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Torment: Tides of Numenera - Post-Funding Update #25
November 22nd, 2013, 17:20
Voted for Turn Based.
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"From knowledge springs Power, just as weakness stems from Ignorance."
"From knowledge springs Power, just as weakness stems from Ignorance."
November 22nd, 2013, 18:31
Voted for RTwP. There are already great titles with turn based combat in the making. Also I want this title as close as Planescape: Torment. So in my opinion it's successor must have RTwP combat.
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"Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is wrong. No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
Terry Pratchett, Reaper Man
"Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is wrong. No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it."
Terry Pratchett, Reaper Man
November 22nd, 2013, 18:46
Originally Posted by Sacred_PathAnd that is the only reason why I "accept" when the result is RTwP: I would even play this game if the fights are crappy and I can accept it if the majority prefers to focus on the story and wants the fights "to go away" without much effort.
Camp TB represent
altough I don't care much either way. Torment isn't about combat.
My reasoning for TB:
I like to get "most out of combats" and play as effective as possible and set the game diffuculty as hard as possible.
That works absolutely fine with turn based combat. There it is:
Difficulty of the fight < = > Skill needed
It does not work with pausable Real time combat however. It adds the additional component of "how often do I pause the game?" The more often you pause it, the easier it gets. The equasion becomes basically:
Difficulty of the Fight - Pause Frequency < = > Skill needed
And the only way to play it for me is to pause whenever it makes sense as I want to play as good as possible. And that is normally each 0.2-0.5 seconds (e.g. in Dragon Age 1) when a spell went through, when you need to reposition your characters, when you need to react to the opponent. That makes the flow of the combat much more "unfluent" than a turn based combat can ever make a game.
The only advantage of pausable real time combat is: If you don't want a challenge, you don't care about strategies much and just want it to be over fast because you think it's boring.
And I don't want to have boring, unchallenging combat in the first place.
But as said in the beginning, in the case of Torment I'd accept it and could understand the decision.
November 22nd, 2013, 18:58
I hope the combat is good, whatever they do. I'm surprised at how close the voting is, either is fine by me.
November 22nd, 2013, 19:18
Originally Posted by KordanorExactly! And the way I understood it, there will be no trash mobs and hopefully only deep, meaningful combat encounters. Assuming this is true, TB would work way better for creating some tense moments imo.
The only advantage of pausable real time combat is: If you don't want a challenge, you don't care about strategies much and just want it to be over fast because you think it's boring.
And I don't want to have boring, unchallenging combat in the first place.
Watchdog
November 22nd, 2013, 19:19
RTwP - I already have several TB (incl Deathfire) backed - I do not want my Torment experience changed by TB combat. Yes, it can be good, but it depends on the mechanics - I loved TB in ToEE, but that was a different game. I supported Tides of Numenera because of my nostalgic longing for the old IE games and Planscape: torment in particular.
November 22nd, 2013, 20:14
Originally Posted by boobooWhile I do agree with the nostalgic part, I do not think PS:T is remembered because of the combat, which was not a very strong point of the game.
RTwP - I already have several TB (incl Deathfire) backed - I do not want my Torment experience changed by TB combat. Yes, it can be good, but it depends on the mechanics - I loved TB in ToEE, but that was a different game. I supported Tides of Numenera because of my nostalgic longing for the old IE games and Planscape: torment in particular.
IF they go with RTwP I would go with a system like the one in Fallout:Tactics, I actually felt that was so good I never played it in turn based.
November 22nd, 2013, 20:19
I tried out Fallout Tactics back then because I loved Fallout 1 and 2 (and Jagged Alliance).
I only played it in turnbased, but it somehow felt worse than the older games.
So the reason why you prefered it in RTwP might have been that the TB mode was actually badly implemented.
I also played X-Com Apocalypse which also had both modes and which I played in TB most of the time. While I loved that game, I think this hybrid model made it feel less polished/smooth.
I only played it in turnbased, but it somehow felt worse than the older games.
So the reason why you prefered it in RTwP might have been that the TB mode was actually badly implemented.
I also played X-Com Apocalypse which also had both modes and which I played in TB most of the time. While I loved that game, I think this hybrid model made it feel less polished/smooth.
November 22nd, 2013, 20:48
TB combat automatically puts more emphasize on combat, because in that case every combat has to be "meaningful". Meaningful automatically means you have to put more time on it. Because if it is less engaging, it would be boring and crappy TB combat. I also don't like their Crisis example, because it means, that even non-combat quest solutions are outplayed in turnbased mode. That does not sound like a narrative-driven game but like masking a dungeon-crawler with non-violent options. Or like a board game. I think the result will be tedious. I'm not impressed.
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A-Van-Te-Nor: A big car full of black hot beverage
A-Van-Te-Nor: A big car full of black hot beverage
November 22nd, 2013, 20:49
Originally Posted by KordanorAn RPG without "trash" fights has never existed and never will. Most of the combat will always be filler combat, and will not be very challenging. Why? That's how you build up bosses, villains and so on to be interesting fights. There must be a significant difference in difficulty between Sarevok and kobolds, and that's exactly why I prefer RTwP - I can steamroll the kobolds, and be tactical with Sarevok.
The only advantage of pausable real time combat is: If you don't want a challenge, you don't care about strategies much and just want it to be over fast because you think it's boring.
And I don't want to have boring, unchallenging combat in the first place.
Most turn based games I enjoyed over the years have some sort of "quick combat" option that lets you flatten your enemies automatically if they're too far behind in terms of power or levels. The Fallout games, for example, does not have this option and they bore me out of my mind. In fact, I actually don't think I've completed any of the Fallouts prior to Fallout 3, which makes it by far the biggest black hole in my list of completed RPGs.
SasqWatch
Original Sin Donor
November 22nd, 2013, 21:55
Originally Posted by MaylanderWell you can also make trash fights hard by making big groups of weaker enemies which make harder fights (instead of several small groups running into suicide, which is also more logical). But in the end every trash fight can be a "challenge" in a way if you win something by optimizing it. And if it's just take no damage so that you don't need to drink or need food for resting.
An RPG without "trash" fights has never existed and never will. Most of the combat will always be filler combat, and will not be very challenging. Why? That's how you build up bosses, villains and so on to be interesting fights. There must be a significant difference in difficulty between Sarevok and kobolds, and that's exactly why I prefer RTwP - I can steamroll the kobolds, and be tactical with Sarevok.
But besides of that, the trick is the implementation of course. While I don't think that auto battles are a good solution, I think smooth and fast controls, fast animations and so on help a lot, so that a fight which is not very challenging doesn't feel like torture.
Let's take Jagged Alliance 2 for example: Whether you fight against 6 black shirts (the elite guys) or against 3 yellow shirts (fresh recruits) makes a big difference.
But in both cases you enjoy the fight, all your actions are meaningful, fun and feel good. And even when fighting against weak enemies you try to avoid big damage so that you have breathing space in these easy fights but they are still meaningful.
A game where it works not so well: The Realms of Arkania games. Because the fights are too long, and killing a weak enemy can take quite long. The remake also adds some combat control and animation speed issues. While challenging fights were also fun in the old ROA games, very easy fights were quite boring and took too long (brings back memories about an enemy called "Riesenschröter", a beetle which had tons of hp and did nothing at all).
Keeper of the Watch
Original Sin Donor
November 22nd, 2013, 23:25
Hmm, a lot of good points both ways. And since the vote is also pretty much a tie I guess we'll just have to trust the devs.
Still a lot of people who haven't voted, but my guess is if you don't vote when you get the e-mail, you probably wont vote at all.
Still a lot of people who haven't voted, but my guess is if you don't vote when you get the e-mail, you probably wont vote at all.
November 22nd, 2013, 23:45
Originally Posted by KordanorI think you might have missed Maylander's point. He's saying the advantage of RTwP is that fights against weakers enemies won't take as long. Having larger groups of weaker enemies would only make combat longer and more drawn-out in turn-based mode.
Well you can also make trash fights hard by making big groups of weaker enemies which make harder fights (instead of several small groups running into suicide, which is also more logical).
It's a tough decision because we don't yet know how combat-heavy Tides of Numenera is going to be. If it's anything like the Infinity Engine games though, and I think it's logical to assume that it will be, then I think RTwP is the better choice.
November 22nd, 2013, 23:58
Whatever way this goes, it's going to be quite polarizing. The vote seems fairly evenly split. I don't think they expected it to be so even…
As for combat itself - I thought there was (as with all the IE games I played) a *lot* of it in PS:T - and I managed quite fine with RTwP. I also like exploration (caves, wilds, abandoned ruins etc) and the encounters that generates (which are not 'trash' - they make sense in the wilds, caves etc - they're ecosystems after all As long as they don't respawn stupidly). If every fight is "significant" and requires the precision of TB, then clearly there won't be that much free exploration, with the "random" encounters that generates.
As for combat itself - I thought there was (as with all the IE games I played) a *lot* of it in PS:T - and I managed quite fine with RTwP. I also like exploration (caves, wilds, abandoned ruins etc) and the encounters that generates (which are not 'trash' - they make sense in the wilds, caves etc - they're ecosystems after all As long as they don't respawn stupidly). If every fight is "significant" and requires the precision of TB, then clearly there won't be that much free exploration, with the "random" encounters that generates.
November 23rd, 2013, 00:17
Originally Posted by JDR13That's why I said one big group instead of several small ones. If you enter combat each time and have to destroy 4 Rats again and again it's boring.
I think you might have missed Maylander's point. He's saying the advantage of RTwP is that fights against weakers enemies won't take as long. Having larger groups of weaker enemies would only make combat longer and more drawn-out in turn-based mode.
But if instead of fighting 4x 4 rats in boring fights, you could face one fight with 16 rats instead. They surround you, no safe spot for your mage anymore, more attacks per turn than your warriors can block each turn and so on. It becomes a fight for survival. But you can maybe use AOEs instead of just single target damage, which would also make this fight resolve faster than 4 single fights. The feeling of being more powerful compared to a rat would still be there.
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