Should Angband have easy/difficult 'levels'?

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  • ChodTheWacko
    Adept
    • Jul 2007
    • 155

    Should Angband have easy/difficult 'levels'?

    I haven't won angband in ages, although I have a character who I assume is just in 'end phase' - aka just trolling around dlvl 98, looking for kit.

    I was wondering if the difficulty of angband could be increased, perhaps a 'difficult' setting for people who want something more challenging.
    It's nice to keep 'normal' 'as is' for people who haven't won before.

    It shouldn't be such a massive jump as going Ironman/artifactless,
    Nor do I think it should make the game more tedious, like say,
    making pseudo ID take a lot longer, or dramatically reducing the probability of ego item/artifact generation. ( Which doesn't necessarily make the game harder, just longer )

    The idea should be to make it harder, but in an interesting/fun way.

    I was thinking things like:
    1) higher monster density/level, so it's harder to just hop on a level and explore around without fighting things. (maybe not for the initial room the character enters a level in, so it's not instadeath city )
    2) Reduce stealth so monsters wake up a bit faster
    3) Remove the quiver ( multi shot isn't so abusive if you run out of ammo easier! )
    4) ego/artifact generation probably does need to be toned down a bit
    5) Reducing inventory slots would be very interesting even it's just 1-2 slots.
    6) Avoid ego item generation in stores. One of my characters bought boots of speed (+9) from the armor store, and it was only 50K!
    7) It would be very interesting to 'cap' the number of torches/flasks of oil you can buy from the general store, making the quest for permanent light more critical/satisfying. Maybe even do this for food, so dungeon food becomes more interesting.

    Thoughts?

    - Frank
  • LostTemplar
    Knight
    • Aug 2009
    • 670

    #2
    There are already many difficulty settings like
    ironman, no_artifacts, ai_smart, etc.

    Comment

    • PowerDiver
      Prophet
      • Mar 2008
      • 2820

      #3
      You can always impose your own. E.g. promise not to dig or stone2mud any ASCs.

      Comment

      • Nick
        Vanilla maintainer
        • Apr 2007
        • 9637

        #4
        I must say, I like the sound of the "ironman rooms" option that's been mentioned for Z (? or Heng?), where every room tries to be made as a vault.
        One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
        In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

        Comment

        • Derakon
          Prophet
          • Dec 2009
          • 9022

          #5
          Ironman rooms was added first in Z, yes. And it is quite interesting, at least in the early game. I don't know if it'd stay interesting once you manage to achieve a reasonable amount of survivability, just because navigating the dungeon becomes so painful...but then, I've never managed to get a character past 800' or so, and that was with abusing some of Z's more twinked character combinations.

          Comment

          • Zikke
            Veteran
            • Jun 2008
            • 1069

            #6
            I think the options in V that tweak the creature AI give a good stepping stone up to no-artifacts or ironman. Is there a short distance option in V like there is in FA? i.e. sight and ranges cut in half

            I am playing a Half-Troll mage and that is plenty challenging in its own way, heh
            A(3.1.0b) CWS "Fyren_V" NEW L:50 DL:127 A++ R+++ Sp+ w:The Great Axe of Eonwe
            A/FA W H- D c-- !f PV+++ s? d P++ M+
            C- S+ I- !So B ac++ GHB? SQ? !RQ V F:

            Comment

            • Derakon
              Prophet
              • Dec 2009
              • 9022

              #7
              "Monsters learn from their mistakes" doesn't actually do all that much to combat. "Monsters cheat", on the other hand, renders any monster with the heal-self spell largely unkillable. Having something of a middle ground would be good.

              Other possibilities for difficulty options:

              * No selling to stores (as a halfway with the current ironman_stores option; thus, you could still buy, but only with the cash you find in the dungeon)
              * Monsters cannot be frightened
              * Monsters don't give experience after killing 10 of that type of monster
              * Damage received is always maximized (so a Uruk with a 3d5 melee attack always rolls a 15 for damage, before armor damage reduction kicks in; likewise a manabolt that deals 50+5d10 damage would always hit you for 100)
              * Hitpoints/mana don't regenerate during combat (must go N turns without seeing an enemy before regeneration of any kind kicks in)
              * Monsters are always awake and have max awareness distance (like hounds)
              * Summoning spells are biased towards deeper monsters / uniques
              * Every vault is generated with a) no permanent walls, and b) an Umber Hulk or other EAT_WALL monster in the middle (okay, this is pretty silly...)
              * Every level is generated with at least one pit of the most dangerous type permissible at that depth

              Comment

              • miyazaki
                Adept
                • Jan 2009
                • 227

                #8
                A few other in-between difficulties:

                * home-less
                * no recall (but can still use up-stairs); kind of a ironman-lite
                * no magical ID

                My favourite self-imposed difficult story is still that guy who started with a plain shovel and used it for the entire game. Shovelled M to death!

                Comment

                • Tiburon Silverflame
                  Swordsman
                  • Feb 2010
                  • 405

                  #9
                  Obviously, if these are just *options* then one can turn them on or off at one's leisure. Comments are directed to making them default or even mandatory.

                  Home-less would just seem to require more extended scumming prior to the final confrontations, and would make it much harder to adjust one's equipment set. Neither of these seems like they're any fun.

                  No ID is just plain tedious.

                  No selling to stores...how about, instead, greatly reducing the max $$$ one gets from anything? Make all stores give no more than 1000 gp. This lets you get *some* cash for Recalls and CCWs and spellbooks early on.

                  Decreasing monster XP based on count, as well as charlevel, would work better than a flat "no more after the first 10." This would be *ugly* tho with the damned hounds; now, they still threaten to kill you but you don't get a damn thing from them. Orc/troll pits become, at most, item drop areas.

                  I think "only regen when no enemies in sight" is a BAD idea. Why does it only work then? Makes no sense to me.

                  Having monsters never flee, would be nasty. Another one, perhaps a bit more complex, would be to give a lot of monsters a BERSERKER flag. When they drop to below, say, 25% of their max hit points, they gain benefits similar to the potion of berserker str. The option would be to Enable Berserk, or something along those lines.

                  Comment

                  • Tiburon Silverflame
                    Swordsman
                    • Feb 2010
                    • 405

                    #10
                    Let me also make a broad comment. There's a big difference, IMO, between reducing tedium, and making things easier. To a degree, many things that reduce tedium, such as improved pID, do make things somewhat easier...but not that much. Things which reduce monster threat and/or increase your damage potential, make the game easier, and the converse also holds.

                    Note that the two aren't entirely disjoint. ESP falls somewhere in between 'reduce tedium' and 'improve chance to win.' Yes, it definitely lowers your risks...but at the same time, most characters could just use detection spells as often as their mana recovery would allow, so really it's just reduced tedium.

                    Comment

                    • will_asher
                      DaJAngband Maintainer
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 1124

                      #11
                      I like the idea of having difficulty level options and will likely do that for DaJAngband at some point.

                      Ideas I like:
                      - Tiburon's Berserker monsters idea.
                      - reduced experience for monsters weaker than you (but I'd probably make this a mild reduction)
                      - Summoning spells are biased towards deeper monsters / uniques
                      - slightly lowered chance of weapons/armor being made into egos/artifacts
                      - harder to detect curses (I heard that certain variants do this pretty well)
                      - higher monster density/level
                      - Reduce stealth so monsters wake up a bit faster

                      The thing about having limited food in stores is something I've considered doing just to make the food mechanic interesting. You'd also have to stop selling scrolls of satisfy hunger, and probably make the satisfy hunger spell more expensive and have less classes get it.

                      If/when I do add a difficulty level option, there will probably also be an option to make the game a little easier.
                      Will_Asher
                      aka LibraryAdventurer

                      My old variant DaJAngband:
                      http://sites.google.com/site/dajangbandwebsite/home (defunct and so old it's forked from Angband 3.1.0 -I think- but it's probably playable...)

                      Comment

                      • Derakon
                        Prophet
                        • Dec 2009
                        • 9022

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Tiburon Silverflame
                        Obviously, if these are just *options* then one can turn them on or off at one's leisure. Comments are directed to making them default or even mandatory.
                        All of my suggestions were made with the understanding that they would be optional. I don't think I'd support making any of them be mandatory as I suggested them. That said...

                        No selling to stores...how about, instead, greatly reducing the max $$$ one gets from anything? Make all stores give no more than 1000 gp. This lets you get *some* cash for Recalls and CCWs and spellbooks early on.
                        The point of this option, of course, would be to make it much harder to acquire consumables (and very difficult indeed to buy anything from the black market). That in turn means that the player has to either be much more careful in picking fights, or be more willing to take risks during fights so that they don't have to use up valuable consumables. It also means that inventory destruction becomes comparatively nastier.

                        Decreasing monster XP based on count, as well as charlevel, would work better than a flat "no more after the first 10." This would be *ugly* tho with the damned hounds; now, they still threaten to kill you but you don't get a damn thing from them. Orc/troll pits become, at most, item drop areas.
                        The entire idea of this suggestion was to force the player to keep diving and seeking out "novel" enemies. It means that the player might well find himself fighting enemies that he would ordinarily avoid (c.f. mystics, hydras) because they're the only things that can get him any experience. It'd also likely mean having to take down Morgoth at less than max level.

                        I think "only regen when no enemies in sight" is a BAD idea. Why does it only work then? Makes no sense to me.
                        Because you can't rest and get your breath back if you're in the middle of a fight. Net result of this suggestion is to make attrition a factor regardless of what you're fighting, and mean that increasing monster density makes it much harder to recover in general. Mana also becomes a scarcer resource.

                        Having monsters never flee, would be nasty. Another one, perhaps a bit more complex, would be to give a lot of monsters a BERSERKER flag. When they drop to below, say, 25% of their max hit points, they gain benefits similar to the potion of berserker str. The option would be to Enable Berserk, or something along those lines.
                        This would work at making the game harder, but I've always felt this was a pretty silly concept in videogames, personally. Why do monsters get harder to kill as they get closer to death? Is scar tissue made of muscles or something?

                        Comment

                        • d_m
                          Angband Devteam member
                          • Aug 2008
                          • 1517

                          #13
                          Originally posted by miyazaki
                          My favourite self-imposed difficult story is still that guy who started with a plain shovel and used it for the entire game. Shovelled M to death!
                          Do you have a link? I haven't read this and it sounds great!
                          linux->xterm->screen->pmacs

                          Comment

                          • miyazaki
                            Adept
                            • Jan 2009
                            • 227

                            #14
                            Originally posted by d_m
                            Do you have a link? I haven't read this and it sounds great!
                            I didn't quite remember the ending correctly, but it is still damn impressive: Props!

                            Comment

                            • miyazaki
                              Adept
                              • Jan 2009
                              • 227

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Tiburon Silverflame
                              Home-less would just seem to require more extended scumming prior to the final confrontations, and would make it much harder to adjust one's equipment set. Neither of these seems like they're any fun.

                              No ID is just plain tedious.

                              No selling to stores...how about, instead, greatly reducing the max $$$ one gets from anything? Make all stores give no more than 1000 gp. This lets you get *some* cash for Recalls and CCWs and spellbooks early on.
                              I disagree. The quiver and increased slots at home has made it increably easy to collect and store all sorts of consumables from !res_stat to !heal to ?*destroy* to arrows of slay evil. It means there is very little penalty for saving a bunch of potions and arrows for the endgame. Right now there is one obvious way to defeat morgoth. This is what I dislike about some of the current changes.

                              If the inventory was smaller to compensate for the increased quiver or home made smaller/eliminated, it would force the player to make choices earlier. If you decided to use the current obvious endgame strategy, then yes, you would choose a tedious path of scumming for consumables. By introducing more difficult choices, different endgame strategies become more attractive.

                              As for no-selling options, it is extremely liberating. It keeps you in the dungeon longer. (No more lugging backpacks of weapons up to the surface to buy stat potions.) Homeless would have a similiar effect of keeping you in the dungeon longer. (Even better if coupled with fixed-inventory stores.)

                              Comment

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