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#1 |
Prophet
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, US
Posts: 3,025
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GOOD and GREAT
I was going to add this into another thread, but it started expanding and I decided to make it its own thread.
I think that ditching the current definitions of GOOD and GREAT altogether is the way to go. I think I tried to explain this on IRC, but probably sucked at it, so I'll try again. First I guess I should go through what we currently have. (FORCED_GOOD and FORCED_GREAT are my terms) Right now GOOD means: Has positive AC bonuses or combat pluses if a weapon or armor Is one of a small set of jewelry, amulets. Is a dungeon book. FORCED_GOOD (distinguished from good in that it is dropped by a DROP_GOOD monster, a vault spot) Has a 10 level boost to base level Same as GOOD GREAT means Is an ego (if a weapon or armor) Is one of the same set of jewelry, amulets as GOOD items Is a dungeon book. Gets 1 roll for an artifact FORCED_GREAT (distinct from GREAT, these have to become GREAT either by being dropped by a DROP_GREAT monster, or a vault spot, or by failing a special artifact roll) Is the same as GREAT Gets 4 rolls for artifact My proposal would be to: 0) Remove the weird mechanic that a failed special artifact becomes FORCED_GOOD, FORCED_GREAT 1) move the random roll determination of good and great into make_object. This eliminates the difference between GOOD and FORCED_GOOD. (and btw GREAT and FORCED_GREAT) 2) All good objects get a +10 boost to level. If they are a weapon/armor/light, they get a chance to become an ego. (prob something like level/2/100). They do not get an artifact roll. 3) All great objects get a +20 boost to level. They are automatically egos. They get 4 artifact rolls. 4) The formulas for calculating good and great objects will be different. The chance that a normal object will become good should be something like: (level*2 / 100) The chance that a normal object will become great should be something like: MIN(level/4 , 15) 5) No exclusion of consumables from DROP_GOOD or DROP_GREAT. As long as the level of the object is in the appropriate range, that object can be dropped. My guesses as to what will happen. Artifact frequency will drop considerably, possibly too much. High end staves/scrolls/rods will increase in frequency, enough that we may need to increase their rarity. Egos will be rarer, although there will be less junk items littering the dungeon, since more monsters will drop squelchable items. |
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#2 |
Prophet
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Climbing up from hole I just dug.
Posts: 4,096
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I think this is good for monster drops and general floor items, however I would hate to see this in "8" block vault items. Too many consumables have too high range of levels where they can be generated, so that would weaken greater vaults a lot. If you make vault risk/reward ratio too high nobody will enter any vault, which pretty much negates reason for their existence.
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#3 | |
Prophet
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, US
Posts: 3,025
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Quote:
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#4 |
Prophet
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 9,022
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That sounds reasonable to me.
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#5 |
Prophet
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, US
Posts: 3,025
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Also in response to Timo's point, I think I'm more often inclined to enter a vault that has a known consumable like a ?mass banish than I am to enter one that has a bunch of unknown weapons. Nevertheless, restricting consumables from 8 squares is reasonable.
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#6 |
Prophet
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 9,022
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?MassBanish is one thing, ?Identify is another. There's lots of consumables that have strong allocation throughout the dungeon, because they're basic "bread and butter" items. This makes them not very exciting to find.
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#7 |
Adept
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 163
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I'm a little surprised to see dungeon books on both the "good" and "great" lists.
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#8 |
Prophet
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, US
Posts: 3,025
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?identify is still better than a slay orc broad sword. At least one is useful.
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#9 |
Prophet
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 9,022
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But it's not better than a broadsword that might be Slay Orc and might be Aranruth. Really, you're not going to go take on a remotely difficult fight if you know the reward is ?Identify, but you would if the reward has the potential of being a useful new piece of equipment.
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#10 | |
Prophet
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, US
Posts: 3,025
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Quote:
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