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| RPG ideas |
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piccolo
Member #3,163
January 2003
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mEmO: idea of having every spell have it's own experience so as you use a spell it levels up all spell but at a slower rate of the spell being used and Richard Phipps idea of using stamina bars to get the play switch there attacks both of theses ideas would work well together you have to remember there is a 1st best and a 2nd best spell alway when fighting monsters wow |
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Carrus85
Member #2,633
August 2002
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Maybe you could add some additional incentives as to leveling up different schools of magic... Such as blue flame, for example, if you have ice and fire experience. The only real way to get around these problems is planning, which is really the only way to get around about any computer programming/gaming problem.
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Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Quote: He should, because just being thrown in without warnings and advice is NO FUN FOR THE PLAYER, which is the main priority.
Warnings and advice, sure. In the beginning of the game, this is absolutely necessary. In my example way above ("There's a fire cavern ahread!"), that would not be necessary later in the game. The player should expect elemental monsters, and should have a good grasp of what elements are in the game and their weaknesses at this point. Being hand fed is too easy for the player, and will lead to a boring cinematic RPG and nothing more. If the only decisions the player makes are his class, his hair color, and which direction he should turn at the next junction, it's not a fun game. You haven't said what is fun, to be honest, which is what we're trying to accomplish in this thread. Quote: or the player WILL get bored. I think I'd rather judge for myself. Being a player and all. Personally, I find character advancement the most fun when I'm the one making the choices. That is, afterall, what character customization is all about. No offence X-G, but you haven't given any type of solution, additional idea, or anything. Just a bunch of negative comments. If you continue, I'm going to have to call you negative nancy from now on. "He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe" |
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X-G
Member #856
December 2000
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It's said that the player must succeed with at least 70% of his endeavours, and at no more than 80% of them, to be completely satisfied. Any less, and the game is too hard and it becomes frustrating. Any more, and it seems like a cakewalk and becomes boring. And why should I have to come up with a solution? All I know is that I see numerous flaws that need to be addressed, but I don't know how to fix them, and I don't have to know them already. Quote: I find character advancement the most fun when I'm the one making the choices
Only, you're limiting choice for the player by forcing him to learn every element imaginable. -- |
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Richard Phipps
Member #1,632
November 2001
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Seems like you two are going to have your own little elemental battle to me! Make sure you have plenty of tonics! |
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X-G
Member #856
December 2000
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I'll be an Alchemist, because that means I get free access to unlimited X-Potions and Mega Phoenix! For FREE! -- |
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Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Ok, Nancy Quote: Do you start out by finding the problem, or finding the solution? This is one very small element of game design. All you've done is shown flaws in other remotely related ideas. For example, elements was not a part of the initial idea. Who knows if they exist in the game in which this idea is placed into? Whereas elements seem to be your primary 'problem'. Quote: Only, you're limiting choice for the player by forcing him to learn every element imaginable. It's hardly forcing him to choose every element imaginable; assuming elements exist. Two elements would be perfectly fine if monsters only had one resistance. If not, then the player might need one more. Who knows though. Maybe he also selected his race as a lizard, so he's weak against ice and resistant against fire. In which case, he has little reason to practice his ice spell - fire enemies shouldn't be a problem anyways. If you really wanted to allow the player to use only one element, a spell could be added that would change the target and remove all weakness/resistance. For example, Polymorphism. It's going to drain a lot of mana, but the option is there, and would be a decent strategy. Quote: All I know is that I see numerous flaws that need to be addressed You haven't mentioned many real flaws, in my opinion. Just that the player is going to dislike casting the same spell over and over again, just to find out it's not going to work on the monsters of that element. To that, I say duh. There's many solutions that would allow that, but I wouldn't recommend actually using any of them. The player just shouldn't do that, or want to do that. Who does that, anyway? Quote: I don't know how to fix them I know, you're not even trying. "He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe" |
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X-G
Member #856
December 2000
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Quote: I know, you're not even trying.
Of course not. It doesn't interest me in the least. Quote: If you ask me, you're not thinking your problems all the way through
Again, that's not what I'm here for. I'm here to point out the flaws you make so that YOU can address if them if it really bothers you that much. If you don't want to, fine, just don't post. I'm not making an RPG here. -- |
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Richard Phipps
Member #1,632
November 2001
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Derezo hits X-G with Logical Melee for 16 hp damage! X-G attacks Derezo with Evasive Sarcasm for 10 hp damage! Red X-G is about to die!
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X-G
Member #856
December 2000
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-- |
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Joe Olivieri
Member #2,286
May 2002
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I can hardly believe this is still going. I would agree with Derezo on giving the player choices, I think that every time a game ends it should only be the players fault. If you took your fire spells into your fire cavern only to find out that they heal monsters instead of hurt 'em... well... that's your problem. I also think that it's fairly simple to craft a solution that merely suggests to a player - hey, you're in town here and the magic guy at the store sells fire spells at half off, and oh yeah... there's this cave and there's nothing but nasty ol' ice creatures in it. What's left is for the player to choose their own demise. If you want to be a moron knucklehead and do the opposite of what people tell you to do, please, do it but do it quickly - we hope to keep the genepool clean of those knuckleheads Am I missing something? Is there more to this? Should we be talking on the level of ... aha! I just re-read the initial question. Battle Engine stuff Flow I would try for a mission based flow. Something along the lines of Final Fantasy Tactics Advance. Have some missions that are story based and the rest help you get to those missions. I'm really considering a mix of the two myself... Items Bottom-line Just my 2c. |
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hazul
Member #4,338
February 2004
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Thanks for a good on-topic post
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Korval
Member #1,538
September 2001
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Quote: I would agree with Derezo on giving the player choices, I think that every time a game ends it should only be the players fault. If you took your fire spells into your fire cavern only to find out that they heal monsters instead of hurt 'em... well... that's your problem. One choice is no choice. Like I said, if it is merely a question of "pick the one right, obvious solution," then it isn't very interesting. If it's "use fire spells in the ice cave or die," how is that interesting? Since it is an uninteresting choice, what's the point of having the option at all? Quote: I haven't decided whether the game should have a main plot or story you follow (FF series) or if it's more individual quest-driven (Daggerfall, Morrowind) with more freedom.
Quote: Item interaction I'm not sure I know how to code as well as I'd like, so I'll probably limit the types of weapons and armor. ATM the hero has only an attack power and defence power, that depend on the weapon and armor he is wearing at the time. How else could this be done? Should he have some kind of inventory? If so, what kind?
Quote: My battles are arranged sort of Zelda-style. No random battles like in the FF's. The hero's hits all land, no missing. Should this be altered? On what would hitting and missing depend? All of these kinds of questions are questions you should answer yourself when you design the game. There's no right answer; it all depends on what kind of game you want to make. Are you trying to make a Zelda-style adventure game, a Final-Fantasy-alike, or a modern PC-RPG-esque game? Or something else entirely. |
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hazul
Member #4,338
February 2004
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Let's just say I'm going to try to take the best of all of those At this point, thanks to all for good answers. Now I have a very good idea of what kind of a game I want
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