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Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/9/2021 2:30:47 PM   
Erik Rutins

 

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"Regardless of where the team has chosen to focus in terms of priorities, so far things seem to be shaping up nicely. This will definitely be one of those information-heavy strategy games, much like the older Paradox grand strategy games, but there’s already plenty here to look forward to."

https://www.pcgamesn.com/distant-worlds-2/engine-tech

"This is exactly what fans of the first game appear to have been clamouring for. Fans loved how deep and absorbing the universe was, and may favour a shinier version that builds on the previous entries strength."

https://www.gamewatcher.com/interviews/distant-worlds-2-interview/13306

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Post #: 1
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/9/2021 11:39:53 PM   
zgrssd

 

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quote:

"This is exactly what fans of the first game appear to have been clamouring for. Fans loved how deep and absorbing the universe was, and may favour a shinier version that builds on the previous entries strength."

I like to say: "Distant Worlds 1 was a realy good game, held back by it's poor UI."

(in reply to Erik Rutins)
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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 12:59:22 AM   
Retreat1970


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How exactly was the interface bad? Just asking.

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 1:02:21 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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When you don't make it yourself, it is always easy to find fault.

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 1:33:56 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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Hey Erik,

Regarding the PCGames^N article, I read that the ship designer will add new ship components to the mesh. I am guessing this is another procedural generation technique like with generating the planet visuals and animations.

I'm curious, will the location of a 'side cannon' affect the combat logic for a ship? For instance, does it have constraints on its arc of fire, does it have a vector representing its direction and need to intersect within some margin with a target's in-game location, etc. I'm sorry if the answer would be obvious from Distant Worlds 1 (or is answered in an FAQ), but I only just discovered the game last week.

Also, regarding the Game Watcher article, I saw a quote about variable paths for technological research. From what I can gather, you are psuedo-randomising the children of some or all nodes.

I'm interested, is there a particular logic for this? I'm guessing complete chaos would lead to unpredictable outcomes for the players. How is the variability constrained? Is there an upper bound on how many nodes are adjusted and if so, is it a one for one swap with another node's child or can you have some technologies dead-ending and others on the same level all sharing a single child.

Thanks,
beyond

(in reply to beyondwudge)
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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 2:03:16 AM   
Galaxy227


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Retreat1970

How exactly was the interface bad? Just asking.


I'll reference this post of mine on the old forum months ago, where I listed some of the countless drawbacks pertaining to the functionality of Distant Worlds' interface. Beyond function, it also just looked terribly dated; bland colors, windows from Microsoft's OS, unreadable text, among other aesthetically displeasing things.

Edit: Reading through my list again, nearly all of my gripes were about the interface, and to my surprise, many of the suggestions I put forward are now additions to the upcoming sequel. It seems Elliot's vision aligned with my own when it came to the interface of DW:U.

Edit 2: In response to beyondwudge below, I'm aware Retreat had already replied to my thread, but my point still stands. His reply months ago doesn't negate my list's relevance to this conversation today. In fact, Elliot going through with many of my suggestions only further solidifies their worth. TL;DR: Distant Worlds' interface was poor.

< Message edited by Galaxy227 -- 12/10/2021 6:43:45 AM >

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 5:23:24 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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Retreat1970 already replied to your thread.

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 6:14:15 AM   
SirHoraceHarkness


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Retreat1970

How exactly was the interface bad? Just asking.


Eh bad is probably too strong a word. I'd say inefficient and a bit non intuitive would be a better descriptor with bad scaling for higher resolutions. The ship design screen is a good example as it doesn't really show you how the various systems will perform together and the energy numbers can be a bit misleading. But overall the ui was just clunky.

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 7:21:27 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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Hey Erik,

In DW1 do you generate the background elements for the Selection Panel (bottom-left) buttons in software? I mean the dark grey to grey gradient for the main box, the light gray (?) / dark blue split background for each cycle button and the light blue / dark-blue split (with black checkerboard when inactive) background for the bottom row of Action buttons.

I have hand inspected almost every folder in the DWU installation and I can't find these graphical elements. I was wanting to test playing with solid fills behind the icons but I can't find the correct images to edit.

Thanks,
beyond

Edit: I think I found a workaround. The icon images can have their canvas expanded to the size of the button element (give or take one or two pixels) and block out the background. It's just a little bit more work to get the effect.

< Message edited by beyondwudge -- 12/10/2021 8:20:45 AM >

(in reply to SirHoraceHarkness)
Post #: 9
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 12:23:25 PM   
Erik Rutins

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: beyondwudge
Regarding the PCGames^N article, I read that the ship designer will add new ship components to the mesh. I am guessing this is another procedural generation technique like with generating the planet visuals and animations.


The models are actually built with the required component sub-meshes, including some support meshes so that everything looks seamless whether the component is there and visible or not. Then we turn them on or off based on whether the player chooses to put a component in one of those externally visible component bays.

quote:

I'm curious, will the location of a 'side cannon' affect the combat logic for a ship? For instance, does it have constraints on its arc of fire, does it have a vector representing its direction and need to intersect within some margin with a target's in-game location, etc. I'm sorry if the answer would be obvious from Distant Worlds 1 (or is answered in an FAQ), but I only just discovered the game last week.


Yes, I think this is explained a bit more in some other threads, but weapons do now have fire arcs and for military ships, the arrangement of weapons differs somewhat by faction and ship role. The ship designer shows you the fire arc for each weapon bay and what size weapon it can fit so that you can design as you like.

quote:

Also, regarding the Game Watcher article, I saw a quote about variable paths for technological research. From what I can gather, you are psuedo-randomising the children of some or all nodes.

I'm interested, is there a particular logic for this? I'm guessing complete chaos would lead to unpredictable outcomes for the players. How is the variability constrained? Is there an upper bound on how many nodes are adjusted and if so, is it a one for one swap with another node's child or can you have some technologies dead-ending and others on the same level all sharing a single child.


There's a designed tree with multiple possible pre-requisite paths as well as "fallback" paths and probabilities for each. The game in effect "rolls" against these probabilities each time it generates a research tree for a new game and then further events and actions on the player's part can still enable projects that are otherwise inaccessible.

Some additional info on research here:

https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=5106472

Regards,

- Erik


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For official support, please use our Help Desk: http://www.matrixgames.com/helpdesk/

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(in reply to beyondwudge)
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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 5:52:35 PM   
Retreat1970


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Galaxy227

quote:

ORIGINAL: Retreat1970

How exactly was the interface bad? Just asking.


Edit: It seems Elliot's vision aligned with my own when it came to the interface of DW:U.

Edit 2: In fact, Elliot going through with many of my suggestions only further solidifies their worth.


Thank you for your genius.

(in reply to Galaxy227)
Post #: 11
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/10/2021 11:46:25 PM   
beyondwudge

 

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Erik,

1. RE: Ship Design

I see, you've designated specific hull locations (component bays) for types of sub-object with 'active' and 'inactive' versions of the location.

I'm curious again: for component damage calculations - would this interact with the impact locations of projectiles, the explosive radius of missile detonations and so forth? Would the fall of a shot on a weapon more likely damage that weapon component and if so, are the other components also given location positions and volumes inside the main object as well? Could you adjust your ship's AI to prioritise a particular component type or give an order of priority to how they target an unshielded vessel?

It sounds like the system is a lot more complicated than in Distant Worlds Universe, I look forward to seeing what you've put together with these new tools.

2. RE: Research Paths

I read the link and the article. So the point is to increase the inter-relationship between the in-game map and objects and the player's research progression, requiring the player to look, plan and react to the developing research situation. The system isn't representing any particular conceptual paradigm about researching technology, but rather trying to make research require more player involvement. Have I got that right?

I'm curious, why did you decide to introduce research bonuses pre-requisites for some technologies? Is that about gently encouraging the player about the importance of building research stations / obtaining bonuses or are the technologies in question meant to be particularly valuable, useful or off-the-beaten-path as to be worth locking behind a bonus wall?

I don't know what to make of the system yet. It seems that a lot of the impact would be in the exact magnitudes of locked technologies, of number-of-research-points-spent / resources-expended-for-bonuses to unlock these technologies, of how variable the locking of important technologies is and so forth. I can remember how Master of Orion 2 worked where you had to steal, trade or conquer to obtain most of the tech tree, for example, but it seems that the context of that system was very different to the context of DW1 and most likely to DW2. However, it is a question that can only be solved by playing the game and seeing what you've done.

I appreciate your explanations. Most interesting.

Thanks,
beyond

< Message edited by beyondwudge -- 12/10/2021 11:51:38 PM >

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 1:04:08 AM   
Galaxy227


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Retreat1970


quote:

ORIGINAL: Galaxy227

quote:

ORIGINAL: Retreat1970

How exactly was the interface bad? Just asking.


Edit: It seems Elliot's vision aligned with my own when it came to the interface of DW:U.

Edit 2: In fact, Elliot going through with many of my suggestions only further solidifies their worth.


Thank you for your genius.



And you, you're inability to comprehend what makes a good interface.

Edit: Don't poke around pretending DW's UI was all sunshine and roses, only to be reminded it wasn't, and then refuse to debate about said reminder. At that point your initial remark served no purpose to begin with.


< Message edited by Galaxy227 -- 12/11/2021 1:06:55 AM >

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Post #: 13
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 2:55:54 AM   
Erik Rutins

 

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Let's all keep things civil please. DW1's UI was functional, but certainly had issues, partly because of its layered evolutionary nature. We took a lot of feedback on board as well as putting our own heads together in figuring out how to hopefully improve that in DW2.

< Message edited by Erik Rutins -- 12/11/2021 2:56:38 AM >


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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 4:16:10 AM   
Galaxy227


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Erik Rutins

Let's all keep things civil please. DW1's UI was functional, but certainly had issues, partly because of its layered evolutionary nature. We took a lot of feedback on board as well as putting our own heads together in figuring out how to hopefully improve that in DW2.


I'd like to add by no means do I intend to talk about DW2's UI negatively. I think the work that has been invested SHOWS. It's amazing, where nearly everything that (I believed) desperately needed work from DW1's UI has either been fixed, added onto, or completely redesigned altogether. From more map modes presented on the playing galaxy, to fleet templates, to a completely reorganized menu fixated on the left (rather than the tabs across the top screen in DW1), resolution scaling, better aesthetics & colors... Point being, there clearly has been a lot of thought, time, and money invested into improving the interface. I really look forward to what DW2's interface has to offer, and am certain the improvements will draw in all sorts of new players who were hesitant before.

< Message edited by Galaxy227 -- 12/11/2021 8:41:35 AM >

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 5:35:14 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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Well, that's much nicer.

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 5:53:19 AM   
Retreat1970


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lolz

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 6:10:57 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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Look, the user-interface is important. However, if the game isn't worth playing in the first place, having a great UI doesn't make it worth playing. Improving a UI can also be an expensive, iterative process that introduces a lot of bugs to code that used to work just fine. Worse still, the users who want the UI change also tend to be quite unthankful about the time and effort you had to put in to create a smooth interactive experience for them. Its explicable that DW1 has the quirks and missing links between objects and actions that it does.

However, it really would be a shame if DW2 had a great UI but didn't pull its weight as a game.

Lets support the developers about the things that really matter, in the order that they matter. UI just can't be first in line. It's a bit like trying to write the final wording of a journal article on the first draft. It's a mind-numbingly expensive way to do it. How can you finalise how zooming works in a game if you aren't even sure what monitor resolution's the game can be played at, how close the viewport can get to the objects before looking ugly, how far away can you move back and still clearly distinguish different objects, etc. These type of questions can be up and the air until weeks before shipping, depending on how the project is being managed. It's why a lot of games come V1.0 with obvious gaps in how the interface, game objects and game logic are connected together.

Now, to be honest, UI is very important to me as a player. Extremely important. However, if I want a great UI I'd be expecting to pay the developers for it. I'd expect to at least pay the cost of DLC, if not of several DLC, to get the kind of custom inputs and outputs I would like as a player. It is expensive to make happen.

I'd also expect to have to put in some work myself to get the result I want. I can't believe that the whole game can revolve around my particular input-output needs. Other players have far different needs and the game has to accommodate everybody, over a long period of time with each user changing and growing in how they interact with the system. If all I received was just the tools to get the UI to where I would like it to be then I'd put in the work myself.

That being said, I'm looking forward to DW2 and willing to tolerate significant issues with how smooth, intuitive, convenient or even logical my interaction with the machine-system is, as much because new game features don't tune, balance or integrate themselves and those features are necessary for the game's success. Yes, I'd hope the game is a pleasure to play by the time the last DLC is released, but I can wait, or at least, would happily do the final leg work myself, until that time.

< Message edited by beyondwudge -- 12/11/2021 6:32:16 AM >

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 1:22:53 PM   
zgrssd

 

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quote:

ook, the user-interface is important. However, if the game isn't worth playing in the first place, having a great UI doesn't make it worth playing.

People seem to have read only the 2nd half of my quote.

quote:

ORIGINAL: zgrssd

quote:

"This is exactly what fans of the first game appear to have been clamouring for. Fans loved how deep and absorbing the universe was, and may favour a shinier version that builds on the previous entries strength."

I like to say: "Distant Worlds 1 was a realy good game, held back by it's poor UI."

Which consists of two sentences. One of which is: "Distant Worlds 1 was a realy good game."

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 1:39:46 PM   
zgrssd

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: beyondwudge

2. RE: Research Paths

I read the link and the article. So the point is to increase the inter-relationship between the in-game map and objects and the player's research progression, requiring the player to look, plan and react to the developing research situation. The system isn't representing any particular conceptual paradigm about researching technology, but rather trying to make research require more player involvement. Have I got that right?

I'm curious, why did you decide to introduce research bonuses pre-requisites for some technologies? Is that about gently encouraging the player about the importance of building research stations / obtaining bonuses or are the technologies in question meant to be particularly valuable, useful or off-the-beaten-path as to be worth locking behind a bonus wall?

I don't know what to make of the system yet. It seems that a lot of the impact would be in the exact magnitudes of locked technologies, of number-of-research-points-spent / resources-expended-for-bonuses to unlock these technologies, of how variable the locking of important technologies is and so forth. I can remember how Master of Orion 2 worked where you had to steal, trade or conquer to obtain most of the tech tree, for example, but it seems that the context of that system was very different to the context of DW1 and most likely to DW2. However, it is a question that can only be solved by playing the game and seeing what you've done.

I appreciate your explanations. Most interesting.

Thanks,
beyond

Not having played it yet, I forsee 2 effects from this design choice:
1. It makes those bonuses worthwhile getting. Something akin to a rare resource deposit. Something to start wars over or to trade for.

If it just increased the research of specific technologies they would be "meh". I did not realized that beofore, but this is a issue in Stellaris:
I would never pick a scientist with a bonus to a specific sub-category, if I have the choice. Even if they were a +20%. I always try to get the ones with +5% or +10% to all research (there are other factors like the draw weight being skewed by a specialist. But even when looking for a specific direction, I always prefer general bonuses).
Even the planets you get reserach points from a little more the "Background Noise". I hardly even notice if my science is heavily skewed due to space resources.

2. It makes general Reserach Bonuses realy important.
Keep in mind the treshold is checking Genereic Reserach Bonus + Specific Category Bonus.

(in reply to beyondwudge)
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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/11/2021 5:15:59 PM   
beyondwudge

 

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It largely depends upon the magnitude and frequency of the requirements. For a given tech locked behind a requirement, if the requirement tends to be lower than what most players will have by the time they can research it, then the mechanic will have a low impact on the player's experience and their behaviour. If you find the requirement is often higher, it will have some impact. If you find the requirement is a lot higher, then it will have a big impact. This of course is relative to the number of locked technologies and the importance of getting those technologies with respect to time. Some technologies will effect your empire as soon as you obtain them and others, like weapons, can be of limited effect until actual combat (and war) takes place. Some locked weapons might be of little impact because the player doesn't need it yet and can wait until their empire has grown enough before selecting it. However, a powerful locked economic bonus might force the player to immediately get more research bonuses, because the boost to the empire's growth is too much to miss out on.

Without actual numbers and some idea of how hard it is to get a research bonus level of X vs a requirement of value Y by a given time t_0, with respect to the number and quality of locked technologies encountered, it is actually pretty difficult to say just how much of a difference it will make.

< Message edited by beyondwudge -- 12/11/2021 5:26:23 PM >

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/12/2021 4:19:22 AM   
zgrssd

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: beyondwudge

It largely depends upon the magnitude and frequency of the requirements. For a given tech locked behind a requirement, if the requirement tends to be lower than what most players will have by the time they can research it, then the mechanic will have a low impact on the player's experience and their behaviour. If you find the requirement is often higher, it will have some impact. If you find the requirement is a lot higher, then it will have a big impact. This of course is relative to the number of locked technologies and the importance of getting those technologies with respect to time. Some technologies will effect your empire as soon as you obtain them and others, like weapons, can be of limited effect until actual combat (and war) takes place. Some locked weapons might be of little impact because the player doesn't need it yet and can wait until their empire has grown enough before selecting it. However, a powerful locked economic bonus might force the player to immediately get more research bonuses, because the boost to the empire's growth is too much to miss out on.

Without actual numbers and some idea of how hard it is to get a research bonus level of X vs a requirement of value Y by a given time t_0, with respect to the number and quality of locked technologies encountered, it is actually pretty difficult to say just how much of a difference it will make.

The only requirements to reserach a technolgoy seems to be:
- have a link to it
- have the required percentage
- having the nesseary resources

There seems to be no "tech tier" system. Or rather the percentages are the Tech Tier System. You basically have a "maximum tech level" for each category - based on your Bonus Percentages.

Note that we got some example numbers:


My guess is, that having a Racial bonus to a category or a luck with finding and securing a anomaly with a research bonus would be relevant. Not only do you research faster, you also unlock higher level tech.

At the same time, I would strongly asume/advise for the player to have some way to build the generic bonus. That way, even if you got unlucky - you got no anomaly or the game might not have spawned any +Sensor one - you could still unluck all advancements eventually.

(in reply to beyondwudge)
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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/12/2021 5:24:09 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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It will be interesting to play it.

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Post #: 23
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/12/2021 10:02:51 AM   
Ranbir


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I think a neat thing with the bonuses requirement is that now every faction will be diverse in their technological make up and fit the theme in sci-fi where one group is better at something than another because they have expertise in something..

I think it's better than giving racial bonuses from the get go and instead allowing us to develop our own 'bonuses' based on how we develop in a particular game. So one game I might have my Human empires brilliant in shield tech but in another game based on the map I'll have them leading the way in scanner tech.

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RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/13/2021 2:23:33 AM   
beyondwudge

 

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It depends. It can be really good for a game that a player can associate a picture (portrait) of a race (faction) with a specific set of bonuses, behaviours and in-game objects (technologies). It creates expectation and and a sense of accomplishment as they can recall the race and know what they need to do in response to it. Experience with the game and long-term memory is rewarded and even a player with limited ability can learn over time how to improve their gameplay.

In contrast, if the faction is different every game, then the player has to look and read carefully each time they encounter them. It results in a very different kind of interaction. There is a lot more short-term memory and calculation involved. For some players, it might be really unclear why what worked last time might not work this time. The results of a particular game have to be generalised and the lessons learnt limited as you might with a scientific experiment or academic report. This tends to be more interesting to people who are good at analysis and synthesis or have a lot of time on their hands.

Fundamentally, we are talking about the issue of constant mechanics vs. variable mechanics. Some game rules and mechanics lend themselves to variability and others to constancy. Often a good game implements constancy and variability in different parts using their return on investment as a guide. Just because you can make the race technology more variable, doesn't mean that there wasn't another part of the game where that variability wouldn't have been even more fun, without taking away from the players who really enjoyed the race-specific tech.

To be honest, I'm half-and-half about it all. I have played games with both systems and I can't really say that either was perfect. I think there is a generally better way to do it, for a given player base and game feature set, but as Distant Worlds is still adding new core-mechanics to its body-of-rules it's a bit early to say which will result in a generally more enjoyable and interesting game.

< Message edited by beyondwudge -- 12/13/2021 3:45:41 AM >

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Post #: 25
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/13/2021 3:24:31 AM   
Retreat1970


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For me there is the big three I care about: Weapons, shields, and speed. Everything else is secondary. I can't win being great at sensor tech (though I've never tried).

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Post #: 26
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/13/2021 9:54:06 AM   
Jorgen_CAB

 

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I don't think this new research mechanic will completely lock us out of the core technologies but rather make it require more of en effort to get slightly sub par versions of that tech if you don't have the research bonuses or the tree simply decided it would not reveal a specific technology this time around. You would have to spend more time and resources reaching a less powerful or versatile version of the technology such as shields or engines for example.

We would still be able to research those categories but at a slower overall pace and with less choices and perhaps lacking some valuable traits.

It will be up to you if you want to spend allot of extra time to catch up in shield technology rather then benefit from the bonuses you have in engine technology and adapt your tactics and strategy to that. Perhaps you keep investing in engine technology as you have good bonuses for it and only basic or weak shields as you have no good bonuses for it, then once you manage to secure some good shield bonuses you switch research focus to that field. You could of course instead do just average engines and average shields but at a greater cost in research, this is up to you.

Personally I probably would be going for focusing on what I'm good at and developing those areas ahead of those areas I'm not. The other areas I wold only develop into the bare minimum necessary. I would then try to lean on the technologies I'm good at. If I have good stealth and scanning technology I could use that to my advantage even if my ships are individually less powerful than the opponent. I could hit them where they are weak using numbers to take them out and they will not be able to react in time... just as one example.

I also would likely favour none military technology over military technology most of the time, engines being the most important and that is important for both economy and military. So good engine technology is generally just good.

< Message edited by Jorgen_CAB -- 12/13/2021 10:15:02 AM >

(in reply to Retreat1970)
Post #: 27
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/13/2021 1:09:38 PM   
zgrssd

 

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Joined: 6/9/2020
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Retreat1970

For me there is the big three I care about: Weapons, shields, and speed. Everything else is secondary. I can't win being great at sensor tech (though I've never tried).

In DW2 you might win with Sensors. Have you read up on the Exploration Mechanic?

Exploration goes from 0 to 100, with only a active colony, advanced survey or realy advanced sensors being able to hit 100.
If you find stuff first, you can grab it. Before others even know there is something to grab.
It is a longterm investment, but then any colonies are.

Also note that the images do show a lot of values on the Jammer. "Empire Masking Power" sounds like the enemy might not even know if that ship comming in is a ally or a enemy.

(in reply to Retreat1970)
Post #: 28
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/13/2021 3:17:24 PM   
beyondwudge

 

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I'm sure if you put the difficulty to easy, you can win with sensors. :)

(in reply to zgrssd)
Post #: 29
RE: Two new articles about Distant Worlds 2 - 12/13/2021 4:41:48 PM   
zgrssd

 

Posts: 3385
Joined: 6/9/2020
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quote:

ORIGINAL: beyondwudge

I'm sure if you put the difficulty to easy, you can win with sensors. :)

When you think about it, isn't a missile just a way to find out the structural integrity of a target?
Isn't a Laser Gun just a overpowered rangefinder?

In all seriousness however: I do think that having a species with Sensor bonus would be quite usefull.
Sensors (and sensor jammers) have a lot more details then just "can see up to distance Y".
As a result, having good sensors early can easily be a consierable bonus.

(in reply to beyondwudge)
Post #: 30
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