I have outlined a few of my ideas about maintaining, but probably not very coherently. This (and maybe even follow-up posts) will be an attempt to be a bit more thorough.
It seems to me that one of the big strengths of Angband is the freedom of choice it gives to its players. There are two fixed objectives, and how you achieve those is very largely up to you. As a consequence, we have
Rule 1: Angband is a game you are playing against yourself.
So if you're "cheating", you're only cheating yourself (unless you're playing in a competition where there are defined rules and an honour system and you go against that).
Now I'm taking the responsibility for maintaining Angband, but that doesn't make me the boss of it. I'd certainly feel a bit silly telling someone like Timo how to play, and if it's like that for Timo, why should it be any different for a new player? Which brings us to
Rule 2: How you play Angband is up to you.
Back in the days of rgra, there used to be a standard pattern when anyone complained about some aspect of the game: a small amount of discussion, and then if they were still complaining, someone would say "You should make a variant".
So one of my big goals is to make the game easier to modify. Don't like hounds, or identify, or the mage spells? Change 'em. And while there will still be a standard (erm, Vanilla) Angband which is the one that's released, I will be encouraging people to mess with stuff and see whether they like it better.
Discuss.
It seems to me that one of the big strengths of Angband is the freedom of choice it gives to its players. There are two fixed objectives, and how you achieve those is very largely up to you. As a consequence, we have
Rule 1: Angband is a game you are playing against yourself.
So if you're "cheating", you're only cheating yourself (unless you're playing in a competition where there are defined rules and an honour system and you go against that).
Now I'm taking the responsibility for maintaining Angband, but that doesn't make me the boss of it. I'd certainly feel a bit silly telling someone like Timo how to play, and if it's like that for Timo, why should it be any different for a new player? Which brings us to
Rule 2: How you play Angband is up to you.
Back in the days of rgra, there used to be a standard pattern when anyone complained about some aspect of the game: a small amount of discussion, and then if they were still complaining, someone would say "You should make a variant".
So one of my big goals is to make the game easier to modify. Don't like hounds, or identify, or the mage spells? Change 'em. And while there will still be a standard (erm, Vanilla) Angband which is the one that's released, I will be encouraging people to mess with stuff and see whether they like it better.
Discuss.
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