disappointment though, when playing Dragon Age, was when I found out you don't speak. You got to pick a voice but you don't talk in convos. You're silent, and half the time people just continue talking as though your input was never really there. This is probably mostly because of playing Mass Effect beforehand, however.