Yup, Ultima 9 should be retconned into oblivion.
By the way, I'd like to see more games using the tarot cards character creation from Ultima 4.
Game Mechanics You Hate
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i would second this notion, The Avernum games did an admirable job of this, although the first 2 had the advantage of being in an underground tunnel system with limited exits. but there were still several points that I remember you could escape the play area, at least 3 of them being rewards for progress in the mainquests (main-quests plural, by the way, another lesson that more games should take from avernum) the second game was a little sloppier on that front but still...[/i]OgreBattle wrote:My thoughts on how to do invisi barriersShrapnel wrote: Basically, I just think they could've found a better way to do it.
-Player gets a warning to turn back
-Heads ui display dissappears after a while
-Player enters cutscene describing how he's left and was never seen in the lands again
-Return to main menu screen
Depending on the tone of the game it can vary from humorous to wistful to "and then the demons won and everyone died", but it still feels like a 'player choice'.
After all, when you climb Mt. Kon Foo Sing to fight Grand Master Hung Lo and prove that your "Squirrel Chases the Jam-Coated Tiger" style is better than his "Dead Cockroach Flails Legs" style, you unleash a bunch of your SCtJCT moves, not wait for him to launch DCFL attacks and then just sit there and parry all day. And you certainly don't, having been kicked about, then say "Well you served me shitty tea before our battle" and go home.
I'm very interested by the concept of multiple main quests. Could you tell more about how Avernum dies this ?norms29 wrote: i would second this notion, The Avernum games did an admirable job of this, although the first 2 had the advantage of being in an underground tunnel system with limited exits. but there were still several points that I remember you could escape the play area, at least 3 of them being rewards for progress in the mainquests (main-quests plural, by the way, another lesson that more games should take from avernum) the second game was a little sloppier on that front but still...[/i]
The traditional playstyle is, above all else, the style of playing all games the same way, supported by the ambiguity and lack of procedure in the traditional game text. - Eero Tuovinen
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Not a game mechanic in any existing game, but I had a friend who wanted to design a role-playing game where the primary resolution mechanic is based around aggregate dice pools, ala' WEG Star Wars. However, instead of using traditional 6-sided dace, he instead wanted to use Fudge dice.
For those of you unfamiliar, Fudge dice are 6-sided dice that have two faces showing a +(worth +1), two faces showing a 0 (worth zero), and two faces showing - (worth -1).
He thought these would be easier for counting up totals. He failed to realize two things:
A) You're both adding and subtracting within the same roll. Not a huge deal, but not as efficient as adding straight positive values.
B) Since there is equal likelihood on each Fudge die of getting a positive and negative value, it means that the average is always 0 no matter how many dice you roll. This is in a system where the better you are at something, the more dice you get to roll.
Once I explained this to him, he looked at me as if I just told him Santa Claus wasn't real (spoiler alert).
For those of you unfamiliar, Fudge dice are 6-sided dice that have two faces showing a +(worth +1), two faces showing a 0 (worth zero), and two faces showing - (worth -1).
He thought these would be easier for counting up totals. He failed to realize two things:
A) You're both adding and subtracting within the same roll. Not a huge deal, but not as efficient as adding straight positive values.
B) Since there is equal likelihood on each Fudge die of getting a positive and negative value, it means that the average is always 0 no matter how many dice you roll. This is in a system where the better you are at something, the more dice you get to roll.
Once I explained this to him, he looked at me as if I just told him Santa Claus wasn't real (spoiler alert).
The most dangerous game is man. The most entertaining game is Broadway Puppy Ball. The most weird game is Esoteric Bear.
The Avernum games are pretty great, but he's overselling it. There are usually a number of quest lines that get you the gem-encrusted plot-coupons that you need to unlock the door for the final quest.silva wrote:I'm very interested by the concept of multiple main quests. Could you tell more about how Avernum dies this ?
my memory's not as good on the third one, but the first two didn't have A final quest. they had 3 (or possible 4) major long-term goals given to you super early. in the first game it was Find the escape tunnel to the surface. kill the emperor, and kill the demon lord i think, the war with the lizard men might also be one, unless it's tied into one of the first three.Ed wrote:The Avernum games are pretty great, but he's overselling it. There are usually a number of quest lines that get you the gem-encrusted plot-coupons that you need to unlock the door for the final quest.silva wrote:I'm very interested by the concept of multiple main quests. Could you tell more about how Avernum dies this ?
I refer to them as seperate main quests because when you reach the end of anyone of them it gives you the victory screen and more or less asks if you're done or will you do the other quests.
I'm counting any game-long quest lines that doesn't demand you do the other quest line to be seperate quests which are equally main.
After all, when you climb Mt. Kon Foo Sing to fight Grand Master Hung Lo and prove that your "Squirrel Chases the Jam-Coated Tiger" style is better than his "Dead Cockroach Flails Legs" style, you unleash a bunch of your SCtJCT moves, not wait for him to launch DCFL attacks and then just sit there and parry all day. And you certainly don't, having been kicked about, then say "Well you served me shitty tea before our battle" and go home.
Avernum really was much more detailed world design than actual multiple plots (at least, assuming that they kept the Exile plots...).
Vebyast wrote:Here's a fun target for Major Creation: hydrazine. One casting every six seconds at CL9 gives you a bit more than 40 liters per second, which is comparable to the flow rates of some small, but serious, rocket engines. Six items running at full blast through a well-engineered engine will put you, and something like 50 tons of cargo, into space. Alternatively, if you thrust sideways, you will briefly be a fireball screaming across the sky at mach 14 before you melt from atmospheric friction.