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Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
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If we had all of the several hundred regulars on this board set down on paper, their "perfect" balance, we would not get two the same. Simple differences in style and outlook would overrun the "perfection". ... But we would discover a dozen or more things that everyone thinks are too strong or too weak. Perfection is unattainable but improvement is very possible. |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
Equating Se4 to Rock/paper/scissors is a compliment for Se4, not a criticism. It demonstrates that every strategy you could choose in SE4 will beat some strategy, and lose to some other strategy. There is no perfect strategy.
It's a good analogy and is particularly appropriate for a discussion about balance in the game. Of course Se4 has a multitude of strategies and techs to choose from, and RPS only has three. But it's an analogy. It's finding a common point between two things that appear different and using their commonality to demonstrate a particular point. Nobody is trying to say they are the same game, or should be. For me this discussion about balance always ends up being a disagreement over semantics. I think different people have different things in mind when they say balance. Because to me balancing SE4 would mean that you could choose any weapon and have a chance of beating any other weapon in a straight up fight. I don't think that is something we should strive for. If balance means something other than that to you, then we may not be disagreeing, even though we think we are cause one of us wants balance and the other doesn't. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif Weapons have strengths and wealnesses in different areas that make a damage per KT comparison difficult at best, and meaningless at worst. Cost to research and cost to construct and maintain particularly. So weapon A can't beat weapon B in a straight up fight, but it can beat C. And C loses to A, but it beats B. Rock/Paper/Scissors. But most of the differences in weapons don't even have to do with that tiny example. It isn't about beating some opponent in a straight up fight. It's about using your weapons choices advantages to put your self in a posiiotn where you aren't in a straigh up fight. Cause you have more ships than he does in a particular place. Victroy doesn't go to who has the better ships. Victory goes to whichever one destroys all the other guys ships first, by whatever means nessecary. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif Geoschmo [ December 26, 2002, 12:21: Message edited by: geoschmo ] |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
I think part of the challenge is finding a way to make the most of what you have. A good player can win with one set of racial traits and then take the losing race and beat you again.
This is due to the ability of finding the best way to use what you have. |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
Well, I have great contempt for the game "rock/paper/scissors", for people who waste their time for it, and I am dumbfounded by people who see it as a principle of game design. The principle I see as worthwhile is that no one approach should dominate all others, and every technique should have weak points and counter-tactics. I would never call that "rock/paper/scissors" though, because what "rock/paper/scissors" stands for to me, is thoroughly pointless game design, where the elements are superficially labelled as something interesting, but in fact are all exactly the same. I guess it's just a semantic pet peeve of mine, rather than a real disagreement with the actual concepts involved.
At least, most of the time. I have however noticed that often (not necessarily in connection with SE4) that people who do talk use the expression "rock/paper/scissors" as if it were a fundamentally good concept, also tend to come up with some game design ideas that I really don't enjoy. Especially, games designed with really obvious artificial balance techniques that don't make any sense but make it clear to unsophisticated players what the strengths and weaknesses of each element are. Ah well, PvK [ December 27, 2002, 04:52: Message edited by: PvK ] |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
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Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
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Rock/Paper/Scissors can be useful, too; not as a game in itself, but as a random number generator for "SE4 on Paper" during a car ride, it works well. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif To the point: The RPS analogy can validly be used to describe the idea that there should be no UberTech. That dosen't nessesarily mean the speaker wants to make a pointless RPS mod. Don't get too upset over the use of RPS in a non-derogatory sentence http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
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Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
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You describe the operative principle well when you say "The principle I see as worthwhile is that no one approach should dominate all others, and every technique should have weak points and counter-tactics." However, we humans are such lazy creatures. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif It is so much easier to say "RPS" to identify the principle rather than have to describe the operative principle over and over again in the way you have done above. Tomorrow, "RPS" may lose favour and we may use something else to identify the principle. Maybe it will be something like FWS (fire, water, sponge). http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
Pvk, Suicide Junkie, Thontob,
You all say it so much betterer than me. Thinking back, I have played games simulating warfare since 1975. I can only think of a few exceptions where there was not in effect some form of a Play Balancing System. Rock, Paper, Scissors component selection In a WWII game the main elements were Infantry, Armor, Artillery. I’m over simplifying here. Each had distinct advantages and each disadvantages. It really came down to selecting the right units for the job and deploying them correctly. I can also remember the endless "competitive discussions" on whether this or that was "Realistic". Since many of the games were "real world" simulations such as WRG's Ancients or their WWII (forget the name) miniatures game there was a strong emphasis on making them “more realistic”. So we changed the rules or added more. In SEIV we don’t have many options to change the hard code. We can Mod and make Gentleman’s Agreements on restricting the use of a perceived exploit. |
Re: "Gamey" tactics like "Rock, none" races
WRG Ancients
Talk about problems with game balance. Try taking the sea people vs Alexander's Macedonians (1500 points each). (Actually I loved WRG ancients. It just took toooooo long to paint those lead suckers.) [ December 28, 2002, 05:35: Message edited by: SamuraiProgrammer ] |
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