Monthly Archives: December 2006

Before the Battlegrounds

With the revised PvP/Honor system in the latest WoW patch, I (along with just about everyone else) am battling away to get myself enough honor for a shiny reward or two, so I thought I’d look back a bit…

When the original Honor system was introduced, giving “points” for kills and assigning ranks based on those points, with progressively shinier rewards as you went up in rank, there were no battlegrounds. Not being on a PvP server, this meant there wasn’t much opportunity to get honor, but the shiny rewards were tempting, so anyone “cruising for a bruising” would head to a common spot: Tarren Mill.

For a typical Tarren Mill fight, the Alliance (almost always outnumbering the Horde) would line up on the road near the mill, and, en masse, slowly shift forward. The Horde would line up in the town, and also slowly shift forwards, both sides cagily staying out of range of each other, an occasional skirmisher darting in a ranged attack then heading back to his own lines, sometimes a particularly brave (and insane) melee class launching themselves into a mass of the enemy and being promptly slaughtered. Gradually the Horde would be pressed back towards the town until a member of the Alliance got too close, at which point the NPC guards would go bonkers and fling themselves upon the Alliance, who’d fall apart in disarray, hotly pursued by the Horde for a variable distance, then everyone would form back up for another go.

This was, frankly, rubbish. Especially for a melee class, firing the odd missile now and again between insane rushes. It was probably the closest PvP got to a “real” battle, from my limited reading on pre-gunpowder warfare, hardly a bundle of laughs. So after a few visits to Tarren Mill, and enough kills to make Sergeant (which gave a handy discount from vendors), PvP was again forgotten until… battlegrounds.

Patch Day of DOOOOOOM!

So World of Warcraft got patched to 2.0 last night. Updating up the game itself wasn’t too bad, thanks to 95% of the patch being pre-downloaded, but logging in revealed a seething mass of humanity (and of course gnome/dwarf/elf-anity) in Stormwind, no NPCs, and fairly rapidly, no Stormwind as everything fell over. Nothing unexpected there.

One of the big changes is in the scripting, requiring all user add-ons to be updated. Most of the popular add-on sites were thus slashdotted by thousands of people trying to get the latest version, so I just popped on with the “vanilla” UI, which made me realise just what a difference the add-ons make. When I returned to WoW a couple of months ago, I just grabbed a compilation pack recommended by friends of 10-20 various add-ons and never really glanced at the standard interface. None of the other MMOs I’ve played have WoW’s level of customisation; are Blizzard empowering players by letting them tinker so much, or abdicating their responsibility?

Either way up, another of the big changes is new talent trees, taking account of the extra talent points that will come up to level 70 in The Burning Crusade. With the new trees, everyone gets their talent points refunded to spend again how they like. It’s all a bit abrupt for me, though; while information on the new talents has been available for a while, it’s all been in testing, and subject to change (fairly significant change, in some cases). Furthermore, without actually being able to use the new talents, it’s difficult to get a feel for them. A trial period, with another talent refund at the end of it would be nice, or resetting the cost of resetting your talents back to the initial 10 silver, or however much it was (it’s been a while…)

Forums are Scary

There’s some debate over forums at the moment. Much of which (in conjunction with several years of related blog archives) serves to remind me that just about anything I vaguely think of in relation to MMOs has already been posted about in vast detail hundreds of times before, usually better than I could put it myself. But still, I might as well shove my tuppence worth in, that’s the point of a blog, right?

Web forums, bulletin boards, usenet, I’ve been around them for a while, subscribed to a fair few over the years on various subjects, and they all develop their own quirks, cliques, personalities, styles, inevitable arguments not helped by the anonymous, textual medium. Even by those standards, official game forums are pretty scary places. This piece nails them perfectly, but doesn’t quite capture the deeper horror still…

I develop systems; for a few hundred people, rather than thousands or millions, and about as different from MMOGs as you get. And I take criticism pretty personally, even when it’s just about the system as a whole. When someone provides helpful feedback like “this system is stupid and useless”, I get pretty annoyed and resolve to change all their records to read “I’m a buffoon and know nothing”, for about 30 seconds ’til I get a grip. I get annoyed even though I know I do the same thing myself, I get instructed to use some system or piece of software, and I’ll probably swear at it and decry it for being unintuitive and useless. But it’s a temporary thing, a little bit of thought, possibly even reading some instructions (as a last resort) usually works things out, and I can appreciate that these things are done with finite time and budget, the designers set out to do the best they could and didn’t deliberately plan to ruin my day. I wouldn’t ever send them a mail saying “OHMIGOD YUO SUCK”, or enter that into some feedback system, there’d be no point. If people make suggestions about my systems, that’s great, if they’re impractical or whatever, we can discuss it. So long as everyone stays amiable about the whole business, it’s fine.

One thing that web forums (of any kind) seldom are is amiable. I’m not sure if The Nice Society Of Nice People Who Are Nice To Each Other have a forum, but if they do I bet there are frequent flamewars over just *how* nice they should be. That’s the nature of the beast, but it’s more unusual for the actual subjects of the rants to be expected to read and take action on them. There’s some forums for a TV series I watch, where one or two writers occasionally post. Not everyone knows they do, and now and again there’ll be a ranty post about one of their episodes that they’ll reply to. It’s often a lovely thing, the writer maybe points out what they were trying to do in a certain scene, and that they appreciate it didn’t work for everybody but they value feedback, and the original poster often realises they may have worded their post a bit strongly, and perhaps “I didn’t like the way this was handled” would have been better than “whichever fool wrote this has no idea what they’re doing”.

Official forums, though, give people a target. The company as a whole, the designer of the game, the developer who coded that last tweak which rendered your character USELESS. Everything becomes very personal. People say “the devs are grown ups, they should be able to handle the stuff posted.” But come on, how many of you could really work that way? Could objectively come in every day and say “oh look, another twenty seven people called me an incompetent moron, still, never mind eh?”

The false dilemma frequently presented to people saying “be a bit nicer, maybe?” is “oh, so you just want everyone to say good stuff and praise them HUH? HUH?” Of course not. The inevitable righteous defenders, who in their impassioned defence of the game shoot down any criticism at all, often cause the worst strife by being as unreasonable as the people making bizarre demands. Everything gets polarised and cliquey, everyone gets labelled as “fanbois” or “whiners”.

What can be done? I don’t know. Like DKP systems, there’s any number of forum/blog-with-comments/internet based communication systems, and all have strengths and weaknesses and problems of their own. In the meantime, I’m off to found The Nice Society Of Nice People Who Are Nice To Each Other, and if you’ve got a problem with that, you can bite me, loser.

Character Customisation

What does your character represent in a MMOG? The unconscious self, the id, finally given free reign in a world with no constraints? An idealised version of ourselves as we’d really like to be? Or a nice ass to stare at while playing?

City of Heroes has an incredible character customisation system. You can change almost anything. Sliders for the overall character size, as well as individual body parts (leg length, chest broadness etc etc). Hats, helmets, hoods, masks, coats, robes, tights, gloves, belts, trousers, boots, etc. etc. etc., all individually coloured, for literally millions of combinations. You can spend hours just working on a costume.

Starting World of Warcraft after that was a bit of a shock. After selecting your race, customisation stretches to a few skin tones, some hairstyles and facial hair, and off you go! The whole of your starting area populated by a series of clones with slightly different hairstyles…

Of course after a while in World of Warcraft, you start picking up different weapons and armour (ironically, if your character in City of Heroes uses a weapon like a sword or axe, that’s one of the few things you can’t change). But it’s a very different philosophy of customisation: the way you look is almost a direct representation of your power (and thus time spent) in game. You start off in tattered rags and scraps with a stick/rusty knife, and work up to a set of armour that will take someones eye out if you turn around too fast, and a weapon you nonchalantly heft in one hand even though it’s twice the size of you.

That fits with the genre for each game. A superhero’s costume seldom changes, whereas the protagonist of an archetypal fantasy story frequently finds a magical weapon and/or armour on his journey from humble beginnings to mighty feats. A superhero’s powers aren’t necessarily reflected in their appearance: an innocuous looking chap in a T-shirt might have skin as hard as metal, or amazing regenerative powers, or be able to shoot blasts of energy. For a fantasy hero, appearance is usually more closely related to role.

Even so, the limited customisation of World of Warcraft still irks when compared to City of Heroes. Due to the nature of loot outlined before, you’ll normally end up wearing whatever useful items happen to drop for you. Your outfit is random. And your outfit *is* your character customisation, as by the late game, even your limited selection of hairstyles is covered by a helmet unless you turn that off. True, you can buy “casual clothes” (before they added the “see what this item would look like on my character” feature in WoW, I’d often buy several cheap pieces of low level cloth armour just to see what they looked like), but you can’t have them around at any time unless you devote bag slots to them, and much as I like playing dress-up I’ve usually got better things to keep in my bags. If you devote time to raiding (or PvP), you can get the “Tier” armour, sets of matching armour, usually very impressive, but looking identical to someone else with the same set of armour. And if you don’t like the design of the armour, well, tough.

Blizzard are aware of the issue, and it’s not really a deal breaker. Wielding the katana-looking Assassination Blade and Hanzo Sword was nice for my inner ninja-samurai-monk-pirate of whirling death, but when I got the rather drab looking (but harder hitting) Sword of Zeal I didn’t seriously think about not using it (a Krol Blade, on the other hand… that thing just looks foolish!) Still, it would be nice to have a few more options.

Random Loot

I hate random loot. I really do.

We made a bit of a run on Blackrock Depths, just completing a couple of the earliest quests, in the process killing three or four bosses. In a group of two plate wearers and two leather wearers, what BoP items dropped? Mail and cloth, of course, every time. And that seems to be a bit of a running theme, that whatever our group consists of, the BoP drops would suit a class that isn’t present. A random loot generator (not that it’s totally random, clearly, when a boss has a certain chance of dropping certain items, but it’s close enough to rant about) doesn’t favour a type of item any more than an iPod favours certain artists, but either bad luck means the dice happen to fall the wrong way for us, or selective memory edits out the times we get appropriate loot and reinforces the times we don’t. I suppose I could record exactly what drops every time I play (or get an add-on that does that), but it doesn’t really matter, it feels the same either way. It’s not so bad for “trash bosses”, but if you spend several hours battling through to the Super Tough Boss at the end of an instance, and you know he has a chance of dropping something really nice, how much of an anticlimax is it when you end up with something nobody in the group really wants? (OK, the first time you do it there’s the sense of achievement of having beaten the dungeon, beaten the boss, but let’s be honest, it’s all about the loot isn’t it? Why else would you keep playing WoW…)

Then, of course, when that desired item does drop, you’ll probably have to win a roll for it against someone else of your class, or someone who values similar item properties to you, or a hunter (I kid, I kid). So you have a second layer of random capriciousness to deal with. In the last week or so, while out and about doing general quests, three drops have particularly stood out amongst the usual bits and pieces: a 16 slot bag, and two potion recipes worth around 50g and 100g at auction. From a group of three or four (with no alchemist), the same person has won the rolls for all of them. Not that I’m bitter (he said through clenched teeth). OK, so I’m very slightly bitter. But then, the person who won the stuff hasn’t hit level 60 yet, and I just got my epic mount, so fair enough. For raiding, there’s a bunch of DKP systems that can be used (none of which are perfect, judging by the number of them), but what about just while generally out and about?

One of the things I work on is a job management system. It used to be that eight sites each had a person who’d do all the jobs raised by people at that site. This wasn’t ideal, as workload could vary a lot from site to site, and there was major disruption when someone was sick or on leave. Thanks to the wonders of networking, it got to the point that people on one site could do jobs raised at other sites, so they wanted to change the job assignment system. But to what? In hindsight, it’s a similar problem to loot distribution (see, there is a point), only inverted, as people really don’t want new jobs, rather than wanting loot. In both cases you want to make sure the distribution is equal as possible, but the jobs vary wildly in terms of effort required, much like loot varies wildly in value, so a simple “number of jobs” total is as meaningless as “number of pieces of loot (ignoring quality/value)”. What did we end up with? A random assignment scheme, so the users probably feel the same when three jobs in a row get assigned to them as I feel when someone else wins three loot rolls. I guess, to paraphrase Churchill, “random rolling is the worst form of loot distribution, except all those others that have been tried”.