Камрад
|
In the thread about the tech video in NMA, Van Buren lead designer J.E. Sawyer gave some additional comments on the status of the tech dome:
* Floating damage numbers were meant to be an option, thought it isn't in the options menu in the demo.
По поводу закликай::::
* The game was intended to be played either as turn-based or real-time. Because Jefferson was real-time, that was the first combat mode implemented for Van Buren. Even what's there is only partially working. There's no pause (super sucky) or called shots, but weapons did their proper damage types and values, armor resisted properly, and it actually did calculate hit location. In the combat log, it will say where the shots hit and the characters will float comments like, "GOD DAMMIT MY EYES!"
People who have played the demo may have seen a switch on the option screen for combat mode that reads "Ask Me". This would have prompted the player before every battle and asked him or her to select between the two modes.
* The female characters in the demo are on the male skeleton (whoops), which is why they look kind of... El Greco-ish and bizarre.
* True "Fallout-style" death animations were not in the demo because we had to figure out how to do them from a technical perspective. Jefferson wasn't going to have crazy death animations and 3D posed some new challenges for blowing out parts of creatures. It's one of the areas where T-Ray/Brian Menze's 2D work definitely had an edge.
* All males were on the same skeleton, which made it hard to pose the character correctly when he could be a thin character in a jumpsuit or a strong guy in power armor. That's why everyone's walking around "bow-armed" and only the PC's escort in power armor (Cpl. Armstrong) looks like he's in a proper stance. Chris Marleau was our sole animator. He worked really, really hard, but there was no way he could do full animation sets for two male skeletons for the demo deadline.
* The weapons in the demo were chosen either because they were traditional Fallout weapons or because their visual effects/sounds were appealing. The player wouldn't have started with any of that stuff in the actual game.
* Yeah calling Multiplayer "Play With a Friend" was kind of goofy.
* Also, around 20 seconds or so, you might notice Cpl. Armstrong in the upper left corner standing with his minigun floating text. He's saying something similar to, "Move citizen, you're standing in my line of fire!"
Of course, this is the most important element of the entire demo: companions that don't shoot you in the back with an automatic weapon.
* The higher AP was the result of increasing the overall granularity of the AP scale and reducing the effective capabilities of high vs. low AG characters. In F1/F2, the difference between what a low AG and high AG character could do in a round was very large. In VB, a 1 AG character would have 21 AP, with a high AG character at 30. Of course, the overall AP costs were higher, but the change allowed each point of AG to make a difference and it meant that a high AG character was only ~33% more capable than a low AG character (compared to the ~50% bump from F1/F2).
Increasing the AP range also helped give us a little more flexibility in differentiating the costs of actions on certain weapons/from certain perks.
Characters would regenerate all of their AP in a single "round" of six seconds and their total AP (whether or not they had any remaining) directly influenced their movement speed. Movement suspended AP regeneration, so the amount of "stuff" a single character could do in a round was very close to what it would have been in turn-based.
Комментарии по поводу графики меня вообще удивили. Разве графика хоть сколько нибудь важна в rpg?
__________________
Massively multiplayer games are so far beyond the pale in their hunger to make you waste your time doing meaningless, repetitive tasks that there isn't any point in discussing them. Jeff Vogel
|