please no, detection is good, knowing exactly is nice, also in difficult game i see remove maximize or something like that, eeek!
OOD objects too common?
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Maximize can actually make the game easier, depending on how your stats play out. A race/class combo with penalties to important stats like CON and STR can come out post-stat gain with higher stats than would be possible with maximize on, though IIRC they'll also start out with worse stats.
Anyway, the game's gonna get harder one way or another, DOS350. Protesting everything we discuss without offering any helpful alternatives is, well, not very helpful.Comment
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I wonder if vaults are being generated too frequently at shallow dungeon levels.Comment
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Dos350 has it right this time, for a variety of reasons.
1. Functional
Monster symbol can be overriden by prf file. So are you going to use the original symbol/color for modified monsters, or the prf-file specified symbol? If the former, the UX is terrible: players must remember the original symbol and the new symbol. (This is a complete disaster for players who use graphics.)
If you use the new symbol, prf file configuration will have an impact on game-play. This is even worse!
2. Logical
Assume there is a workaround for (1). Then you are biasing the game even more in favor of cautious play. Don't know what that dragon is? Better not crack the vault or go near the 2x2 moated room.
3. Gameplay
Assume you do run into that 40 level out-of-depth GWoLaw, and get killed. If you are a relative newbie, you have no way to know in advance that such a beast exists. So you stop playing in disgust. If you aren't a newbie, you are just pissed off because you forgot that there is another monster with the same symbol.
For making things harder, nerf player capabilities, don't nerf the UI.
Examples include:
* Reduce damage (e.g. for off-weapon bonii)
* Reduce hit chance for crippled characters (blind/confused/stunned/infravision/stuck in the dark.)
* Reduce healing capabilities for non-priest-casting charactersComment
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I think there are now too many "8" block vaults in vault.txt, some of the "medium" vaults have actually better content than many greater vaults (which might actually mean that those greater vaults have too few of the "8" blocks).Comment
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Dos350 has it right this time, for a variety of reasons.
1. Functional
Monster symbol can be overriden by prf file. So are you going to use the original symbol/color for modified monsters, or the prf-file specified symbol? If the former, the UX is terrible: players must remember the original symbol and the new symbol. (This is a complete disaster for players who use graphics.)
If you use the new symbol, prf file configuration will have an impact on game-play. This is even worse!
3. Gameplay
Assume you do run into that 40 level out-of-depth GWoLaw, and get killed. If you are a relative newbie, you have no way to know in advance that such a beast exists. So you stop playing in disgust. If you aren't a newbie, you are just pissed off because you forgot that there is another monster with the same symbol.
If you don't know what it is, assume it can kill you.
For making things harder, nerf player capabilities, don't nerf the UI.
Examples include:
* Reduce damage (e.g. for off-weapon bonii)
* Reduce hit chance for crippled characters (blind/confused/stunned/infravision/stuck in the dark.)
* Reduce healing capabilities for non-priest-casting characters
Having combo:
RoP (+6/8/10, +6/8/10)
Elessar (+7,+7)
Haradrim (+5,+5) +1 blows
Hammerhand (+9,+9)
Cambeleg (+8,+8)
STR 18/220
You have +1 blows and +55-59 off-weapon bonus. Add a 8d4 SoS of Fury +20 with off-weapon acid brand you have +80 to that with two additional blows.
5-blows base that is 8 blows with 137 (Nenya) = 1096 against Sauron, 8*107 against Morgoth = 856 (not counting criticals).
Compare to old-times superhero with +2 blows non-fury SoS.
RoP, no bonus
Elessar, didn't exist
Haradrim, didn't exist
Hammerhand, no bonus
Cambeleg (+8,+8)
STR 18/220
Non-Fury means less than +20 bonus. You lose external brand, extra blow and 27-31 points of off-weapon damage, also because speed was seriously more difficult back then you wouldn't have a ring slots to use anyway for anything else than RoS.
That's 5 blows base 7 blows with 8d4 + maybe 40 total (28+12) = 420.
Current chars do more than twice the damage old time chars did.Comment
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Plain color tells you general type of the monster, not exact type, which is enough. Balance dragons are violet, so they are easy to recognize. More difficult cases are impact/earth hounds, gravity/inertia hounds and stuff like that. Now that we have more colors used distinguishing monsters from each others is rather easy.
I am sufficiently color blind that I cannot make so many distinctions. At a minimum the look command should list the specific monster types that match the color.Comment
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Thanks for the analysis - until you summarised it like that I had no idea quite how much difference the off-weapon damage makes. And Haradrim is clearly way too findable!
Please rest assured that this will be addressed for 3.3 ..."Been away so long I hardly knew the place, gee it's good to be back home" - The BeatlesComment
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Elessar is too good, and the Rings of Power are too common. It used to be a Big Deal to get even one of them. That comes down to general artifact frequency, though.
Hammerhand can be tricky to use because of its lack of things head slots usually cover (ESP, confusion/blindness, INT/WIS boosts), but if you can use it, it's quite nice.Comment
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Elessar is too good, and the Rings of Power are too common. It used to be a Big Deal to get even one of them. That comes down to general artifact frequency, though.
Hammerhand can be tricky to use because of its lack of things head slots usually cover (ESP, confusion/blindness, INT/WIS boosts), but if you can use it, it's quite nice.
What worries me is if we try to fix drops so that high-end artifacts become really rare again - is everyone going to whine about how they have to spend a million turns scumming for Ringil/Fingolfin/Feanor/RoP etc. etc."Been away so long I hardly knew the place, gee it's good to be back home" - The BeatlesComment
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They will whine about RoP being too hard to find, but I suspect that the others aren't too much of a big deal. Is anyone ever scumming for Ringil and having to have it to be able to win? I don't think so. It would be possible to win with Sting, Pete Mack did it once IIRC, and you are likely to find better stuff than Sting if you look for a bit longer, so I wouldn't be worried. Maybe if you could find one RoP, and one of the awesome other things with a pretty lucky character you would have it pretty much balanced, maybe just simple two of the overpowered at max for 1 million turn char. One should be about average for 1 million turns. No scumming neccesary, except for consumables(which is why I think priest is much better than ranger, 0 fail heal coupled with glyph is overpowered. No good way to fix it either.).Comment
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Yeah, I don't think Hammerhand is out of whack while aggravation remains unchanged, but you're right that the problem is definitely related to stuff being too common. It's weird how that's happened - there isn't a change or set of changes to attribute it to, but endgame chars are now vastly better equipped much earlier.
What worries me is if we try to fix drops so that high-end artifacts become really rare again - is everyone going to whine about how they have to spend a million turns scumming for Ringil/Fingolfin/Feanor/RoP etc. etc.
At the beginning of each game, randomly select N artifacts. These artifacts will never be generated during the game by any means.
The player will have to manage his kit without those artifacts, because he will not find them no matter how long he looks.
A.Ironband - http://angband.oook.cz/ironband/Comment
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There is perhaps a way round this, although people might not like it.
At the beginning of each game, randomly select N artifacts. These artifacts will never be generated during the game by any means.
The player will have to manage his kit without those artifacts, because he will not find them no matter how long he looks.
A.Comment
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There is perhaps a way round this, although people might not like it.
At the beginning of each game, randomly select N artifacts. These artifacts will never be generated during the game by any means.
The player will have to manage his kit without those artifacts, because he will not find them no matter how long he looks.
1. Divide the artefacts up into groups according to power level, and limit how many the player can find from a given group; i.e. once you've found Ringil and one RoP, no chance that you'll find Feanor as well.
2. Give the player a pool of 'artefact points' to use up; crappy early game artefacts are only worth a few points, endgame quality use up a ton of them, and once you've maxed out your allowance in a given game, no more artefacts for you.
3. Simply code a flat maximum number of artefacts per game. If you use up your limit finding weak and useless ones before you get to the good stuff, well, better luck next time.
You could easily have "limit artefacts" as a birth option to turn on and off to taste, or even allow the player to set a sliding scale of difficulty.Comment
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