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  • Voovus
    Adept
    • Feb 2018
    • 158

    Late-game

    I'd like to open a can of disenchanter worms. Specifically what, to my taste, is a serious problem with late game Angband, viz it's tedious and loses the atmosphere present in the early game. Yes, I'm sure it can be exciting the first few times when you are seeing lots of new things, but I'm speaking as someone who has beaten Morgoth times too numerous to list.

    The first 2500' or so are fun. The second 2500' - meh. In the early game Angband encourages "good playstyle", such as diving rather than grinding. Unfortunately, late game Angband seems to do just the opposite. I find myself regularly using TO, teleport self, abusing LoS, pillar dancing, using anti-summoning corridors, spamming banishment with a mage and spamming detection with everyone - not because they are fun, but because the alternative is worse. For example, is there a good playstyle with which one is meant to take on summoners who can effectively clone themselves (greater undead, greater demons)? Or to fight monsters that wreck your consumables, without then having to grind for those consumables? In the early game, the monsters play nice and I play nice, and all is fun and friendly. Then they begin to fight dirty (instakills, summoning, stat drain, disenchantment, item destruction). So I end up fighting dirty. But they started it!

    Do others find that this is an issue? And does anyone have constructive suggestions how to make Angband encourage good playstyle in the late game? (Ok, playing a stealthy character does work, though it still relies on constant TO, TS and detection). I'm not looking for the game to be easier, I'm looking for it to be more fun. Fighting Azog is way more fun than fighting Ungoliant. My impression is that the main problem stems from an overflow of annoying monsters, but I would be happy to hear other opinions.

    Apologies for the moaning.

    And thank goodness for randart loot.
  • Selkie
    Swordsman
    • Aug 2020
    • 434

    #2
    I do agree with you and I think most players admit enjoying early game the most.

    My biggest annoyance in the late game is the gear swap challenge and my insistence on THE PERFECT @. This is more down to me than the game though.

    I like playing mages because the end game is much quicker. In fact as soon as I get mana storm I start thinking about killing Morgoth. Playing as a warrior is the most painful end game, IMO.

    For me all of the peaks and troughs are just part of the adventure and part of the game that I love. If the end game gets a bit dull then I'm always raring to get started with a new character and go again.

    Maybe one day I'll manage to win as a druid

    Comment

    • Julian
      Adept
      • Apr 2021
      • 122

      #3
      Yeah, it’s a problem. Angband has a lot of mechanics that never really changed from Moria; they just became bigger.

      Fixing that requires a lot of rethinking of how all the bits of Angband fit together. (I have A Lot of thoughts; it remains to be seen if something will ever become of them.)

      IMO, the biggest two are the sheer depth of the dungeon, combined with the proportionally low level cap, and all the "have this resist or die" walls that discourage steady descent in a normal play style.

      Comment

      • ewert
        Knight
        • Jul 2009
        • 702

        #4
        Yep I do agree, I find playing up to statgain/20+ speed to be the most interesting part of the journey.

        I think the monster density goes up just too much compared to how dangerous a single monster in the endgame can be. Two mobs in LoS often mean chance of instant death. Then you have summoners that can summon anywhere from couple to what seems like a dozen(?), any which of them might be as dangerous.

        Even in the end-game, I find fighting a single mob carefully to be enjoyable often, pushing the limits and covering your resists vs them, knowing what to fight etc. Summoners who summon trash to fill up the space are also kinda ok IMHO, but summoners who summon comparable monsters just force you to cheese it.

        The bigger baddies, even the non unique ones, already force you to balance the cost vs reward. And many will just skip the fights unless they are uniques and want to kill them, because floor has more rewards...

        Maybe a direction of:
        less reliance on floor loot at end-game levels
        change summons to be "here be trash mobs to make it more annoying for you"
        boost big baddies loot drops so instead of shooing away mobs from vaults, the vaults have the big baddies that you really want to kill (vault big baddies have boosted drops?)

        On another note, this would also change the value of banishments that was talked in the other thread...

        Thematically:
        Bigger the baddies, more territory they claim
        Bigger and smarter the baddies, less chance loot is on the ground
        While the bigger baddies have minions, the minions are not the same level as they are

        As for the unique summoners, the worst ones could still summon quite tough minions, to force people to fight the biggest unique summoners with current antisummon tactics. But it should be reserved for limited amount of uniques, and I think the summon lists should be pruned to avoid situations where often the only option is to just use 1 round safety items ...

        Actually, all of this stuff is something I'd probably enjoy balancing. Might have to crack out a devkit again ...

        Comment

        • NCountr
          Apprentice
          • Sep 2016
          • 53

          #5
          There are better ways to make the 2nd-half more enjoyable.

          But this has always been the nature of the beast of Angband---once one attains max-stats and has decent gear with few holes, the path forward is one of management, not making abrupt errors. For some, this can be tedious, but aside from boosting mobs to ridiculous levels, just silly ridiculous (like beyond Black Reaver ridiculous), there isn't much to be done with mobs themselves.

          I think the answer is actually to make more items, more types of spells & abilities for all classes. Make the player actually choose which spells to learn or not learn. Which abilities to master or not master.

          Oangband had mob AI that was nearly impossible to beat, but, they did do player classes / abilities quite well.

          If the mage class had 40, 60, or even 100 total spells in the game, but any given mage player could only ever learn a maximum of say 50 of the 75 or 80 defined in the game, wouldn't that make the end game that much more enjoyable? You don't have to modify how mobs behave, you make the game more interesting by expanding the options for the player on the way down past 2000'.

          Comment

          • archolewa
            Swordsman
            • Feb 2019
            • 400

            #6
            If the mage class had 40, 60, or even 100 total spells in the game, but any given mage player could only ever learn a maximum of say 50 of the 75 or 80 defined in the game, wouldn't that make the end game that much more enjoyable? You don't have to modify how mobs behave, you make the game more interesting by expanding the options for the player on the way down past 2000'.
            In theory, this sounds like fun, but in practice you just end up with the same problem you have with *every* open-ended character building system: 90% of all builds are utter trash, 9% of the builds are well-balanced, and 1% are overpowered. So you end up in the same situation you are now with experienced players: every mage looks the same, but with new players they end up slamming their heads against the wall trying to figure out if they keep dying because they make bad build choices, or poor tactics.

            One of the things I *love* about Angband is that its character development is simple, and mostly gear-based. Simple character advancement means I can focus on short-term tactics without worrying about making dumb errors that I couldn't possibly know are dumb. Gear-based means it's relatively easy for me to tweak my build if later I realize things aren't working the way I expected.

            I'm always down with more gear though. Really, I find the core source of variety in Angband is what gear you get and when you get it. Few things are more tense than entering Drolem territory, without rPois! Best spam that Rod of Detection.

            I don't think we'd get much mileage out of adding additional consumables though. Inventory space is so tight (especially if you play without the town) that most of the new stuff is going to be left on the floor in favor of good old CCW, Magic Mapping, Detection, Speed, etc.

            I don't like the idea of reducing floor drops and shoving them all into unique drops. One of the things that makes Angband unique compared to other roguelikes is how strongly it *disincentivizes* killing everything.

            Personally, I'm fine with the endgame where it is. To me, it's a playground, a chance to enjoy that powerful build you sweated for over the past 80 floors or so. Once I get bored in the playground, I go kill Morgoth.

            If there's anything that needs tweaking, it's the early game (first twenty floors or so). Now *that*'s a dull slog.

            Comment

            • NCountr
              Apprentice
              • Sep 2016
              • 53

              #7
              Originally posted by archolewa
              In theory, this sounds like fun, but in practice you just end up with the same problem you have with *every* open-ended character building system: 90% of all builds are utter trash, 9% of the builds are well-balanced, and 1% are overpowered. So you end up in the same situation you are now with experienced players: every mage looks the same, but with new players they end up slamming their heads against the wall trying to figure out if they keep dying because they make bad build choices, or poor tactics.
              If you are limited to choosing which spells to learn versus which NOT to, its akin to a your Gear Buildout you refer to below. You have to know which spells are critical and which are optional. Early on some spells like Lightning Bolt / Electric Arch [i]seem[/] good, but later on, with higher level mobs resisting a lot or having higher HPs, it's not as useful. But, you can't dump it like you can a Wand of Lightning Bolts. It's stuck in the mind. There's also no guarantee one would find scrolls of higher power spells later on, say a Chaos Strike or Word of D (for priests, say) or Mana Storm.

              One of the things I *love* about Angband is that its character development is simple, and mostly gear-based. Simple character advancement means I can focus on short-term tactics without worrying about making dumb errors that I couldn't possibly know are dumb. Gear-based means it's relatively easy for me to tweak my build if later I realize things aren't working the way I expected.
              You will still have the same challenges; can you find the appropriate gear to suit your character's current situation.

              I'm always down with more gear though. ... I don't think we'd get much mileage out of adding additional consumables though. Inventory space is so tight (especially if you play without the town) that most of the new stuff is going to be left on the floor in favor of good old CCW, Magic Mapping, Detection, Speed, etc.
              More choices will only present more dilemma for the player. Those choices are indeed what make the game interesting. Increasing those choices will (okay, there's always a threshold .. to over do those choices to be ridiculous) make the game more enjoyable. Let's bring in Wands of Cave-ins, to rubble-up a hallway for defense... Potions of Half-speed (+5), mixed weaponry (+5, -3), a variety of Shield spells for many of the spell-casting classes, have *Slay* weapons with more varied bonuses (*Slay Orc* that bolsters Intelligence as well or in stead of Dexterity, or +1 Str, +2 Dex, -1 Con).

              [QUOTE} I don't like the idea of reducing floor drops and shoving them all into unique drops. One of the things that makes Angband unique compared to other roguelikes is how strongly it *disincentivizes* killing everything. [/QUOTE]

              Agreed.

              Personally, I'm fine with the endgame where it is. To me, it's a playground, a chance to enjoy that powerful build you sweated for over the past 80 floors or so. Once I get bored in the playground, I go kill Morgoth.

              If there's anything that needs tweaking, it's the early game (first twenty floors or so). Now *that*'s a dull slog.
              Also agreed. But that dull slug is where you find out whether you've got a winner in the making or not. By 1500', you tend to know.

              Comment

              • archolewa
                Swordsman
                • Feb 2019
                • 400

                #8
                Originally posted by NCountr
                If you are limited to choosing which spells to learn versus which NOT to, its akin to a your Gear Buildout you refer to below. You have to know which spells are critical and which are optional. Early on some spells like Lightning Bolt / Electric Arch [i]seem[/] good, but later on, with higher level mobs resisting a lot or having higher HPs, it's not as useful. But, you can't dump it like you can a Wand of Lightning Bolts. It's stuck in the mind.
                And this is precisely what makes it *completely* different from being gear-based. If you're allowed to unlearn spells to make room for new ones, then sure, I'm ok with being able to pick spells. But so long as you're stuck with spells forever, you're not just littering the ground with a few newb traps here or there, you're creating a newb minefield. Some people enjoy navigating those. I don't.

                If a player makes a critical mistake, they should find out *real* fast. They shouldn't find out seventy floors later when they find Mana Storm only to realize they can't learn it because they were inexperienced enough to think Electric Arch was a good idea.

                Comment

                • Pete Mack
                  Prophet
                  • Apr 2007
                  • 6883

                  #9
                  Hmm. It seems to me that if spells are bound to spellbooks as they come, the limiting factor is spellbooks and appropriate scrolls. It's also a sure recipe for too much junk.

                  Comment

                  • Selkie
                    Swordsman
                    • Aug 2020
                    • 434

                    #10
                    @NCountr I think you make some very sensible and refreshing in these two threads.

                    I've long thought that spell casters should find individual spells on scrolls and then after casting them for 100 times they can commit them to memory.

                    I love the idea of having a vast pool of spells but only have the memory capacity to learn 60-70 per cent of them.

                    To counter the idea of there being ONE single OP mage spell combination I'd have to say I can't see it happening. There are spells some players rave about but I never use - anything that destroys the dungeon for example like Grond's Blow only ever gets cast once by me for the XP.

                    I like the idea of mages getting ever single elemental offense spell but only having the ability to learn one or two of them. The player has to decide which monsters it wants to focus on. Do you go frost bolt to assassinate hydras (for all that filthy cash) or do you go fire bolts to fry vampires or huorns? I know which element I'd choose.

                    Time attacks really need to go. They're zero fun. If I see time hounds on a level then my heart sinks, often I'll just insta bail.

                    Comment

                    • Pete Mack
                      Prophet
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 6883

                      #11
                      Time attacks are one of the good things about Blackguard. The only important stat actually affected is Dexterity. CON, STR, INT are immediately recovered.
                      Plus nearly every time breather is dead in one turn.

                      Comment

                      • ewert
                        Knight
                        • Jul 2009
                        • 702

                        #12
                        Hmm, personally, I feel the too much junk approach is not the way for the vanilla game to go. There has been years and years of fixing that issue. Randarts make random things exciting. Heck, I often go wooooah thats so cool, even though the item in question is of no use for my character.

                        In short, I feel the class based approach to changing end-game is for variants, not for the vanilla game. I would hate to get spell gluttony myself. I love the playstyle of the vanilla game of that these are the classes, now go get gear. As a variant, go for it.

                        Hounds were tuned back a long time ago, and lets face it they are animals and dumb and so easy to trick into just walking into slaughter. Even time ones. I feel they are in a good spot, since some hate em, some (at least me) look into them as ez xp if your dmg is high enough, they can cause annoyance but outside some rare events are rarely instakills, but they can be 'oh crap oh crap I need to bail NOW'. Also their spacing in DLVLs seems pretty spot on at the moment.

                        I have been mulling on the ground vs mob loot issue, especially with vaults. At the moment I am thinking some delineation could be best, such as consumables are mostly ground, and gear is mostly carried. So for vaults, spawned gear would actually be put on mobs in the vault (algorithm tbd). This would also make rogues steal very unique as they could snag that loot and bail.

                        Yes the game heavily favours not killing everything. However, IMHO, it is too easy to get by killing NOTHING. After !xp DLVLs, in theory you can only kill 2 more mobs to beat the game. Each to their own and all, just my opinion.

                        For me, the game until stats/speed is all about taking choice tough fights and clearing average mobs, and that's where it is so fun. Post dive (just read scrolls to drop straight from 40 to 90 yesterday on my current char ...), it is just scouring the floors, feeling like a janitor sometimes.

                        Comment

                        • NCountr
                          Apprentice
                          • Sep 2016
                          • 53

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Pete Mack
                          Time attacks are one of the good things about Blackguard. ... Plus nearly every time breather is dead in one turn.
                          Time Attacks are just mundane. Indefensible, no "save" possible. The Mods don't even attempt to give the player a chance to parry them.

                          ◦ You stop using the Lantern of True Sight (13215 turns) and now hold the Mirror of Reflection (??).
                          ◦ It breathes Time. Your Mirror of Reflection deflects the attack. It howls in pain.

                          ...but, no, we're stuck with a Just Take It mentality from the Game Designers at this point.

                          Boring as heck. If I don't have Banish, I leave the level as soon as possible.

                          Comment

                          • NCountr
                            Apprentice
                            • Sep 2016
                            • 53

                            #14
                            Originally posted by archolewa
                            And this is precisely what makes it *completely* different from being gear-based. If you're allowed to unlearn spells to make room for new ones, then sure, I'm ok with being able to pick spells. But so long as you're stuck with spells forever, you're not just littering the ground with a few newb traps here or there, you're creating a newb minefield. Some people enjoy navigating those. I don't.

                            If a player makes a critical mistake, they should find out *real* fast. They shouldn't find out seventy floors later when they find Mana Storm only to realize they can't learn it because they were inexperienced enough to think Electric Arch was a good idea.
                            Do you think a newbie is going to go straight through and kill off Morgoth on the first go? Even given all the experience I've had through the years with Rogue and Angband, it still took me a few iterations to understand the new nuances with 4.x versus 3.x.

                            Any modification will take some time to grasp or comprehend. I think expanding options to players will only make the game richer. Take your chess board, expand it by 2 squares and 4 more pieces. Make it 10x10. Boom, you've enriched the game. Too complex? Oh, then take the original, vanilla 8x8 board, but just swap the starting positions of the back 8 pieces. (It's called Chess 960, invention credited to Bobby Fischer, also called Fischer-Random Chess.)

                            There are so many ways to modify and expand the game, without penalizing those who prefer to play with their knights more than their bishops. *cough* *cough* And, end-games in chess, to keep the analogy going, are also about Managing the win. Keeping your extra-pawn advantage to the end to win the game (avoiding potential blunders along the way). Sure, the opening and middle games are filled with traps and keen tactical play... . Get through to the End Game and it's the same as when you attain Max Stats and Decent Gear past 2000~2500'. It's the End Game. Turn it into a win as you see fit.

                            Comment

                            • Nick
                              Vanilla maintainer
                              • Apr 2007
                              • 9637

                              #15
                              Originally posted by NCountr
                              ...but, no, we're stuck with a Just Take It mentality from the Game Designers at this point.
                              Given that I am essentially the Game Designer at this point (although I would argue new stuff gets pretty thoroughly aired first), I take this kind of personally.

                              I don't know how much notice you've taken of the years of broad ranging discussions of whether and how the game should change, but I'm not seeing a lot of evidence of it. By all means make your own variant. Claim it's actually the real Angband if you like. But in my opinion venting repeatedly against an unpaid volunteer like they're The Man is ... unhelpful.
                              One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
                              In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

                              Comment

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