A Few Questions/Observations From an Old Player

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  • Patashu
    Knight
    • Jan 2008
    • 528

    Originally posted by debo
    I still really like no-selling. It shuts the gold min-maxer in my brain right up and saves me infinity OCD trips to the town to clear my inventory of every trinket I've picked up along the way
    May I fourth this? I'm so glad this option got added
    My Chiptune music, made in Famitracker: http://soundcloud.com/patashu

    Comment

    • Oramin
      Swordsman
      • Jun 2012
      • 371

      I got a *GREAT* hit with Crisdurian (26.0 lbs) (4d5) (+18, +19) earlier today with my Ranger while heroically berserk. So Durin at 23.0 lbs can't get Superb but Crisdurian can get *GREAT*? This is based on our earlier discussion about crit qualiity (not crit chance) being based solely on weapon weight.

      This doesn't seem right since I've been getting superb hits with many weapons including Haradekket which is pretty darn light.

      Am I also correct in assuming that there is basically no chance of Crisdurian's higher quality crits making up (on average) for the difference in damage between it and Aule (12.0 lbs) (8d1) (+19, +21) (which I just found with my Ranger)?

      Comment

      • Derakon
        Prophet
        • Dec 2009
        • 9022

        The damage display on the 'I'nspect screen ought to take criticals into account, so if Aule displays higher damage than Crisdurian, then no, Crisdurian's higher-quality crit potential can't make up, on average, for Aule's better base damage.

        Looking at the code right now, crit power is given by (weight in decipounds) + randint(650) and you need at least 900 to get the "*GREAT*" crit. So the cutoff for *GREAT* is 25 pounds (250 decipounds) and even then you have to be pretty damned lucky.

        Comment

        • Oramin
          Swordsman
          • Jun 2012
          • 371

          Originally posted by Derakon
          Okay, fine, I guess I'll go source-diving. The formulae aren't linked anywhere that I'm aware of, but the relevant function is critical_norm in attack.c.

          Crit chance calculation is based on (weight in decipounds) + (total melee to-hit bonus * 5) + (player level * 3). You have a (chance in 5000) chance of getting a critical hit; if this fails, you get a regular hit.

          Crit power rating is given as (weapon weight in decipounds) + (1d650). Durin's best crit power would be 880, giving a "great" hit (2x + 10 damage), barely better than a "good" hit (2x + 5). At 900 power you can get "superb" hits (3x + 15).

          Durin's weight gives it an extra +100 to crit chance and crit power compared to Ringil, but its to-hit is lower by 9 (in your case), which reduces its chance by 45. So you'll get crits an extra 1.1% of the time. The actual power of those crits is only slightly better, on average, than Ringil's, especially since Ringil has higher base damage to multiply by.

          Almost no major demons resist acid, so the difference between the two is just Ringil's x5 slay vs. Durin's x3 brand -- it should be noticeable, but not extreme.

          I hadn't realized how discretized the critical quality cutoffs are. Not just the *GREAT* hit, but also the Superb hit, is functionally unachievable for almost all weapons. And good/great hits are almost identical.
          I thought I would bring this forward from page 7 for purposes of discussion. If the 'I'nspect screen includes the possibility of bonus damage in the calculations, then shouldn't the value change depending on whether I have Heroism or Berserk running?

          Incidentally, as I level my melee and archery are supposed to improve. How exactly does that work? Does it add to my to hit and damage potentials?

          Comment

          • Derakon
            Prophet
            • Dec 2009
            • 9022

            Okay, my labeling in that post is off. If power is less than 900, then you get a "superb" hit, if it's less than 1300, then you get a *GREAT* hit. I misread the code when I wrote the original post, so I was off by one tier (i.e. thought that you needed at least 900 to get Superb).

            Your damage may change very slightly if you have Heroism, Berserk, and/or Blessing active. I don't think I've ever noticed but I wouldn't be surprised.

            p_class.txt has your base melee/missile skilsl and your gain per 10 levels. For example, warriors start with a melee skill of 70 and get +45 every 10 levels. Race also has an effect on your base skill but IIRC doesn't affect your level gain. This is translated into a bonus to-hit that I don't really care to look up right now. It doesn't affect your damage any (except via crit chance). Same goes for archery.

            Comment

            • Oramin
              Swordsman
              • Jun 2012
              • 371

              Hmm, +36 To Hit (Heroism and Berserk Rage) translates to 180/5000 = .036 or a 3.6 increase in chance of a crit (e.g. from 20% to 23.6%). That *should* cause a noticeable change in the damage potential if crits are factored into the damage display.

              And it does. Just tested and the +36 increases the average default damage for Aule to 335.5 from 327.5. Not exactly a huge increase. Good to know I don't have to manually determine if bonus crit damage makes a difference. Thanks.

              Comment

              • Oramin
                Swordsman
                • Jun 2012
                • 371

                Ok, I just found Bard so I could do a comparison with Belthronding.

                Turns out that damage-wise Belthronding is better when using a slay arrow on the appropriate target but Bard is better when using a slay arrow on the wrong target. I compared both Seeker arrows and ordinary arrows but they were all in the +12 to +14 damage range.

                Note this is for a L50 Ranger so we're comparing 4 shots at (x3) with 3 shots at (x5).

                As an example, Seeker Arrows of Venom 4d4 (+12, +14)

                Belthronding: 1159.2, 579.6
                Bard: 1083.6, 677.1

                I would probably switch over to Bard for the extra range (160 to 120) and the use of less ammo (3 shots per round vs 4 shots per round) but I haven't killed the Tarrasque yet and don't have Disenchantment Resistance from another source.

                Comment

                • Timo Pietilä
                  Prophet
                  • Apr 2007
                  • 4096

                  Originally posted by Oramin
                  Ok, I just found Bard so I could do a comparison with Belthronding.

                  Turns out that damage-wise Belthronding is better when using a slay arrow on the appropriate target but Bard is better when using a slay arrow on the wrong target. I compared both Seeker arrows and ordinary arrows but they were all in the +12 to +14 damage range.

                  Note this is for a L50 Ranger so we're comparing 4 shots at (x3) with 3 shots at (x5).

                  As an example, Seeker Arrows of Venom 4d4 (+12, +14)

                  Belthronding: 1159.2, 579.6
                  Bard: 1083.6, 677.1

                  I would probably switch over to Bard for the extra range (160 to 120) and the use of less ammo (3 shots per round vs 4 shots per round) but I haven't killed the Tarrasque yet and don't have Disenchantment Resistance from another source.
                  Bard: (4d4+14+19)*(5(bow)+3(brand)) = 344 * 3(shots) = 1032
                  Belthronding (4d4+14+22)*(3(bow)+3(brand)) = 276 * 4(shots) = 1104

                  Surprising. In old days when brand was multiplier itself instead of addition to bow multiplier that would have been other way around. (Belthronding: 1656, Bard: 1935). Nice, non-obvious change in damage.

                  However I would still use Bard with ranger for range and less arrow consumption just like you write. Those couple of grids longer range can play quite a big difference in total damage in combat.

                  Comment

                  • Oramin
                    Swordsman
                    • Jun 2012
                    • 371

                    I just found some Balance Dragon Scale Mail and I noticed that it allows me to breathe "Balance".

                    I'm assuming that monsters can't resist Balance; what does it destroy (potions, scrolls, etc.)?

                    Comment

                    • Timo Pietilä
                      Prophet
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 4096

                      Originally posted by Oramin
                      I just found some Balance Dragon Scale Mail and I noticed that it allows me to breathe "Balance".

                      I'm assuming that monsters can't resist Balance; what does it destroy (potions, scrolls, etc.)?
                      Looking at effects.c "balance" is random breath from selection chaos, shards, sound and disenchantment, not just one type of breath. Same thing with pseudo, multihued, chaos and law, you get random element from original dragon form with each activation.

                      Shard and sound destroy potions, chaos or disenchantment don't affect items onto ground (chaos might polymorph monsters and I'm not sure if monster inventory survives that).

                      PDSM seems to be exception to the rule, it breathes "GF_missile" which is pure unresistable damage that doesn't destroy anything.

                      Comment

                      • Derakon
                        Prophet
                        • Dec 2009
                        • 9022

                        Er, I'm pretty sure chaos destroys everything except artifacts.

                        Comment

                        • fizzix
                          Prophet
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 3025

                          does it? I don't remember chaos destroying anything at all... manastorm destroys everything.

                          Comment

                          • Derakon
                            Prophet
                            • Dec 2009
                            • 9022

                            Hm, I guess that was changed at some point (possibly in a variant), because you're right, it seems that chaos doesn't destroy anything in current Vanilla. My mistake.

                            Comment

                            • Oramin
                              Swordsman
                              • Jun 2012
                              • 371

                              I finished pincushioning Sauron with two types of Arrows of Acid just a bit ago and I noticed that one type was completely gone after he died. I also noticed that the square he had been sitting on while getting shot now had stairs.

                              Does the game by any chance create stairs where Sauron was when he died and destroy all items on that square in the process?

                              I wasn't going to use those arrows on Morgoth but it was still annoying if that is what happened.

                              Oh, btw, Morgoth is dead also. Add a High Elf Ranger to the win list for this thread: Dwarf Priest, Gnome Mage, Half-Troll Warrior, and High Elf Ranger.

                              What race should I use for Paladin?

                              Comment

                              • Estie
                                Veteran
                                • Apr 2008
                                • 2345

                                Originally posted by Oramin
                                I finished pincushioning Sauron with two types of Arrows of Acid just a bit ago and I noticed that one type was completely gone after he died. I also noticed that the square he had been sitting on while getting shot now had stairs.

                                Does the game by any chance create stairs where Sauron was when he died and destroy all items on that square in the process?

                                I wasn't going to use those arrows on Morgoth but it was still annoying if that is what happened.

                                Oh, btw, Morgoth is dead also. Add a High Elf Ranger to the win list for this thread: Dwarf Priest, Gnome Mage, Half-Troll Warrior, and High Elf Ranger.

                                What race should I use for Paladin?
                                Dunadan of course.

                                Comment

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