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2/10/13 9:14:52 PM#61
Originally posted by aRtFuLThinG Item decay and item power or dungeon loot are NOT TIED TOGETHER...you can still end up with a game that has an uber leet sword of melt your face off that decays over time forcing you to get yet another one. You are basing your arguments on something that isnt connected in any way. “I hope we shall crush...in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country." ~Thomes Jefferson |
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2/10/13 10:05:35 PM#62
Originally posted by waynejr2 It depends on what does the "market" is designed for. For combat centric game, the only purpose is to help progression, and add another dimension to get items. That is, to make sure if i get a great item that i cannot use, i can sell it to someone who can, and i get gold to buy what i *can* use. If that is the goal, instead of making the economy a big part of the game, we don't need local markets or what-not. |
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2/10/13 10:59:58 PM#63
Originally posted by jtcgs I think you are totally missing my point. I'm not talking about item power and dungeon loot at all. I'm talking about developers having no where to go in their design because they can only make existing players "obsolete" their gears and contents over time by keep upping levels only - and the lack of perm decay perpetuates the problem because people can keep items forever and they have nowhere to go to keep them from increasing they distance in terms of wealth and power versus the late starters. See there are powerful weapons in games like pre-NGE SWG as well, but perm decay and dynamics resources forces create a resource sink in terms of both wealth and power (in terms of individual's power) instead of having to create just arbitary sinks. Perm decay was the sink, dynamic resources becomes the chase (instead of farming the same dungeron 200 times for the same gear). |
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2/11/13 3:14:51 AM#64
I have always thought that having crafted items simply better than any drops apart from raids would be enough to solve ecomomy issues. But if its the only way I have no problem with item decay.
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2/11/13 3:20:47 AM#65
One thing that came to mind regarding item decay is that since it builds pressure for gear replacement, the availability of gear should be balanced with how much decay is involved.
Lots of decay should be reflected by having gear that is easy and affordable to achieve.
Lots of decay and difficult gear would just end up being a pain that drives off players.
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2/11/13 3:27:14 AM#66
Originally posted by adam_nox 1) I don't recall any games where crafting was significant. Maybe SWG? But even then the best items were still drops. EQ2 has played with the significance here and there, but drops / other aquisition methods usually win in the end. 2) I prefer soulbinding, I don't like seeing powerful items able to be sold, even via inviting players to your group before you loot. Loot should be locked to those that beat the encounter. 3) Gear aquisition should be merit based, not market based. Market based systems just lead to gold spam and greed. I would rather the game rewarded player accomplishments, rather than credit cards. |
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Loktofeit
Elite Member
Joined: 1/13/10
EVE in 2013 - DUST 514, CSM8, Fanfest, 10th Anniversary, Uprising, Odyssey. Gonna be a good year :) |
2/11/13 4:27:48 AM#67
Originally posted by evilastro 1) Asheron's Call and EVE Online. 2) Why? 3) This explains point 2. It seems like you prefer gear grinding for advancement over player economy. Both are valid game designs and there are many games to support both styles. To say that MMOs should be based on only gear acquisition is a bit over the top, though. filmoret: One thing I have never figured out is why the game devs hardly ever fix simple problems that arise. It is like they don't care about the pvp community. Nitth: What makes you so sure its a simple fix? filmoret: Because most of them are. Sometimes its just changing a number in a code string other times its creating a few variables. However none of them should take over a few hours of coding. |
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2/11/13 4:36:34 AM#68
Makes me miss SWG. Nothing like making a name for yourself as a crafter and having people go out of their way to visit your shop for the best gear. Hell, even good mob drops generally ended up just being gear components. Time to log back onto SWGEMU I think.
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2/11/13 4:43:37 AM#69
Originally posted by Loktofeit But an appropriate response to the op's assertion that they should be based on crafting. :shrug: Run in circles, scream and shout. He could have saved a lot of time, with just posted the standard "Themeparks are Satan's Spawn burn them burrrrrnnn!!" This thread's really only even mildly interesting for positing archaic ideas like Decay. :shrug: First heard that one proposed around 1979—"the problem with D&D is these items last forever, that +5 magic sword will always be unbalancing everything for as long as it continues to exist". His proposed solution was exhaustible Charges on the magic sword, as I recall. Consider the size that the Magic Weapon Factory in WoW just has to be, to keep up with that demand. We're not talking a once-in-a-lifetime masterwork by a senior enchanting wizard, here, we're talking assembly lines churning out tater tots. But we regularly dredge up old ideas one at a time and declare them "the saviors of gaming's future". It's jist what we do to kill time, in between gaming sessions (to kill time). -Nearly every single bad trend in MMO development was started by the developers.--Wordiz |
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Loktofeit
Elite Member
Joined: 1/13/10
EVE in 2013 - DUST 514, CSM8, Fanfest, 10th Anniversary, Uprising, Odyssey. Gonna be a good year :) |
2/11/13 5:03:04 AM#70
Originally posted by Icewhite For me, the interesting part was seeing how few actually understand the mechanic they are supporting. Decay isn't to take the decaying items out of the system, it's to take cash and materials out of the system. And WTF are you doing up at this hour? :) filmoret: One thing I have never figured out is why the game devs hardly ever fix simple problems that arise. It is like they don't care about the pvp community. Nitth: What makes you so sure its a simple fix? filmoret: Because most of them are. Sometimes its just changing a number in a code string other times its creating a few variables. However none of them should take over a few hours of coding. |
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2/11/13 5:06:22 AM#71
Originally posted by Loktofeit Er. I dunno. Been waking up at the crap of dawn recently. /damn snowplows -Nearly every single bad trend in MMO development was started by the developers.--Wordiz |
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2/11/13 5:52:19 AM#72
Originally posted by Sijjistoryus It means your take on why aforementioned games failed is wrong. Economy is nowhere near the top faults in those games. Economy is not even a big crowd magnet. So do your homework, research the subject, before making a statement like that. Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference. -Author unknown, attributed to Mark Twain |
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2/11/13 7:54:23 AM#73
Originally posted by Scot This leads to other issues. It forces people into crafting. Take Ultima Online, take Mortal online. If you wanted the best gear, you made an alt. To be precise, a crafter alt. And you had to grind all the crafting skills you wanted to maximum to get the gear. And oh lord was that time consuming piece of annoyance.
Not commenting at you anymore Scot. But item decay alone does not suffice. Player's would see items as expendable consumables they can use for a limited amount of time until they are restricted from using them anymore. This does not increase the value of items, but it actually decreases them. So now instead of having a inflated economy, we have extremely deflated economy.
The most solution that actually works? No currencies! Good example of that is Path of Exile. The game has no currencies, but items players can use as currencies (no one told them to do that, actually): But players have actually made their own economy, and the "orbs" (items that can alter stats of items) have become the standard currency in the game, with well, elusive values. The game is now a massive field of bartering and trading, and it flourishes.
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2/11/13 8:00:11 AM#74
There are 2 problems with your idea:
1. Item decay for me means item lowers durability by usage. However the concept of durability/repair is enough. You don't need to permanently lower the maximum durability of an item. Correct me if I misunderstood something.
2. Any gear based progression in the game that's monster drop exclusive cannot work. Everything musy be craftable by players.
A great example of both is EVE Online. There's no item decay (but items have HP) and the economy works great. |
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2/11/13 8:04:47 AM#75
I think you can do a middle way. Say that an item that been repaired a lot breaks faster and faster, so at the end you can still use you special weapon but the first you die it needs to be repaired to be useful. But OP is right, crafting games needs better item decay than Wow. |
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2/11/13 8:15:03 AM#76
You need some item inflation or the amount of currency coming into the economy will cause major price inflation, placing even basic items out of the price range of most players. The major issue with MMORPGs today is the sheer amount of items obtained. If items with stats were much more rare and sparse, the amount of items in the game wouldn't drastically rise. |
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Loktofeit
Elite Member
Joined: 1/13/10
EVE in 2013 - DUST 514, CSM8, Fanfest, 10th Anniversary, Uprising, Odyssey. Gonna be a good year :) |
2/11/13 8:27:25 AM#77
Originally posted by Neherun Basically, you said the game lacks a desired feature. Players created a currency because they needed it and the game doesn't support it. Creating a situation where the players have to work against the design of the game to achieve basic goals isn't what most people would define as a solution.
filmoret: One thing I have never figured out is why the game devs hardly ever fix simple problems that arise. It is like they don't care about the pvp community. Nitth: What makes you so sure its a simple fix? filmoret: Because most of them are. Sometimes its just changing a number in a code string other times its creating a few variables. However none of them should take over a few hours of coding. |
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Briansho
Advanced Member
Joined: 3/05/06
Functionless Art is Simply Tolerated Vandalism...We Are The Vandals. |
2/11/13 8:34:47 AM#78
Completely controlled crafting economy run 100% by the players. Reminds me of Entropia Universe. If only I could get that game to run decent on my computer.
Don't be terrorized! You're more likely to die of a car accident, drowning, fire, or murder! More people die every year from prescription drugs than terrorism LOL! |
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Re EVE. Its model of relying on trial churn and pvp deaths would not work in every mmo. But in a way it proves the point as its a type of item decay.
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2/11/13 8:41:03 AM#80
Originally posted by Loktofeit An important difference is that a regular currency is in itself useless, it is only when the regular currency is exchanged for items that they indirectly have an use. Orbs are useful per se, on the other hand.
Futhermore, the community working together to create a community tool, is very much an achievement. |
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