Tears unnumbered ye shall shed
Collapse
X
-
The core idea is that I want a shorter, more eventful, more dangerous game.
Here are some of the things I envisage happening:
Forced descent will be the default option. As a consequence, in a standard game there will be no more than 99 levels generated before you meet Morgoth.
The dungeon may be shortened.
I actually think part of the problem is the two end fights are too hard and long meaning you have to scum for consumables and gear to have a decent shot at winning even if every other part of the game is very easy at this point.
I say make Morgoth easier, but you'll have to face him much less prepared than currently. It also means that other monsters near the end will still be tough and worth avoiding rather than pushovers as you stack up the consumables. At the moment I get to the endgame about 35% of the time, but only bother to do the last couple of boring hours to win about 10% of the time and normally just start a new game.
Individual dungeon levels will be more interesting.
Some fights will be dangerous, and require the player to escape or die.
I think we really need a new game mechanic to indicate danger, but without making it a chore like experience to avoid death.
So here's my ideas for this:
Monsters make sounds when walking about and leave clues lying about to indicate their presence on the level. So "you hear a terrifying roar to the East" or "the earth shakes". There could be scorchmarks on the walls and bones with big teethmarks on them lying about. Smaller monsters start to flee when they hear it coming.
Something like an ancient dragon should be an event to the player. He works out there is one on the level and then has to avoid them or arrange their gear to take them on. If they can lure them out and then ransack their nest then there are treasures to be had before they return.
Ok maybe this is all a bit varianty so I'll stop.
Some fights and/or traps will result in the player being effectively crippled, and needing to return to town to recover properly.
Recalling just to allow you to continue after being crippled in the dungeon just means that the player is going to recall every time something bad happens. There's no interesting gameplay decision to make just another chore before you can carry on with the fun part of the game.
I like the idea that you have to play through some difficult situations sometimes though.
The town will be primarily a place to recover rather than restock
Every object will be useful to some character at some time; very few will be useful to any character all the time.
Achieving game balance while doing all this will be challenging, and at times the game will be unbalanced; at these times, I would rather err on the side of being too hard than too easy.
Where there is a choice of possible development paths to take (combat system is a prime example here), I would like to actually implement multiple possibilities for people to test and compare. That way I have informed feedback to ignore
All this said, I do want to ensure there is a good selection of birth options to cater for multiple tastes.Comment
-
Nice list.
Damn I was hoping that the town was going to disappear
Recalling just to allow you to continue after being crippled in the dungeon just means that the player is going to recall every time something bad happens. There's no interesting gameplay decision to make just another chore before you can carry on with the fun part of the game.
e.g. I show up on a floor, get ass handed to me but still have 75% of floor to explore. Do I recall back knowing that I have to go deeper one level when I return, or do I keep exploring?Glaurung, Father of the Dragons says, 'You cannot avoid the ballyhack.'Comment
-
Mind you, I've come up with them after playing a lot of Sil so you are bound to like themComment
-
Damn I was hoping that the town was going to disappear
Recalling just to allow you to continue after being crippled in the dungeon just means that the player is going to recall every time something bad happens. There's no interesting gameplay decision to make just another chore before you can carry on with the fun part of the game.
I've been lurking here on and off for a couple of years, reading many of the debates that have taken place about the future direction of Angband. I've recently started to feel that a lot of the problems covered there ultimately stem from the existence of the town, and in particular that certain things are always easily available there.
(For example, curses are difficult to do in an interesting way if you can always buy ?Identify and/or ?Remove curse.)
However, I would be very hesitant before removing the town. I wonder if, after taking it out, the game would still be Angband? Maybe it's just an artefact of the Roguelikes I play, but the town level does seem a very characteristic feature of Angband.
Since I've been moved to post, let me say one more thing.
Originally posted by NickForced descent will be the default option. As a consequence, in a standard game there will be no more than 99 levels generated before you meet Morgoth.Comment
-
I actually think part of the problem is the two end fights are too hard and long meaning you have to scum for consumables and gear to have a decent shot at winning even if every other part of the game is very easy at this point.
I say make Morgoth easier, but you'll have to face him much less prepared than currently. It also means that other monsters near the end will still be tough and worth avoiding rather than pushovers as you stack up the consumables. At the moment I get to the endgame about 35% of the time, but only bother to do the last couple of boring hours to win about 10% of the time and normally just start a new game.
Sort of like the sound of this, but I think one of the main problems with Angband currently is the fact that you need to do a lot of boring stuff all the time to avoid death eg. detect all the time. Detection is dull but necessary and then eventually you get ESP which makes it trivial most of the time except for a few things (which exacerbates the problem of the game being hard at the start and easy by the end).
Other mechanisms to show danger are certainly a possibility, though.
Recalling just to allow you to continue after being crippled in the dungeon just means that the player is going to recall every time something bad happens. There's no interesting gameplay decision to make just another chore before you can carry on with the fun part of the game.
Also, with forced descent, recalling means you go down a level
More generally, I think Angband has succeeded so well in the past because it does allow a lot of oddball ways of playing which still provide enjoyment to somebody. There is a tradition of inclusiveness to maintain here.One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
-
It may be a big change, but it certainly isn't going to be an immediate one. You may remember I posted a list of things I would do in the first post of this thread - all that stuff has to happen first. These things I'm talking about now are a long way off yet, and they're aims and principles rather than concrete plans.One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
-
[*]Forced descent will be the default option. As a consequence, in a standard game there will be no more than 99 levels generated before you meet Morgoth.
Aaaaaaaarrrgggghhh Noooooooooooooooo!!!
(Although I guess an option is just that. The thing is, I like to feel like I'm playing on default and believe that anything else is kind of mild cheating - or lunacy depending on the option)
[*]The dungeon may be shortened.
Yuk
[*]Individual dungeon levels will be more interesting.
Great
[*]Some fights will be dangerous, and require the player to escape or die.
They already do, for me anyway.
[*]Some fights and/or traps will result in the player being effectively crippled, and needing to return to town to recover properly.
Ditto.
[*]Ironman will be very hard to win.
Fine. (Are you still smarting from Psironic's FA Ironman win, perchance?)
[*]The town will be primarily a place to recover rather than restock.
Excellent.
[*]Every object will be useful to some character at some time; very few will be useful to any character all the time.
Fantastic!Comment
-
Hehe, Nick, now you're talking my type of a game. Halls of Mist has a very similar philosophy.
My main piece of advice: design the mechanics so that the player doesn't have an incentive to do boring things, like clear each level in order even though they are powerful enough to dive.
Sil and Mist solve this in different ways. Sil has a time limit of a sort, and you are not supposed to clear levels. In Mist you are supposed to clear levels, but the levels are small. Between levels you get to decide how far you want to dive, and the game rewards you for diving fast (more wiggle room later and/or a big score multiplier if you manage to win).
Angband's strength compared to most other roguelikes is that you never need to spend time on boring levels. The downwards-only version needs to keep that strength, somehow.Comment
-
I feel compelled to make an observation about your comment here.
I've been lurking here on and off for a couple of years, reading many of the debates that have taken place about the future direction of Angband. I've recently started to feel that a lot of the problems covered there ultimately stem from the existence of the town, and in particular that certain things are always easily available there.
(For example, curses are difficult to do in an interesting way if you can always buy ?Identify and/or ?Remove curse.)
However, I would be very hesitant before removing the town. I wonder if, after taking it out, the game would still be Angband? Maybe it's just an artefact of the Roguelikes I play, but the town level does seem a very characteristic feature of Angband.
I can think of a few changes that would make the shops more interesting. Firstly reduce the amount of gold about and don't increase the gold dropped at deeper levels meaning that removing curses etc. would be at the expense of purchasing consumables.
Also you can spend on consumables OR save up for some nice gear but not do both (at the moment you have 200k+ gold after a while and can just buy anything you want.) So an interesting gameplay decision would be between purchasing gear and consumables. If you play carefully avoiding using up stuff unnecessarily then you get rewarded for it.
Also make ?recall much rarer and only found in the dungeons. As they are precious you won't be recalling every time you get your strength reduced by 1.
Since this is such a big change, I'd encourage first trying making non-connected stairs the default instead. I switched to that recently, and it did a lot to boost my enjoyment of the game.
A solution I thought of a while ago would be that dangerous monsters drift into shallower levels after a certain length of time. These would be different from just deeper monsters, but specific "hunter" type monsters that are alerted to the player's presence by their time spent in the dungeon.Comment
-
Shops are fun in Mist. Gold is scarce. Town visits are not guaranteed between levels, and in recent versions there is a small reward (acclimatization to the Mist) if you choose to skip town.
If you want to live, you need to choose wisely how to spend your gold.Comment
-
My main piece of advice: design the mechanics so that the player doesn't have an incentive to do boring things, like clear each level in order even though they are powerful enough to dive.
Sil and Mist solve this in different ways. Sil has a time limit of a sort, and you are not supposed to clear levels. In Mist you are supposed to clear levels, but the levels are small. Between levels you get to decide how far you want to dive, and the game rewards you for diving fast (more wiggle room later and/or a big score multiplier if you manage to win).
Of course, boring play is a bit subjective, and varies from person to person and day to day. Some days clearing an orc pit is fun, and some days it's a chore.
Well, levels never being boring would work, I guessOne for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
-
A solution I thought of a while ago would be that dangerous monsters drift into shallower levels after a certain length of time. These would be different from just deeper monsters, but specific "hunter" type monsters that are alerted to the player's presence by their time spent in the dungeon.One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
-
A solution I thought of a while ago would be that dangerous monsters drift into shallower levels after a certain length of time. These would be different from just deeper monsters, but specific "hunter" type monsters that are alerted to the player's presence by their time spent in the dungeon.Glaurung, Father of the Dragons says, 'You cannot avoid the ballyhack.'Comment
Comment