[MUD-Dev] Secondary characters as a mechanic
Valerio Santinelli
tanis at mediacom.it
Sun Feb 16 22:37:38 CET 2003
Daniel.Harman at barclayscapital.com wrote:
> From: Brian Hook [mailto:brianhook at pyrogon.com]
>>> That's one good reason it may not work, the other is interface
>>> difficulties.
>> I think interface difficulties is actually the most serious of
>> the problems. While you can play a game such as Baldur's Gate in
>> real time, at some point it ends up feeling like kids chasing a
>> soccer ball.
>> If you slowed down the pace and/ore removed unit complexity I
>> don't think it's that bad -- you can use RTS games as pretty good
>> evidence that you can manage complexity, but the trade off is
>> that you can't have as much per-unit complexity/depth. Which is
>> probably a good thing, in my book.
> The other implementation I've seen with more of an RPG slant, and
> less complex characters is Dungeon Siege. I think a lot of people
> were impressed by the game initially, and then discovered that
> there genuinely was no depth to it, and it was a tank rush
> simulation, or chasing a soccer ball...
Dungeon Siege had a damn cool engine used for a poor game in the
sense of gaming depth. I wish there was a big company focusing on
real RPGs taking the DS engine and building a real RPG on top of it.
--
c'ya!
Valerio Santinelli
tanis at mediacom.it
HateSeed Gaming Magazine http://www.hateseed.com/
My Lab http://tanis.hateseed.com/
In Flames Italia http://www.inflames.it/
One Man Crew http://www.onemancrew.org/
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