A novel solution to status effects

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Patashu
    Knight
    • Jan 2008
    • 528

    A novel solution to status effects

    The problems with status effects in Angband, in the various iterations of trying to make them both fun and balanced, can be overviewed as follows:

    1) Either they're probabilistic, and thus too unreliable to use,
    2) Or they always work, and they're too good to NOT use,
    3) Or they always work, but they're nerfed to the point where they're never worth using,
    4) Or some monsters are immune and some monsters are not (eventually leading to everything you'd want to effect being immune), making it just something you use until you're diving to the lower levels.

    Divinity Original Sin 2 ( http://store.steampowered.com/app/43...riginal_Sin_2/ ) is a tactical RPG that came out recently, and it has what I think is a novel solution to status effects:

    All units don't just have HP (called Vitality), they also have two more bars called Physical Armour and Magical Armour. How big these bars are is influenced by what equipment you wear, so different allies and enemies have different distributions between these two bars. Physical damage is dealt to Physical Armour first before being dealt to Vitality, and Magical damage is dealt to Magical Armour first before being dealt to Vitality.

    In addition, many terrains and attacks apply status effects, but ONLY if the respective Armour type is at 0. For example, fire terrain applies burning if magical armour is 0, and a skill called 'Chicken Claw' turns the target into a chicken, but only if their physical armour is 0. In addition, healing skills are diversified - some heal vitality, some heal physical armour, some heal magical armour. Offensive skills are split between raw damage, damage + status effect, and status effect only. (Terrain is also a core concept, by the way - many skills create, destroy and interact debilitating terrain such as water, blood, ice, electrified fluid, poison, oil and fire.)

    Because of the variance in enemy physical/magical armour distributions, it's smart to have good ways to deal both physical and armour damage, AND to apply debilitating status effects of both kinds so you have flexible ways to take any problem enemy out of the fight, and you can get all your allies into fights with enemies that they can take out the fastest.

    I'm not sure what the best way to retrofit this system onto Angband (or even a variant) would be, but this is the first status effect system I've seen in a while that isn't trivial (either you always want to apply a status effect, or you never do, or it's a percentage play and you use it exactly when it's more reliable than reducing their HP to 0).
    My Chiptune music, made in Famitracker: http://soundcloud.com/patashu
  • Estie
    Veteran
    • Apr 2008
    • 2342

    #2
    The main reason debuffs have low value in Angband is that most fights are so short. Furthermore, typically higher level monsters are harder to affect than lower level ones, and those are excatly the ones youd want to debuff, because it takes longer to kill them. I very occasionally use a wand of slow monster, but it soon gets squelched as the inventory fills up with more important things. I dont see how you can justify a slot for a debuff unless it is 2) too good NOT to always use.

    Sleep is imo the most interesting status effect for Angband. Call it mesmerisation and let it affect basically everything, make it ball shaped at target location so it can be used without LOS and people might use it. Naturally, the game would become easier, the only way to avoid that is to increase difficulty elsewhere at the same time.

    As for the Divinity system, I cant see any application for Angband. If I understand it correctly, there would be 2 phases to a combat - the first where you erode shield(s) and the second where you exploit the lack of shield with some kind of followup. That kind of complexity only makes sense for the longest fights, that is lategame uniques. Also, it is counter intuitive, as the early stages of a fight is where youd want to have status effects the most. If you can take a dragon down to half health without the help of any status effect, why would you want to apply it therafter, when it is half dead (and/or has lost its shield) ? I havent seen any Divinity play, so maybe I am misunderstanding something.

    I think I would try the opposite approach - make monsters susceptible to status effects, but increase their resistance with additional applications. That way @ gets an advantage at the start of the fight without danger of it turning into a pillar-dance type cycle.

    To successfully introduce status effects it wont do to change said effects into something different. First the game must be modified in a way to present situations that @ has to overcome, but is unable to without the help of status effects. And that would be a major change.

    Comment

    • Patashu
      Knight
      • Jan 2008
      • 528

      #3
      Originally posted by Estie
      Also, it is counter intuitive, as the early stages of a fight is where youd want to have status effects the most. If you can take a dragon down to half health without the help of any status effect, why would you want to apply it therafter, when it is half dead (and/or has lost its shield) ? I havent seen any Divinity play, so maybe I am misunderstanding something.
      Reasons include:
      * Fights in DOS2 are quite long. Fights consist of multiple allies vs multiple enemies (as opposed to Angband where it's you vs one enemy if you're playing intelligently), and killing a specific enemy usually requires more than a full round of attacks from all allies. Debilitating two enemies is often more useful than killing one.
      * Enemies have different amounts of physical armour, magical armour and vitality. An enemy that is mostly vitality will get to status effect range far more easily than it can be killed. An enemy that has less of one kind of armour than the other is a prime candidate for focusing that armour kind down and applying a status effect to it, if you can.

      - - -

      Actually, this is starting to make me realize the biggest reason why status effects are so hard to balance in Angband - how easy it is to reduce all fights into one-on-one, safe-for-the-player instances. This removes the 'do I debilitate two enemies or kill one' decision, for example. This isn't a bad thing, it just means that any attempt to make status effects meaningful (or decide they can't ever be) for Angband has to revolve around the tools you use to fight and control the flow of combat that you already have. What status effect could possibly be better than 'Teleport Away', for example? As you say, "First the game must be modified in a way to present situations that @ has to overcome, but is unable to without the help of status effects.", and that would necessitate at bare minimum challenges that can't be solved by the many forms of failproof Teleportation Angband provides.
      My Chiptune music, made in Famitracker: http://soundcloud.com/patashu

      Comment

      • Gwarl
        Administrator
        • Jan 2017
        • 1025

        #4
        I disagree strongly with 1) and agree very strongly with 2) and 3). Which is to say I think the newest deterministic status effects are fundementally flawed, but I don't think the old probabilistic ones were, and it was simply a poor implementation which hadn't evolved in step with the rest of the game. I've been having a great deal of fun playing with other variants which have old fashioned full-power status effects with different probability distributions and it's been a lot of fun.

        Comment

        • Gwarl
          Administrator
          • Jan 2017
          • 1025

          #5
          Also, not all @'s are equal. I don't think a warrior should go into a game with any more expectations that he'll befuddle and confuse his enemies than he does expecting to destroy them with magic. A mage on the other hand has befuddling and confusion in his class description, and the rogue is meant to be able to do a little of it too.

          I honestly think traditional status effects were simply underrated.

          Comment

          • Sky
            Veteran
            • Oct 2016
            • 2321

            #6
            i think we're heading in the right direction with statuses. There's just one more thing to do.

            let's say for example, Slow is a -10 debuff. Take that as the maximum debuff you can have from Slow effects.

            once cast, a mob will have a chance to save based on Monster Level, Resistances, and luck. If they fail, they will receive a portion of status, based on their ML and Resistance, up to the maximum.

            So, you zap an Orc, and bam! he goes to -10 speed. You zap Ungoliant, and they save a few times, and those times they don't save, they accrus Slow effects, say -2 or -3 at the time, until they reach the maximum of -10.

            Confusion would be a % of effect while the status is running. And so on.
            "i can take this dracolich"

            Comment

            • NimrodPE
              Scout
              • Jul 2017
              • 30

              #7
              I agree with Estie concerning the "need" of debilitating in Angband. Sure, slowing/holding/confusing a difficult enemy can be very helpful, but on the other hand it is easier for @ to haste itself, teleport the enemy/oneself away and simply use brute force to subdue 1 (one) enemy. Fighting against parties is to be avoided in Angband due to obvious reasons where it really boils down to setting up a favorable fighting ground, so adding new "armour/bars" isn't something good in this game.

              Angband is single-player, so brute force tactics, while Baldur's Gate (for example) rewards the player/party very much if they debilitate their opponent(s) in whatever way. Point: These are completely different games.

              Consequence: Implementing a mechanic froma completely different game is a bad choice and does nothing but harm.

              Concerning Angband and resistances, maybe a merger with D&D 3.5 wouldn't be that bad at all. I very much like the mechanic of Saving Throws (10 + good modificator - bad modificator = difficulty to check against), because the harder the enemy the harder to debilitate, while there are (just like RL) some enemies who are immune to something. Of course this would require a great deal of work (and is just another non-innovative probability vs probability mechanic) but it would make those debilitating/buffing items more important.

              Downside: Turning Angband into a "I need an item for every occasion because I can't be immune anymore and they're throwing everything at me" just because players should use items is, well, unnecessary at the least.

              Comment

              • Derakon
                Prophet
                • Dec 2009
                • 9022

                #8
                Here's a thought: what if status ailments were primarily a way to avoid fighting enemies, rather than a way to make fighting them easier? We could make status effects "fragile", in the sense that they get removed if the monster takes any HP damage. So for example, you could make slowing stick all the time and slow by substantially more (and even slow multiple opponents), but as soon as you try to actually hurt the enemy, they get their speed restored to normal. Status effects could then be useful for breaking apart groups or avoiding fights. You could silence a quylthulg to give you time to get into melee range, or pin Lokkak to the ground so you have time to walk down a corridor and create space (instead of using Phase Door).

                I think that such a regime might make it possible to do away with Teleport Other, which is the ultimate "status effect" for avoiding fights right now. Instead you could use status effects that make it safe to walk around the enemy you're trying to avoid.

                Comment

                • Gwarl
                  Administrator
                  • Jan 2017
                  • 1025

                  #9
                  Proof that derakon's "status effects always land" idea was a bad idea: he's back here coming up with a new bad idea which would work horribly. Please give us saving throws and full strength status effects back please. Please.

                  Comment

                  • AnonymousHero
                    Veteran
                    • Jun 2007
                    • 1393

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Gwarl
                    Proof that derakon's "status effects always land" idea was a bad idea: he's back here coming up with a new bad idea which would work horribly. Please give us saving throws and full strength status effects back please. Please.
                    Could you please try to be less ad-hominem and more substantive? This kind of rhetoric does not suit you, or anyone really.

                    Comment

                    • Estie
                      Veteran
                      • Apr 2008
                      • 2342

                      #11
                      Why this hostility towards teleport other ?

                      Angband confronts the player with a mixed population of monsters, from harmless to invincible, at the same time. Most games must make sure the opposition is balanced, not Angband, and the reason is teleport other. The player´s job is to garner something from out of this mix and the tools are fighting, stealth and teleport other. Note that teleport other is not affected by monster difficulty, nor is stealth - while there are easy and hard to wake monsters, the distribution is not (very much) afected by nonster level. This is essential and any attempt to make harder monsters harder to control is likely to collapse this building.

                      This is an aspect of Angband that makes it so enjoyable for me. The game doesnt give me a customized opponent of correct power with a predetermined way to fight it. It just makes vaults and populates them with random monsters, leaving it to me how or whether at all I want to try and overcome them. A wyrm in an early vault can stop me from opening it, or not if I have TO, likewise Adunaphel can stop me even if I have TO. This is why I dont like the better pathfinding - it brings the game closer to "only wake it if you can fight it".

                      It is certainly possible to change the rules so @ of power x can maximally encounter succesfully monster of power f(x), where f is more or less linear, and that is exactly how the vast majority of games are designed. I wouldnt want Angband to take that direction.

                      Comment

                      • AnonymousHero
                        Veteran
                        • Jun 2007
                        • 1393

                        #12
                        @Estie: I too like TO, but I think I can see where the nay-sayers to TO are coming from.

                        TO is an effect like almost no other -- it's so powerful compared to everything else that it's really difficult to balance against monster power, tactics, etc. As an example: Unless Nick & co. go really out of their way to introduce meaningful mob mechanics and cooperation among monsters, TO is basically a "get out of jail free" card... and it's hard to balance that kind of "infinite" power against anything.

                        This has become kind of a hobby-horse of mine, but I find it instructive to look at Baldur's Gate No-Reload play as an analogue of perma-death. Obviously, the mechanics are much different in general, but BG no-reload derives a huge amount of its tactical interest from having no teleportation of any kind[1], nor WoR[2]. Obviously, I don't think Angband should strive to become BG no-reload, but I'm just saying that it is in fact possible to craft fascinating gameplay (even more than Angband, IMO) in similar games where you have no WoR/TO/Teleport.

                        [1] Well, there's a couple of very limited spells that have similar effects, but they'll almost never get you out of a losing situation. I. e. they can prevent losing situations from arising (by sheer improbability), but you can't rely on them saving your bacon at the last minute.

                        [2] Obviously, having a "shallow" tree structure of 'dungeons' helps immensely here.

                        Comment

                        • NimrodPE
                          Scout
                          • Jul 2017
                          • 30

                          #13
                          This may be off-topic, but as a fellow Baldur's Gater who still owns all the original cd's...

                          You know, when I replayed the whole BG this year (thanks beamdog!) I really understood one thing: that magic becomes very fast too powerful if you have a good mage.

                          To put it bluntly: use stinking cloud + summon undead until you get chaos, then use only chaos until you get time stop + greater alacrity. With this two combos and the chaos spell BG is a cakewalk even on insane difficulty and it gets even easier on insane if you play a sorcerer-thief-combo. Way too powerful and unbalanced!

                          TO goes in that direction, but I really like Derakons suggestion! Pinning a monster down to a tile for some time (=making it absolutely immobile) instead of TO'ing it away sounds interesting.

                          How about an item that makes you invisible or non-attackable for one monster? (Rod of Invisibility, Wand of Peace) Of course, as soon as you attack that monster, the charm's gone - maybe even for good as long as you stay in that level.

                          I know I shouldn't say that, but what about pit fights? Staff of Friendship => a monster becomes your ally for a certain amount of turns => lay back, grab popcorn and watch how a P smashes through some o's ;D

                          @Derakon: Muting enemies? I totally want that anti-Q weapon!

                          Comment

                          • Nick
                            Vanilla maintainer
                            • Apr 2007
                            • 9629

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Estie
                            Angband confronts the player with a mixed population of monsters, from harmless to invincible, at the same time. Most games must make sure the opposition is balanced, not Angband, and the reason is teleport other. The player´s job is to garner something from out of this mix and the tools are fighting, stealth and teleport other. Note that teleport other is not affected by monster difficulty, nor is stealth - while there are easy and hard to wake monsters, the distribution is not (very much) afected by nonster level. This is essential and any attempt to make harder monsters harder to control is likely to collapse this building.

                            This is an aspect of Angband that makes it so enjoyable for me. The game doesnt give me a customized opponent of correct power with a predetermined way to fight it. It just makes vaults and populates them with random monsters, leaving it to me how or whether at all I want to try and overcome them. A wyrm in an early vault can stop me from opening it, or not if I have TO, likewise Adunaphel can stop me even if I have TO. This is why I dont like the better pathfinding - it brings the game closer to "only wake it if you can fight it".
                            Interesting - I'll keep that in mind. The two main tasks for 4.2 are refresh of the monster list and of player classes, and the art will be to make the monsters interesting and challenging and make sure the player has the tools to deal with them.
                            One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
                            In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

                            Comment

                            • Pete Mack
                              Prophet
                              • Apr 2007
                              • 6883

                              #15
                              Just a note. TO is not "uniquely powerful." There's also Teleport Level, (Mass) Banishment, Destruction, and Alter Reality. The issue isn't Teleport Other; it's guaranteed escapes of any sort.
                              If you don't like escapes, you might wish to play Sil.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              😀
                              😂
                              🥰
                              😘
                              🤢
                              😎
                              😞
                              😡
                              👍
                              👎