Re: Friday Facts #245 - Campaign concept
Posted: Tue Jun 05, 2018 2:47 pm
What about adding third robot type that would be used exclusively by player both as personal logistic and personal construction?
www.factorio.com
https://test.forums.factorio.com/
Interesting concept. But there would have to be some way to distinguish the personal robots that "stay with the player" for construction (limited in quantity to what the personal roboport(s) can support) and the ones doing logistic deliveries to the player (which could be hundreds, especially during mass-deconstructions / constructions of large blueprints).Avezo wrote:What about adding third robot type that would be used exclusively by player both as personal logistic and personal construction?
It's low priority for 0.17, so maybe then.Sigma1 wrote:Just a quick question; Will we finally get the spidertron?
The problem as I see it is that about 95% of the tree works like I would like. If nothing else, it feels like you're teaching the players to expect recipes to be usable. And if you're teaching players something that isn't true (even unintentionally), you're just setting them up for failure which is poor game design.abregado wrote:GuiltyBystander wrote: please change it so you never unlock a recipe that you can't use.While I agree with GuiltyBystander, the end result of this is actually that every recipe has its own research item. Also, interestingly maybe to some is that when I surveyed players (young,old, new and vets) most people actually enjoy the chaotic nature of the tech tree. I made a "clean" tech tree mod and most people preferred the stock one.eradicator wrote:That issues is more complex than you think it is. More lines make the tech tree more difficult to read, and many technologies would end up containing only one recipe because the others have different requirements.
https://mods.factorio.com/mod/tech-trunk
Agreed, it should be blue science at the highest. IMO it makes having roboports and logistic robots completely pointless until yellow science.Aeternus wrote:I like the split between high science and production.
Dislike the Logistics System still being locked behind yellow science.
I have to agree, it is pretty annoying to research something and find you don't actually have the ability to make all the required parts... isn't having the ability to make a required part... a prerequisite? it should be on the list.GuiltyBystander wrote:Most of the changes I'd like to see wouldn't affect gameplay at all. They wouldn't remove any of the players ability to decide how they want to play the game. It's super anticlimactic to research rocket silo then realize you can't build it because you're missing concrete. This isn't going to break gameplay experience by requiring them to research concrete first. They have to have it anyways.
If players want a chaotic tech tree, fine, but that's not what we have now. We just have an annoying tree that gives the illusion of choice then yanks the rug out from under you when you think you've just unlocked something but really haven't.
I see that some people think that this change would make the tree too cluttered and unreadable. I disagree, there's only about 10 links that need be added (maybe more/less, I haven't recalculated since 0.14), and most of the time you'll only see 1-2 of these at a time. The proposed change in the Friday Facts will add a lot more than that. Besides, the tech tree auto layout is amazing and makes it easy to find how things are linked even in large modpacks.
I think a very simple solution is to simply extend the technology color coding system to include items in "effects" or even the potions themselves. If an item can be built, give it a green background. If it can't, give it a yellow or red background. It's a very simple system that shows what can or can't be built so the player immediately knows if a tech will work.Having new technologies which are not linked anywhere to the main tree makes them incredibly hard to locate, so we decided against having them in their own tree.
I have noticed that the devs seem to be trying to avoid adding in redundant unlocks. But I think it's a good idea to add a few. Sometimes it's good to have more than one place something unlocks. Rather than have it unlock at point X, you can have it unlock at both Y and Z which each require X as a prerequisite. That way you have to research either Y or Z to get it, but it doesn't matter which one.bobingabout wrote:I have to agree, it is pretty annoying to research something and find you don't actually have the ability to make all the required parts... isn't having the ability to make a required part... a prerequisite? it should be on the list.
There are some technologies (in my mod at least, I forget what changes I've made and what are base game now) that will unlock more than one recipe, and the requirements allow you to make all but one of them. I'm not entirely sure what to suggest in these situations. Splitting up techs could be an option.
Oh i most certainly agree with him too. As far as i know i'm also the only one who ever attempted to make a procedural fix for it that would work with all mods. A foolish attempt in hindsight :p. After seeing the result of the initial prototype i was pretty convinced that it can't be done (automatically) without creating a mess of lines and/or a technology for every single recipe. Both of which are undesirable. I'd still love a solution, i just don't know a good one.abregado wrote:GuiltyBystander wrote: please change it so you never unlock a recipe that you can't use.While I agree with GuiltyBystander [...]eradicator wrote:That issues is more complex than you think it is.
It's funny that you should mention the rocket silo of all the things. Because it's one of the easier fallacies, and also one i fell for first before i made my attempt to automatically fix all dependencies. The problem is that "rocket silo (technology)" amongst other things also unlocks rocket fuel which is usable without concrete. So either you're locking rocket fuel behind concrete (acceptable compromise), or you split off the fuel into a single-recipe technology (ugly). Btw, if you really think it's just 10-ish connections to fix vanilla, make a demo mod and post it here. I'd be interested to see that and it'll make it much more likely to ever happen in vanilla ;). Also this is much worse in large complex mods that offer multiple (early and late game) ways to produce certain intermediates. And because factorio knows no "either or" type tech dependencies this is impossible to fix.GuiltyBystander wrote:Most of the changes I'd like to see wouldn't affect gameplay at all. They wouldn't remove any of the players ability to decide how they want to play the game. It's super anticlimactic to research rocket silo then realize you can't build it because you're missing concrete. This isn't going to break gameplay experience by requiring them to research concrete first. They have to have it anyways.
I like pleasant suprises :). The graphic was only meant as a general demonstration. One png says more than 1000 LoC ;).abregado wrote:Your diagram is nice, but I think you will be pleasantly surprised with what we come up with.
Tricky? Absolutely. But if done right it might still be worth it. My idea here was that you give the player a limited supply of something shortly before they get access (both tech and resources patches) to something to get the player "hooked" on i.e. red circuits. This imho has the potential of turning the usual "oh great, and now i have to set up all of oil processing to get even one red circuit" into a situation where the player is both less stressed about having to set up oil processing because they already have a small supply, and more incentivized because now the reason to build oil is not to get some new stuff they've never used (= new stuff for what?), but to keep their already existing factory (= i already know what this does!) that requires red circuits running. It's kind of like how "modern" RPGs often have a tutorial level where you play a mid-level character that already has some skills and equipment before the actual game begins with a level one hero. A combination of "motivation by preview" and hand-holding. Also i'm very specifically thinking about the bridge between green and blue science here, because of the huge "gap" that i percieve is created by having to jump from no oil production at all to full advanced processing. Or maybe i'm just saying "learning curve is nice and all, but don't forget about motivational curve", because my personal one plummets before blue science. every. single. time.abregado wrote:The idea of giving players items before they can make them themselves is also tricky as it really messes with the dependencies.
True. I just always thought of bottles more of a bonus that just happens to come along when you research the ingredients for them, than of something i specifically target my research effort on. I'll have to wait and see how it feels i guess.abregado wrote:The same goes for "technologies which act differently, aka auto unlock". This late in development it would be prudent to change how technology works.
That's where the "acting" part comes in. :P Though i'd really be interesting in an actual answer to this (→ voice nerd). Too much effort/cost to do multi-language voice acting? Or do you devs just not feel the need for it? Or maybe something else?abregado wrote:We cant find any voice actors of the species that the Avatar comes from...
Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data :P). Though it would be interesting to know what the ratio is between "people on steam that you can get data on" and "actual units of the game sold", mind to enlighten me (us) on that?abregado wrote:Well, I based my research on Steam statistics because there is no other data. There is a lot of discussion in here about that being a terrible way to go, and I agree.
It's a good place to start, but I'd still say it's significantly inaccurate. RSO has over 523,000 downloads - about half of Factorio's playerbase. FARL 249,000, Bottleneck 243,000, upgrade planner 229,000. Modding isn't exactly done by an insignificant part of Factorio's playerbase. Then add people who largely play the non-Steam version, people who have been using mods since before the Steam release and won't go back, etc.eradicator wrote:Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data).
I agree. The only reason I am still playing vanilla is that I still have some achievements to complete. Otherwise I'd already be using RSO and some other mods that make the game far superior to vanilla.Jap2.0 wrote:It's a good place to start, but I'd still say it's significantly inaccurate. RSO has over 523,000 downloads - about half of Factorio's playerbase. FARL 249,000, Bottleneck 243,000, upgrade planner 229,000. Modding isn't exactly done by an insignificant part of Factorio's playerbase. Then add people who largely play the non-Steam version, people who have been using mods since before the Steam release and won't go back, etc.eradicator wrote:Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data).
I never wanted to use mods that were coming in later releases. I held off using a train tank mod because it was confirmed it was going to be released in the future.zOldBulldog wrote:I agree. The only reason I am still playing vanilla is that I still have some achievements to complete. Otherwise I'd already be using RSO and some other mods that make the game far superior to vanilla.Jap2.0 wrote:It's a good place to start, but I'd still say it's significantly inaccurate. RSO has over 523,000 downloads - about half of Factorio's playerbase. FARL 249,000, Bottleneck 243,000, upgrade planner 229,000. Modding isn't exactly done by an insignificant part of Factorio's playerbase. Then add people who largely play the non-Steam version, people who have been using mods since before the Steam release and won't go back, etc.eradicator wrote:Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data).
I would rather not use mods too, but some - like RSO - are essential due to major deficiencies in the core game. So as soon as I can... I will.herkalurk wrote:I never wanted to use mods that were coming in later releases. I held off using a train tank mod because it was confirmed it was going to be released in the future.zOldBulldog wrote:I agree. The only reason I am still playing vanilla is that I still have some achievements to complete. Otherwise I'd already be using RSO and some other mods that make the game far superior to vanilla.Jap2.0 wrote:It's a good place to start, but I'd still say it's significantly inaccurate. RSO has over 523,000 downloads - about half of Factorio's playerbase. FARL 249,000, Bottleneck 243,000, upgrade planner 229,000. Modding isn't exactly done by an insignificant part of Factorio's playerbase. Then add people who largely play the non-Steam version, people who have been using mods since before the Steam release and won't go back, etc.eradicator wrote:Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data).
Your using the total download count and pretend it's the total number of people who ever used RSO. The real number is probably closer to 50~100k people who downloaded 5~10 updates each. Just look at the per version downloads. Personally i've probably downloaded it 10+ times even though i haven't actually played a lot with it (mp, updates, reinstallations).Jap2.0 wrote:It's a good place to start, but I'd still say it's significantly inaccurate. RSO has over 523,000 downloads - about half of Factorio's playerbase. FARL 249,000, Bottleneck 243,000, upgrade planner 229,000. Then add people who largely play the non-Steam version, people who have been using mods since before the Steam release and won't go back, etc.eradicator wrote:Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data :P).
I think you're experiencing a strong filter bubble/echo champer effect there. You don't know a significant part of the playerbase, and this forum is clearly part of the vocal minority. But, you're free to believe whatever you want. As long as neither of us has any usable numbers on the subject - and i'd be very interested in usable numbers - we won't know. And so i will keep believing that "modding" for any game is only done by small amount of people (<10%). Admittedly because factorio has official mod integration right in the game itself it probably has a significantly higher than average percentage (<20%) of people who have used at least one mod at least once. But it's still highly likely that most people only try mods after having played vanilla and having gotten some basic achievements, and thus still provide viable steam data. Personally i still play a fair share of vanilla even though i make mods. So all things considered i think the "steam sample" is sufficiently representative (no sample is ever perfectly representative).Jap2.0 wrote:Modding isn't exactly done by an insignificant part of Factorio's playerbase.
I have launched nearly 6000. I'm finding ways to make it so I can just continually produce the necessary pieces without backups and feed my 44 rocket silos.thereaverofdarkness wrote:I haven't launched a rocket. I could have launched one ages ago but that's not why I play the game.
That's true, perhaps that is a bit of an overestimate. I find it strange, through, that the mod portal lists less than 100,000 downloads of RSO, while in-game the number is more than five times that.eradicator wrote:Your using the total download count and pretend it's the total number of people who ever used RSO. The real number is probably closer to 50~100k people who downloaded 5~10 updates each. Just look at the per version downloads. Personally i've probably downloaded it 10+ times even though i haven't actually played a lot with it (mp, updates, reinstallations).Jap2.0 wrote:It's a good place to start, but I'd still say it's significantly inaccurate. RSO has over 523,000 downloads - about half of Factorio's playerbase. FARL 249,000, Bottleneck 243,000, upgrade planner 229,000. Then add people who largely play the non-Steam version, people who have been using mods since before the Steam release and won't go back, etc.eradicator wrote:Funnily i don't agree. Because i firmly believe in a "vocal minority/silent majority" distribution as far as games go. So going by steam statistics is totally fine (especially lacking any other data).
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