tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80861139368527544212024-03-12T18:34:58.964-07:00Twofold SilenceAdventures, cats, bicycles, frowny faces.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.comBlogger22125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-28892172025236073142014-10-07T01:15:00.001-07:002014-10-07T07:33:57.445-07:00House Rules for Certamen Style Bonuses in Ars Magica 5th EditionAs I covered in a <a href="http://twofoldsilence.diogenes-lamp.info/2014/03/homebrew-rules-for-certamen.html">previous post</a>, Ars Magica contains a subsystem for magical dueling, called <i>certamen</i>, that is the focus for my current magus character. The supplement Houses of Hermes: True Lineages contains additional rules for certamen, including specialized styles (also called schools). The styles are a great addition to the core certamen rules as they create more interesting strategic and tactical options while establishing additional lore and flavor.<br />
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Unfortunately, not all schools are equal. This in itself is not an insurmountable problem, but the issues with the schools are compounded by the two-tiered system of proficiency for each school. One season of study allows a maga to fight "in the style" of a school, with dramatically reduced benefits. Two seasons of study are required for full mastery. At the start of any given duel, a maga chooses to either fight as a follower of a specific school or to duel in a variety of styles using only the lesser benefits.<br />
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In practice, players almost never opt to duel in a variety of styles because the ostensible benefits for doing so are often punitive. This is a shame, because the idea of two master duelists shifting between styles mid-duel is fantastic and could lead to great tactical decisions from round to round -- something that is lacking in the certamen RAW.<br />
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I do not think fixing these problems requires a dramatic change to the RAW and I propose the following remedies for both individual schools and for the system as a whole:<br />
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<b>Certamen Reputations</b> - Instead of using the table on page 134 of HoH:TL, roll a stressed Intelligence + Order of Hermes Lore + Duelist Reputation on this table (use the modifiers table on 134, though):<br />
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<b>3</b> - Scandalous breaches of etiquette.<br />
<b>6</b> - Famous victories and victory spells.<br />
<b>9</b> - Famous losses.<br />
<b>12</b> - Favored schools.<br />
<b>15 </b>- Strong arts.<br />
<b>18</b> - Moderate arts.<br />
<b>21 </b>- Weaknesses.<br />
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A botch always results in misinformation of some sort. Minor botches get favored schools wrong. More serious botches get the arts and weaknesses badly mixed up.<br />
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<b>Harenarius Virtue</b> - RAW, but the Master Duelist reputation is for the entire Order of Hermes instead of just Tremere.<br />
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<b>Master and Follower Benefits </b>- If a duelist has spent two seasons studying a school, she is considered a master and gets the full listed benefits for that school. If a duelist has spent one season studying the school, she is considered a follower and takes a -1 penalty to Attack, Defense, Weakening, and Resistance totals and 1 additional botch die when fighting in that style. Otherwise the maga uses the full listed benefits as a master.<br />
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As in the RAW, most magi can only master a single school of certamen (excepting those with the Harenarius virtue), but could conceivably become a follower of many.<br />
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<b>Starting School</b> - By default, all magi begin as followers of Gladiator, for free. Special circumstances may justify individual magi starting as a follower of another school, which replaces Gladiator.<br />
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<b>Dedicated or Shifting Styles</b> - At the beginning of certamen, the maga may choose to fight dedicated to a single style or opt for shifting styles. If she fights dedicated to a single style, she uses the rules as written. If she chooses to fight with shifting styles, she suffers a -1 penalty to all Attack and Defense totals and rolls 1 additional botch die for the entire duel. These penalties are cumulative, so someone dueling in shifting styles as a follower would have -2 to Attack and Defense totals, -1 to Weakening and Resistance Totals, and 2 extra botch dice.<br />
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<b>School Adjustments</b> - The following adjustments are intended to make a wider variety of schools appealing for use in certamen, especially Gladiator (Ars Magica's "default" certamen style), and several other schools that had less valuable advantages overall.<br />
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<b>Gladiator</b> - Fighting as a master of Gladiator gives +1 to Attack, Defense, Weakening, and Resistance totals and subtracts 1 botch die. A standard maga with no additional school training will typically duel as a dedicated follower of Gladiator, negating all of the listed benefits.<br />
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<b>Andabatus</b> - In addition to the listed RAW benefits, masters of Andabatus always have +2 on their Weakening totals and -1 on their Resistance totals.<br />
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<b>Bestarius</b> - These rules replace the Bestarius RAW entirely. Masters of Bestarius can project their Heartbeast into the shared illusion to intimidate and unsettle their opponent. On a successful attack, a master of Bestarius may decline to do damage. Instead, their opponent must roll a stressed Stamina + Concentration against an Ease Factor of half the Bestarius' Heartbeast score (rounded up) +2 for every level of Fatigue declined. If the opponent fails, the Bestiarus may reduce their opponent's Weakening or Resistance total by the Bjornaer's Heartbeast score. This penalty lasts until after the resolution of the Bjornaer's next attack.<br />
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<b>Bone-Biting </b>- Like the RAW "fighting in the style" rules, but the Attack Total bonus for a Light Wound is +13. As there are no masters of Bone-Biting left (or are there...? oOoOoOoOh!), a follower of Bone-Biting would typically inflict a Light Wound and have +12 Attack, -1 Defense, Weakening, and Resistance with 1 additional botch die on top of other modifiers. As in RAW, the Bone-Biter may sacrifice a Light Wound to absorb the next two fatigue levels they would have lost in the duel.<br />
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<b>Charon </b>- The RAW still exist as a "trick". However, here are some rules for them as a school. The Charon style focuses on feinting against the opponent. Their portion of the shared illusion contains duplicate images and subtle perspective tricks layered over each other. On any given round, they may choose to sacrifice up to their Finesse to feint on either Attack or Defense. If the feint roll fails by the penalty or if it succeeds in spite of the penalty, the duelist may immediately re-roll and add the penalty.<br />
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<b>Essedarius </b>- Similar to RAW, but the check is Stamina + Concentration against an Ease Factor of 5 + 2 per Fatigue level the Essedarius has declined to inflict during certamen. The check is made each time the Essedarius declines and the penalty is -2 to Attack and Defense totals and 2 additional botch dice. The penalties are cumulative and last until the end of combat. Many opponents eventually surrender out of fear that they will enter Twilight through a botch.<br />
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<b>Gladiatrix </b>- The Gladiatrix may decline damage to attempt a reading of the opponent's vulnerabilities. The opponent must roll Intelligence + Concentration against an Ease Factor of 5 + 2 per fatigue level the Gladiatrix chooses to decline on that specific attack. The Gladiatrix may choose to learn the score of any of their opponent's Arts, one of their characteristics, all their personality traits, or the score and specialization of Concentration, Finesse, Parma Magica, or Penetration. If they choose to learn the score of an Art that is being used in the duel, the opponent suffers a -3 penalty when using that Art for the remainder of the duel. If they choose to learn the score of one of the abilities, that ability suffers a -2 penalty for the remainder of the duel.<br />
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Some Gladiatrices have a bad reputation for toying with opponents or using duels "for love" as a means of ferreting out weaknesses in advance of a duel with serious consequences. Many duelists have argued that Gladiatrices are magically scrying, but no tribunal has ever made a ruling equating it as such.<br />
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<b>Hoplomachus </b>- RAW.<br />
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<b>Laquerius </b>- RAW.<br />
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<b>Provocator </b>- RAW.<br />
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<b>Pumilius </b>- Similar to RAW, but the check is Intelligence + Concentration against an Ease Factor of 5 + 2 per Fatigue level the Pumilius declines. If the duelist knows personality traits of the opponent, each one can be used once per duel for a bonus to the Ease Factor equal to its absolute value. If the maga fails her Concentration roll, the Pumilius can reduce her next Attack or Defense roll by 15.<br />
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<b>Retiarius </b>- A different approach from RAW but conceptually similar to the swift-striking Fishermen. A master of Retiarius can attack twice in a round at a -3 penalty to both Attack Totals.<br />
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<b>Saggitarius </b>- RAW.<br />
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<b>Scissor </b>- Masters of the School of Carvers sacrifice up to their Finesse on Attack Totals, but if they hit, they increase the Weakening Total by twice the penalty.<br />
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<b>Velitus </b>- RAW.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-27645845942891967902014-06-23T08:44:00.002-07:002014-06-23T16:35:35.169-07:00Rewarding Degenerating Gameplay: Lessons from Gijón and PernambucoThis post is about game design. Just bear with me.<br />
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In the 1982 World Cup Group stage, the West German and Austrian teams found themselves in an odd situation. With the Algeria-Chile match already played, the West Germany-Austria meeting in Gijón, Spain would be the final match of Group 2. Based on the point spread of all four teams in the group, West Germany and Austria knew exactly what results would allow both to advance: a marginal (1-2 goal) West German victory. After West Germany scored in the first half, both teams settled into what was effectively pantomime. For the remainder of the 90 minutes, they politely passed the ball in their respective halves of the field, opponents occasionally making halfhearted challenges - but no real scoring attempts.<br />
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The strategy was transparent to everyone, from the announcers to the angry crowd. Though popular culture condemned the match with names like <i>Nichtangriffspakt von Gijón</i> (Non-Aggression Pact of Gijón) or, even more pejoratively, the <i>Anschluß</i>, it ultimately allowed both teams to progress out of the Group stage. West Germany made it all the way to the final.<br />
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To half-solve the problem in subsequent World Cup Group stages, FIFA scheduled the final two matches for any given Group to take place concurrently. In the case of West Germany-Austria, it would have prevented the teams from building a strategy based on the outcome of Algeria-Chile. However, FIFA didn't <i>really</i> fix the underlying issue, which was the design of how teams accumulate points in Group and how those points determine who advances out of Group. And now, on Thursday, June 26th, it's possible we could see a repeat of the Non-Aggression Pact of Gijón at Pernambuco, Brazil, when Germany faces USA. As in 1982, due to the point spread between Germany, USA, Portugal, and Ghana in Group G, both Germany and USA will advance in the event that they draw - regardless of the results of the Portugal-Ghana match happening simultaneously. Given the widespread condemnation of what occurred at Gijón in 1982, it's unlikely to happen again, but nothing in the rules would prevent it.<br />
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When designing the rules for any challenge-based game, regardless of the form it takes, it's important to consider how the structure of the rules may promote working against the <i>spirit</i> of the game. What designers allow players to do may inadvertently reward behavior that even the players themselves find to be boring and unenjoyable. If these behaviors are advantageous enough, players will gravitate toward them with increasing frequency until they become the <i>de facto</i> "correct" tactics and strategies for play. One of the most commonly-discussed features that produces this effect is <a href="http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/SaveScumming">save scumming</a>. Being able to save and load your game at any time is extraordinarily valuable for players, if simply for convenience. However, the way save/load works in conjunction with other mechanics can strongly promote <i>reliance </i>on save/load to overcome difficult situations.<br />
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As an example, many role-playing games use virtual dice to "roll" a check when attempting to overcome a single obstacle, such as a locked door. In such cases, the player typically has one "try" on any static obstacle. In practice, they effectively have as many tries as they want as long as they are patient enough to reload. This type of interaction doesn't test players' skills in any new way, it doesn't ask players to attempt any different tactic, and given the "one try" system the designers put in place, it seems to go against the spirit of what the designers were trying to accomplish. While players love succeeding at overcoming obstacles, the percentage who love doing it via save/load is probably very low. Even so, that's what the game's design promotes doing for the best outcome.<br />
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By writing all of this, I have no intention of placing any blame or fault on the players. In challenge-based games, designers present obstacles and create the rules and tools for overcoming those obstacles. Players can hardly be faulted for finding and taking advantage of shortcomings in how the systems interact. In the aftermath of Gijón, both teams had to deal with the anger of World Cup fans - especially fans of the Algerian team, who had been denied a chance at moving on due to the West German/Austrian collusion. And there is no doubt that the players who suited up and went on the field that day did not spend their young lives dreaming of strategic pantomiming. Still, FIFA's rules promoted that behavior - and still promote similar behavior. A repeat of Gijón at Pernambuco would produce justified howls of outrage. Still, a paraphrase of the old maxim applies: <i>don't hate the players, hate the game design</i>.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-49707146418676391092014-06-09T07:10:00.000-07:002014-06-09T07:11:11.350-07:00Ars Magica Longevity Rituals - More Gradual Aging for MagiI read <a href="http://timothyferguson.wordpress.com/2014/02/21/is-there-a-better-way-to-model-longevity-rituals/">an entry</a> on Timothy Ferguson's blog about how to re-model Ars Magica 5th Edition Longevity Rituals for more interesting flavor and to shift the apparent aging of Hermetic magi. Because AM5 lacks a core central mechanic for adding and removing Virtues and Flaws post-character creation, Warping and Mystery Cults effectively became the de facto ways for doing it in supplemental books. While I don't think Mr. Ferguson's idea of longevity ritual as a Hermetic Exoteric Mystery is a bad one (especially for flavor, which the RAW longevity ritual rules conspicuously lack), it doesn't address <i>how</i> Hermetic magi age. I.e., it does not fundamentally alter how the Aging tables work, nor definitively when magi will start adopting Longevity Rituals. That is, arguably, the larger problem with the RAW: given good enough rituals, many magi will look like they are in their 20s-30s well into old age.<br />
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Mechanically, I believe the simplest way to address this is by adding a new "apparent aging" range to the bottom end of the Aging table. The precedent for this can be found in the core Aging table itself. Aging Crises are a big deal in AM5. Even if you resolve any given Crisis, you still acquire Decrepitude and potentially a bunch of Aging Points. To make Aging Crises a potent threat even at relatively young ages, both 13 and 22+ on the standard table result in "sufficient Aging Points... to reach the next level in Decrepitude, and Crisis". Since most characters start rolling in their mid-30s, that means that, barring modifiers, a roll of 9 (+4) would immediately result in Decrepitude and Crisis. 13 remains a real threat for most characters unless they have a truly solid Longevity Ritual. It's a landmine on the Aging chart relative to the results around it, but its presence is important because it significantly increases the probability of hitting Crises at young ages.<br />
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Similarly, putting an additional apparent aging range low on the Aging table may seem unintuitive, but it can produce the mechanical results you want. By overlapping the main apparent aging range (3+) with a negative range, you can create a higher probability that magi will slowly continue to gain apparent age even with powerful Longevity Rituals. <br />
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E.g., we could add an apparent aging increase result between -5 and -7. Let's say a maga has a total of -7 to her Aging roll due to Longevity Ritual (-10), being a maga in a Spring (-1) covenant, and her real age (37, +4). The die rolls produce these results:<br />
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<b><i>10-7 = 3, apparent age increases by one year</i></b><br />
9-7 = 2, no apparent aging<br />
8-7 = 1, no apparent aging<br />
7-7 = 0, no apparent aging<br />
6-7 = -1, no apparent aging<br />
5-7 = -2, no apparent aging<br />
4-7 = -3, no apparent aging<br />
3-7 = -4, no apparent aging<br />
<b><i>2-7 = -5, apparent age increases by one year</i></b><br />
<b><i>1*-7 = on subsequent die, 5+ = apparent age increases by one year (and other deleterious effects on a 9 or 10), 2-4 = no apparent aging, 1 = roll again and quadruple</i></b><br />
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As another example, with -12 to the total roll, the maga would still get an apparent age increase on a roll of 7, 6, or 5 (-5, -6, and -7) and would have a ~48%+** chance of hitting an apparent age increase on a 1 (subsequent rolls of 3, 8, 9, 10 or potentially another 1 would do it [and worse]).<br />
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So even with a very strong ritual, there's always a good chance of hitting an apparent age increase. Magi aren't <i>guaranteed</i> to hit those numbers, but over the course of many years, they are much more likely to hit them. And if that probability isn't high enough, you can extend the range from -4 to -7 or -3 to -7, which would result in the magi <i>apparently</i> aging at about half speed.<br />
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* Since Aging rolls are stressed with no botch, the potential for an apparent aging increase will change based on what result a 1 on the die would normally yield. However, this is also true with a lot of results on the standard table due to how exploding dice work.<br />
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** I'm not doing the exact math on this, but a quadrupled roll of 4 or higher will always result in an apparent aging increase (at least) and an another 1, in addition to being extraordinarily unlucky, would guarantee Crisis.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-42983269646178315002014-03-31T19:29:00.002-07:002014-09-16T14:02:30.761-07:00Homebrew Rules for Certamen Experimentation in Ars Magica 5th EditionAfter longing to play in an Ars Magica campaign for decades, I finally got my chance. I've been playing in one for the past six months and running another for the past three. Playing the game (in its 5th Edition) has revealed a lot of cool and a few not-so-cool things about the mechanics, but it's a ton of fun overall. I especially like how downtime is used and how characters can experiment with magic both in adventure sessions and during their off seasons (the unit used for downtime).<br />
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I've been playing a few characters in our saga, most notably Venzi Lüin of Tremere, a <i>disputant </i>who fights in <i>certamen</i>, magical duels, for his covenant, Mont-Mercure, in the Normandy Tribunal. Based on our experiences and what I've seen online, certamen is not something comes up often in many Ars Magica sagas. The core rules can be likened to grappling rules in most editions of A/D&D: seldom used and often dreaded. However, that didn't stop Atlas Games from expanding the basic certamen rules in <i>Houses of Hermes: True Lineages</i>. As my character is a disputant, I often play him as someone who is looking for an opportunity to duel.<br />
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Recently, I realized that my development of Venzi as a disputant would probably trail off sometime in the character's late 40s (he just surpassed me in age -- 39). He can master two special styles (found in <i>HoH:TL</i>) but otherwise he will continue to develop his arts and forsake the things that drive other magi: spell research, item research, apprentices, and familiars. These things add little to nothing to the disputant's dedicated dueling arsenal, which is defined primarily by his arts and three arcane abilities: Finesse, Penetration, and Parma Magica. Spending time on spells and apprentices means time not spent on keeping the dueling arsenal at peak power.<br />
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When choosing arts for a duel, there is a small bit of psychological strategizing that goes on. The duelists want to pick arts they are strong in that their opponents are <i>not</i> strong in. Learning about your opponents through the use of Order of Hermes Lore can help discern what their strong and weak arts are. Knowing that your opponent can veto one of your choices, you may "throw" an initial choice out with the intention of seeing it vetoed. Still, once the arts are chosen, the process of moving from round-to-round is largely a matter of attrition. If you fight in the "style" of a school rather than as a master, you have the option of switching from round to round. You also have the ability to spend <i>vis</i>, a resource of raw magical power, in the course of the duel, but there are not many more choices to make.<br />
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Because Venzi will be focused on dueling for his entire wizardly career, I wanted to extend the rules to develop more oddball aspects and give dedicated duelists the ability to develop new styles on their own. <i>HoH:TL</i> describes how to achieve Breakthrough Points through original research in the Bonisagus chapter. Similarly, <i>Ancient Magic </i>describes how to integrate non-Hermetic magical concepts into Hermetic theory using a similar system that works in parallel. Despite the description of the Harenarius virtue in HoH:TL, which states that the harenarii are the most likely magi to develop new certamen styles, there are no rules present for doing so.<br />
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To fill in the gaps and extend my interest in Venzi's development, I have created a system that hybridizes the rules from original research and non-Hermetic integration. These rules should give advanced duelists goals to work toward as well as the dangerous, chaotic thrill that other magi feel when fooling around with arcane experimentation and the Extraordinary Results chart. These rules haven't been playtested, but I hope you may find them of some use. Thanks for reading.<br />
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***<br />
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<b>Developing New Certamen Styles</b><br />
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Magi can develop new certamen styles by applying Lessons they learn from fighting duels. Each duel they fight is like a tiny artifact they can obsess over for new techniques and applications. Experimenting with these Lessons is risky and time-consuming, but over time can allow duelists to develop Breakthroughs for certamen just as a maga may develop Breakthroughs in original research and Hermetic integration. Once the maga achieves a basic Breakthrough, the research coalesces into a new style. After years of continued work dueling with the new style, the maga can become a rare and celebrated figure in Hermetic circles: a Magistra Certamenis, the master of her own new style.<br />
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<b>Dueling Lessons - From the Ring to the Lab</b><br />
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In any season following one or more certamen duels, a maga can spend a season attempting to gain a Lesson. Lessons can be used to augment study of the arts and arcane abilities in the short term, but are more valuable for their ability to help develop entirely new styles of certamen over a longer period of time.<br />
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It doesn't matter if the maga won or lost, but she must have dueled "on stage" as a meaningful part of the story (as determined by the storyguide). The maga may initiate this study in the season immediately following the duel or later, but once a new season has passed in which the maga dueled on stage, she can no longer attempt to gain a Lesson from the earlier season of duels. To gain a Lesson, the maga must make a stress roll of Intelligence + Magic Theory against an ease factor of 18. The Harenarius virtue adds three to this roll and the troupe may rule that some seasons of duels grant additional bonuses. An ordinary or uneventful duel adds no bonus, but a truly extraordinary duel may add as much as +3. Note that the maga does not roll for each duel, but for the season <i>of </i>duels and the troupe should consider all of the duels together.<br />
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On a botch, the maga thinks she has gained a Lesson, but does not. She realizes this after she attempts to apply the Lesson, which always results in an additional wasted season.<br />
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<b>Nature of the Lesson</b><br />
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The nature of the Lesson is judged by the troupe and should be connected to the nature of the duels but in all cases relate to at least one form, one technique, and one arcane ability used in certamen (finesse, penetration, and parma magica). The troupe's determination defines how the lesson may be applied. E.g. in a season with one duel involving Creo and Herbam that was resolved with lightning-fast initiative, the troupe may decide the lesson may be applied to Creo, Herbam, or Finesse. In a season with multiple duels involving various forms combined with Perdo, and in which the duels lasted a long time due to high resistance totals, the troupe may determine that the Lesson may be applied to Perdo or Parma Magica. The most notable duel involved the use of Ignem, so that is the form the troupe agrees can also be applied to the Lesson.<br />
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<b>Applying the Lesson</b><br />
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Once the troupe has agreed upon the nature of the Lesson, the maga may choose to apply it in any future season. It may only be applied once, but there is no time limit on when it may be applied. When a lesson is applied, the maga must apply it while learning an art or arcane ability connected to the nature of the lesson. The normal source rules apply, but the maga cannot apply the lesson while receiving instruction from a teacher. She must have time to experiment while incorporating the lesson. The experimentation also always requires a lab (even if the maga is studying vis).<br />
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Roll a stress die on the Certamen Experimentation: Extraordinary Results chart for the results. As with normal arcane experimentation, the maga may add from +1 to +3 worth of risk bonus before the die is rolled. However, this bonus is also the additional number of botch dice that must be rolled.<br />
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In all circumstances other than disaster and complete failure, for every 5 experience points (rounded up) you gain using this method you gain 1 Breakthrough Point. This also applies to experience gained in Magic Theory and shifted arts on the discovery or modified study tables.<br />
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<b>The Seed Is Planted: A New Goal</b><br />
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Once the maga achieves a Breakthrough Point, you should declare what the Lesson and subsequent Breakthrough have motivated the maga to discover. In certamen research, the end goal is always a new style, but you must define what that style is going to accomplish that the other existing styles do not. Over time, your research may shift how your style develops, but it's good for the troupe to know what you're going for in the long run.<br />
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<b>A New Style: The First Breakthrough</b><br />
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When the maga has acquired 30 Breakthrough points, she has developed a new style of certamen. This new style is gained as soon as the final Breakthrough point is acquired. The player and the troupe decide what the nature of the style is based on the maga's earliest stated goals, the duels the maga has participated in, and the types of results that appeared during her experimentation. Like other certamen styles, this can be taught to other Hermetic magi, but there is no "master" level in existence. A maga who uses their new style in at least 5 duels and/or teaches their style to 5 students will earn 15 experience points in the Hermetic Reputation: Magistra/Magister Certamenis (magistra in this sense indicating their role as an academic master).<br />
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<b>Developing the Style: Working Toward Mastery</b><br />
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Once the maga has developed a new style, she can only progress in it by repeating the initial process, but she must use her new style in duels "on stage" to devote Lessons toward another Breakthrough. If the maga does this and moves from 30 Breakthrough points to 45, she will have become a master -- the first master -- of her new style. This mastery applies even if the maga has already mastered a school of certamen (or two, in the case of a Harenarius).<br />
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At this point, the maga may determine (with the troupe) what mastery entails and if it has changed even the basics of the style. If the style has changed since its inception, any magi who already knew the "old" version can be updated to the new way if they learn mastery -- or if they simply take another season of studying with a "corrected" disciple of the style.<br />
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A maga who uses her mastered style in at least 5 duels and/or teaches mastery of their style to 5 students will earn another 15 experience points in the Hermetic Reputation: Magistra/Magister Certamenis.<br />
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<b>Defending the Style</b><br />
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Certamen, being binding in "all matters", is a sensitive subject for many magi. Depending on how successful the new style is, it may draw attention from bitter disputants, curious quaesitores, and other sources of criticism. This may provide even more opportunities for the new "Magistra Certamenis" to defend her style both at tribunals and through continued dueling. Peripheral Code rulings dealing with certamen are not common, but the possibility is always there.<br />
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<b>Certamen Experimentation: Extraordinary Results</b><br />
<br />
<b>Extraordinary Results Chart</b><br />
<b>Roll<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Result</b><br />
Botch<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Disaster<br />
0-4<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>No extraordinary effects<br />
5-6<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Cicatrix Certamenis<br />
7<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>No benefit<br />
8<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Complete failure<br />
9<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Special or story event<br />
10<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Discovery<br />
11<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Modified study<br />
12<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Roll twice more on this chart<br />
<br />
<b>Disaster</b>: You fail miserably. Roll a simple die + risk modifier - Perception, and compare to the following chart:<br />
<br />
<b>Roll<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Result</b><br />
<=0 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You spot the disaster before it occurs. Your season is still wasted; see "Complete Failure."<br />
<br />
1-2<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Lab accident. Your lab takes one season of damage (reverting to -3 if a standard lab, or complete ruin if a half-established lab)<br />
<br />
3-4<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Personal injury. You injure yourself, taking damage equal to a simple die + the source quality of your study material (yes, even with Parma Magica).<br />
<br />
5-6<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Explosion! Your lab is ruined and you must roll a simple die for each valuable possession you keep in your lab. On a 0, it is destroyed. You take an amount of damage equal to a simple die + (2 * the source quality of your study material).<br />
<br />
7-8<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Your experiment backfires in such a way that the entire covenant is threatened, either through fire, the summoning of a major threat, or some other calamity the storyguide makes up.<br />
<br />
9–10 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You gain Warping Points equal to the number of zeroes on the botch roll. Roll for Twilight if you gain two or more.<br />
<br />
11+ <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Roll twice more on this chart.<br />
<br />
<b>No Extraordinary Effects</b>: Your experiment does produce any exceptional results but still counts toward your certamen Breakthrough.<br />
<br />
<b>Cicatrix Certamenis</b>: You develop a dueling "scar" -- not a physical mark, but an ingrained habit in your certamen technique connected to the art or arcane ability you are studying. Some scars are beneficial and reflect that you have mastered a powerful tactic or gained confidence from your experience. Other scars are detrimental and represent either the incorporation of a bad habit or the development of a psychological block connected to your duels.<br />
<br />
Roll a simple die and add your risk modifier and compare to the appropriate chart. If you roll a result you already have for the same art, you gain no special insight and no Breakthrough Points. Cicatrices certamenis should be tracked for each type of Breakthrough. They can help shape the direction the new style takes.<br />
<br />
<b>Art</b><br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>Roll<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Result</b><br />
1<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Transformed Image - Your half of the shared illusion is transformed or exaggerated in an unusual way when this art is used in certamen. The nature of the transformation is determined by the troupe, based on the nature of the lesson.<br />
<br />
2<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Weak Response - When you use this art for defense, any successful hit on you (whether or not it does damage) reduces your next attack total by 1.<br />
<br />
3<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Overcompensation - When you use this art for defense, a successful hit on you will reduce your next attack total by 1 and increase your next defense total by 1. If you score a successful hit while using this art to attack, it increases your next attack total by 1 and decreases your next defense total by 1. Both events could potentially occur in sequence, canceling each other out.<br />
<br />
4<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Strong Response - When you use this art for defense, any successful hit on you (whether or not it does damage) increases your next attack total by 1.<br />
<br />
5<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Gloriola Desperationis - Your experimentation has caused you to become careless with vis in duels. When you use vis in certamen to boost this art, you run a risk of causing actual damage to yourself. For each pawn you use on a roll, make a stress die + Stamina + Concentration roll against an Ease Factor equal to the number of pawns used x 3. If you make the check, nothing unusual happens. If you fail the check, you take +2 damage for every pawn spent and mometarily gain the so-called "halo of desperation" from energy coursing over you.<br />
<br />
6<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Powerful Momentum - Immediately following a successful attack with this art, you gain +3 to your defense for the next round.<br />
<br />
7<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Sloppy Aggression - After you successfully land an attack with this art, you suffer -3 to your defense for the next round.<br />
<br />
8<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Urna Volubilis - You have developed a precariously-balanced use of this art. The chaotic "rolling jug" grants boons and horrible misfortunes in extreme circumstances. When this art is used for attack or defense and a 1 is rolled, the final die is always assumed to be a 10 regardless of what the re-rolls are. Conversely, any botch roll always has an additional botch die added.<br />
<br />
9<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Pars Imaginis - You have figured out a way to trick onlookers into believing you have used -- or not used -- vis with this art by masking reality through the shared illusion. You must commit to the ruse before rolling and suffer -1 to your final result for every three pawns of vis (or part thereof) that is being masked or faked in the process. Separately from the attack or defense rolls, you then make a stress die + Presence (if attack)/Perception (if defense) + Guile roll to determine the effectiveness of the trick. Subtract 1 from the total for every pawn of vis being masked or faked. The opponent and onlookers can detect what's happening with a stress die + Perception + Awareness. Tricks of this sort are not against any ruling of the code, though serious sticklers frown at them.<br />
<br />
10<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Flinch - When you suffer the loss of a fatigue level from a successful attack while defending with this art, you must make a stress die + Stamina + Concentration roll against an Ease Factor of 9. If you fail the roll, you suffer -3 to attack and defense on the following round. If you botch, you immediately cease concentration on certamen and drop your half of the shared illusion.<br />
<br />
11<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Warping Surge - When you roll a 1 when using this art for attack or defense, before re-rolling you may choose to add +10 to the final result at a cost of 2 points of warping (meaning an immediate check for Wizard's Twilight). The warping takes effect concurrently with the action, meaning the maga could win or lose the duel and immediately enter Twilight.<br />
<br />
12<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Ars Vicaria - You have accidentally discovered how to surreptitiously substitute other arts for this art during certamen. However, it is by no means foolproof. You must decide to make the substitution (only forms for forms, techniques for techniques) before you roll and must describe to the troupe what art is being is being substituted and how this is disguised in the shared illusion. A stress die + Perception + Awareness vs. an Ease Factor arbitrated by the storyguide determines whether or not the opponent or any onlookers notice what has happened. Though this phenomenon has not been seen frequently enough to receive any tribunal rulings -- and thus is not explicitly covered by any Peripheral Code -- maintaining a stance of victory when caught employing a "proxy art" is broadly condemned by magi.<br />
<br />
13<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>New Side Effect - You learn something else about using this art in certamen. The effect is either of no mechanical benefit or has equal benefits and drawbacks as arbitrated by the troupe.<br />
<br />
<b>Finesse + Art</b><br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>Roll<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Result</b><br />
1-2<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Confident Start - If you win initiative at the beginning of a duel, you may apply +3 to the total generated by the related art in the first round (only). You may not gain this bonus in circumstances where you decline initiative, but you may take it in circumstances where it is declined to you (e.g. when dueling against a master of Hoplomachus).<br />
<br />
3-4<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Nervous Start - When this art is one of the two used in a duel, you may not apply Confidence to your initiative roll.<br />
<br />
5-6<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Rising Tempo - When this art is involved in certamen, you gain +1 to your initiative on every round following the first, up to a total of +3. This has no benefit in circumstances where you win initiative, but it may allow you to eventually reverse the combat order.<br />
<br />
7-8<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Falling Tempo - When this art is involved in certamen, you lose 1 on your initiative on every round following the first, up to a total of -3. This causes no problems in circumstances where you already lost or declined initiative, but in cases where you win initiative, you may eventually drop behind your opponent.<br />
<br />
9<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Seize Advantage - When your opponent botches while you are using this art (actively, on the contested roll), you both re-roll initiative. It does not replace your current initiative total, but if you win the roll, your opponent loses his or her next turn.<br />
<br />
10<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Stumble - When you botch while you are using this art (actively, on the contested roll), you both re-roll initiative. It does not replace your current initiative total, but if you lose the roll, you lose your next turn.<br />
<br />
11<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Calculated Opening - When rolling for initiative at the beginning of the duel, you may take a penalty equal to your Finesse score and apply it to the associated art on the first round. This bonus applies regardless of whether you win or lose, but cannot be used in situations where either party declines initiative.<br />
<br />
12<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Nictus Infelix - When using this art in certamen, you must make a stress die + Perception + Concentration roll against the opponent's stress die + Presence + Concentration or lose your first attack (even if postponed).<br />
<br />
13<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>New Side Effect - You learn something else about using Finesse with this art in certamen. The effect is either of no mechanical benefit or has equal benefits and drawbacks as arbitrated by the troupe.<br />
<br />
<b>Penetration + Art</b><br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>Roll<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Result</b><br />
1-2<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Probing Attunement - While attuning your shared illusion in a duel where this art is used, you can attempt to discern the opponent's score in this art before initiative is rolled. You roll a stress die + Perception + Penetration against their stress die + Presence + Parma Magica to determine success. The opponent will become aware of your attempt, but will not know whether you are successful or not.<br />
<br />
3-4<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Exposed Offense - While attuning your shared illusion in a duel where this art is used, roll a stress die + Presence + Guile against your opponent's stress die + Perception + Awareness. If you fail, your opponent learns your Intelligence + Penetration total.<br />
<br />
5-6<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Rising Offense - After you first hit with this art, you accumulate +1 to your Weakening Total on subsequent hits with this art in the same duel, up to a total of +3.<br />
<br />
7-8<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Falling Offense - After you first hit with this art, you accumulate -1 to your Weakening Total on subsequent hits with this art in the same duel, up to a total of -3.<br />
<br />
9<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Prensa Parmam - When you attack with this art and exactly match your opponent's defense, you may choose to re-roll your attack. However, you must accept the second result.<br />
<br />
10<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Pilum Curvum - When you attack with this art and exactly match your opponent's defense, your Weakening Total is halved for the next round.<br />
<br />
11<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Sundering Blow - If you score a hit with this art, you may decline to in inflict one or more Fatigue Levels in exchange for -4 to the opponent's Resistance Total for the rest of the duel.<br />
<br />
12<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Impetus Malus - Each time you use this art to successfully hit an opponent in a duel, you must roll a stress die + Stamina + Concentration against an East Factor of 9 or lose your next attack (intentionally going full defense with Hoplomachus does not count).<br />
<br />
13<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>New Side Effect - You learn something else about using Penetration with this art in certamen. The effect is either of no mechanical benefit or has equal benefits and drawbacks as arbitrated by the troupe.<br />
<br />
<b>Parma Magica + Art</b><br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>Roll<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Result</b><br />
1-2<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Sensitive Attunement - While attuning your shared illusion in a duel where this art is used, you can attempt to discern the opponent's score in this art before initiative is rolled. You roll a stress die + Perception + Parma Magica against their stress die + Presence + Penetration to determine success. The opponent will become aware of your attempt, but will not know whether you are successful or not.<br />
<br />
3-4<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Exposed Defense - While attuning your shared illusion in a duel where this art is used, roll a stress die + Presence + Guile against your opponent's stress die + Perception + Awareness. If you fail, your opponent learns your Stamina + Parma Magica total.<br />
<br />
5-6<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Rising Defense - After you first defend with this art, you accumulate +1 to your Resistance Total on subsequent defense rolls with this art in the same duel, up to a total of +3.<br />
<br />
7-8<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Falling Defense - After you first defend with this art, you accumulate -1 to your Resistance Total on subsequent defense rolls with this art in the same duel, up to a total of -3.<br />
<br />
9<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Prensa Gladium - When you defend with this art and exactly match your opponent's attack, you may choose to re-roll your defense. However, you must accept the second result.<br />
<br />
10<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Manus Prava - When you defend with this art and exactly match your opponent's attack, your Resistance Total is halved for the next round.<br />
<br />
11<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Blunting Deflection - If you defend with this art and are hit but your opponent fails to exceed your Resistance Total with their Weakening Total, your Resistance Total gains +3 for the rest of the duel. This may only occur once per duel.<br />
<br />
12<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Praesidium Inconstans - Each time you use this art to defend against an opponent in a duel, you must roll a stress die + Stamina + Concentration against an East Factor of 9 or you are unable to use this art for defense on the following round.<br />
<br />
13<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>New Side Effect - You learn something else about using Parma Magica with this art in certamen. The effect is either of no mechanical benefit or has equal benefits and drawbacks as arbitrated by the troupe.<br />
<br />
<b>No Benefit</b>: Your experimentation produces no unusual results. However, your Lesson does generate progress toward your Breakthrough.<br />
<br />
<b>Complete Failure</b>: You get nothing from your efforts, and your season is wasted. Roll a simple die. On a 0, you lose your Dueling Lesson and cannot re-apply it. Otherwise, you may attempt to apply it again in a subsequent season.<br />
<br />
<b>Special or Story Event</b>: Either some effect not covered elsewhere occurs, or, at the storyguide’s option, an event unfolds as a result of your work which involves the entire covenant.<br />
<br />
<b>Discovery</b>: Roll a simple die and add your risk modifier.<br />
<br />
<b>Roll Result</b><br />
1–4 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You gain 15 experience points in Magic Theory.<br />
<br />
5–6 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You gain 15 experience points in Finesse, Penetration, or Parma Magica.<br />
<br />
7–8 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You gain three experience points in one of the Arts that is part of the Lesson.<br />
<br />
9 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You gain enough experience points to bring one of the Arts that is part of the Lesson to the next level (or three experience points, whichever is greater).<br />
<br />
10+ <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Roll twice, and reroll this result if it is generated again.<br />
Modified Study: Roll a simple die and add your risk modifier.<br />
<br />
<b>Roll Result</b><br />
1–3 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You receive half the expected experience points for your study.<br />
<br />
4–6 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>You receive double the expected experience points for your study.<br />
<br />
7–8 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Half of the experience gained does not go to the original study topic, but to Magic Theory.<br />
<br />
9–10 <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Experience granted by the study is applied to a different form, technique, or arcane ability used in certamen, but always with a like type (forms for forms, techniques for techniques, arcane abilities for arcane abilities). This is not chosen by you, but by the troupe.<br />
<br />
11+ <span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Experience granted by the study is applied to an entirely different art or arcane ability used in certamen and not even within the same category. I.e. a form grants experience to a technique, an arcane ability grants experience to a form, etc. This is not chosen by you, but by the troupe.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-44740661117178603912012-11-03T18:11:00.001-07:002012-11-03T22:05:13.992-07:00The Queen Needs No Advocate<a href="http://youtu.be/h2N_OMp3T8I">http://youtu.be/h2N_OMp3T8I</a><br />
<br />
In my career, I've been fortunate to spend a great deal of time involved in system design. Much of that time has been spent implementing or modifying established systems (e.g. Dungeons & Dragons and Fallout's SPECIAL system). Before I was employed in the industry, I spent a lot of time developing my own tabletop systems and modifying the systems of others, so this has always been something I've enjoyed doing.<br />
<br />
There are many pitfalls to system design and I believe most designers trip those pitfalls by moving into implementation details too quickly. I believe some keys to success in system design (and for design in general) are to establish clear goals, to frame what those goals will accomplish in terms of player experience, and to continually return to those goals and player experiences to ensure that nothing was lost in the details of implementation.<br />
<br />
I believe the most well-executed systems are ones where thoughtful players can accurately discern the designers' goals simply by scrutinizing the systems in action. Though not all players need to be able to do this, the ones who care to do so should be able to. Designers who succeed in creating systems that can be "reverse-engineered" in such a way have captured the soul of elegance in design.<br />
<br />
I sometimes look to traditional games for mechanical inspiration. One of the ones I think of most often is chess. Clocking in at over 1,000 years of play around the world, chess has had a lot of iteration time. I'm not an expert on chess strategy and I'm not a particularly good player, but I know chess well enough to take some simple lessons away from it. Two that I often rely on are lessons of <b>obvious value</b> and <b>orthogonally equivalent value</b>. These two lessons can be summarized by examing three chess pieces: the queen, the knight, and the bishop.<br />
<br />
When I look at any system, I examine both the system's design as well as the content that uses the system. I believe this is something that system designers should always do. A system is only as good as the content that makes use of it; content that fails to make use of a system (or vice versa) will always create a disappointing experience.<br />
<br />
The queen is typically the most powerful piece in chess (though not the most valuable; that role is reserved for the king). The queen's movement capabilities combine the lateral movement of the rook with the diagonal movement of the bishop. Even if you are learning chess for the first time, the fact that the queen combines the movement of two other pieces makes her relative power clear. A rook's ability to perform a castle, the knight's excellence at creating forks, and a the pawn's ability to capture an enemy pawn <i>en passant</i> are all capabilities that take a while for players to appreciate, but not the queen's movement. The queen's value is obvious.<br />
<br />
Gameplay consists of players making (more-or-less) informed decisions about what they need to do to overcome an obstacle. It is not enough for the obstacle to be clearly defined and communicated to players. They also need to have a clear understanding of what tools are at their disposal to solve the problem. In chess, the player's primary tools are his or her pieces. Though circumstances determine the value of pieces on any given move, no one needs to advocate the fundamental value of the queen in chess.<br />
<br />
As an extreme analogue in video games, it's unlikely that many players need to be told what the value of the HECU RPG is the first time they find one in Half-Life. After being pursued by a relentless Apache helicopter over numerous maps, the player winds up in a cave with the RPG on the ground and the Apache hovering outside. Players typically snatch up the RPG and blast the Apache in moments. Though the HECU is not the "queen" of Half-Life's weapons, it has obvious applicability in the circumstance where it appears.<br />
<br />
When designers develop tools, we should strive for clarity of primary purpose in a player's tools. The more obvious we make the value of the tools at a player's disposal, the more quickly the player will spend time fully engaged with the obstacles at hand instead of trying to figure out what they aren't "getting".<br />
<br />
Chess has various informal ranking systems for the relative value of pieces. The rankings are not used for scoring, but they are used to give players a rough idea of the strategic (not tactical) value of those pieces. In the most commonly used system, pawns have a value of 1, rooks have a value of 5, and queens have a value of 9. Knights and bishops are both rated at 3. Bishops move diagonally, always staying on their starting color, and knights are the "funny moving" pieces of chess, hopping two squares horizontally or vertically and one square vertically or horizontally, passing over other pieces along the way. Though their tactical applications in any given circumstance are completely dissimilar, the common ranking systems give them equal (or close to equal) strategic value in chess.<br />
<br />
Whether chess' numerous contributors intended for them to be equal in value by design or players collectively determined they were equal in value, today's players generally regard them as being so in spite of their radical differences. I.e., players treat them as having orthogonally equivalent value. Knights and bishops are considered equivalent in an orthogonal sense because their mechanics and applications do not overlap but they commonly create the same amount of benefit for players. Though bishops can move infinitely along their color, potentially from corner to corner, they lack the knight's ability to move over pieces.<br />
<br />
Dungeons & Dragons commonly presents choices in such a fashion. The most obvious examples are spells, which are grouped by level. In most editions of A/D&D, <i>haste </i>and <i>fireball </i>are 3rd level wizard/magic-user/sorcerer spells. Though the tactical relevance and application of these spells varies wildly, the games' designers established them as being equal.<br />
<br />
When we design tools for the player to use -- abilities, gear, options, upgrades -- options with ostensibly orthogonally equivalent value create interesting choices for the player. They also lend themselves to increased clarify of purpose. The more tools overlap in function, the less obvious it is to players why a given tool exists. The less tools overlap in function, the more those tools seem suited to a specific circumstance.<br />
<br />
While these are high-level design concepts, creating choices with obvious, easily differentiated values can make the low-level details much easier to execute and build upon. When a player is presented with strategic or tactical choices, he or she is always fundamentally asking the question, "Why do I want to make this choice instead of any of the others?" As designers, we want to communicate the answers to their questions as elegantly as possible. Ideally, the design of the player's tools and the game's content should be self-advocating, allowing players to reverse-engineer our intent and their range of choices without a word of explanation.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-90267201447248205182012-09-29T18:10:00.000-07:002012-09-29T18:10:05.188-07:00JSawyer.esp - v5.1A helpful modder going by the handle <b>xporc</b> graciously addressed some issues in my mod that I was having trouble resolving. After some back-and-forth to fix some display issues, JSawyer v5.1 is ready.<br />
<br />
Here's a high-level overview of what's substantively changed:<br />
<br />
* Hardcore (H2O/FOD/SLP) thresholds have been set to 400/550/700/850/1000 as originally intended for the mod. The HUD indicators now match this. However, because all "Hardcore" HUD indicators flip over at the same values, this means we had to change the Radiation thresholds (and Rad Child) to match. This means you can go a little bit longer before suffering ill effects from Radiation, but since the Hardcore acquisition rates are all faster than normal, I think players will still be doing more maintenance overall.<br />
* A bunch of dirty edits I had previously made have been cleaned up.<br />
* Various oversights have been fixed (details in the readme).<br />
<br />
<b>N.B.: Some of these fixes may not appear if you replace the mod for a game in progress.</b><br />
<br />
As always, it is available here:<br />
<br />
<a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip">http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip</a><br />
<br />
Thanks to <b>xporc </b>for his help with these problems. I will be using v5.1 as the starting point for a future v6 (if it is needed).J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com35tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-60179240387730625182012-09-29T07:03:00.001-07:002012-09-29T07:03:04.011-07:00JSawyer.esp - v5An updated version of JSawyer is now uploaded in the usual place:<br />
<br />
<a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip">http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip</a><br />
<br />
I have been unable to load the mod in FNVEdit to adjust the Dehydration/Starvation/Sleep Deprivation values, but here is the small list of changes since last time:<br />
<br />
<br />
v5 Changes:<br />
===<br />
9.29.2012<br />
* That Gun added to The Professional list<br />
* Wanderer's Leather and Highway Scar Armor placed in Mick and Cliff's stores respectively.<br />
* Ranger Battle Armor renamed to Lucky Battle Armor. Stats adjusted, Reilly's Rangers decals removed. Placed in Cliff's Store.<br />
* Has Backpack flag checked on Power Armors.<br />
* Bent Tin Can = Tin Can! recipe added. It turns Bent Tin Cans into Tin Cans!!!! WOW!!!!<br />
<br />
7.21.2012<br />
* All primary quest XP in DLCs reduced by 66%. Edits were made in the quest scripts.<br />
<br />
8.8.2012<br />
* Replaced accidental secondary placement of duplicate Mercenary's Grenade Rifle with the Sturdy Caravan Shotgun.<br />
* Fire Axe and Knock Knock added to Never Axed For This challenge weapon list.<br />
J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-62655787494451107742012-09-12T23:33:00.001-07:002012-09-13T07:51:42.197-07:00the black hound - what its deal wasIn the course of following our countdown over at <a href="http://www.obsidian.net/">Obsidian</a>, a lot of gamers have been discussing past IPs we've worked with. One of the common subjects is The Black Hound, a project some of us at OEI worked on at Black Isle. It's also something I worked on as a NWN2 mod in my spare time. There's a Wikipedia entry for it and a few lore sites kicking around. Some of the info on it is accurate and some isn't, but I think the details are less important than what we were trying to do with it. I can't speak for everyone who was on the project, of course, but TBH was important to me for a lot of reasons.<br />
<br />
When I came to Black Isle, the majority of the studio was working on Planescape: Torment. I was the webmaster for that project, but I desperately wanted to work in development as a designer. I had spent a huge amount of personal time in the 90s playing 2nd Edition AD&D in the Forgotten Realms. Working on Icewind Dale was a dream come true. Yeah, the game had a smaller story focus, and yeah, it didn't have companions, and yeah, and was linear and dungeon-focused, but <i>I was making a real AD&D video game in the Forgotten Realms</i>.<br />
<br />
Icewind Dale II is the first game I was credited as lead designer on, but I was the lead designer on TBH first. I felt that the Dalelands, bordering on the Moonsea, presented a cool subsection of the Realms and a crossroads of cultures that would be interesting to explore. We could build a personal story, focused on how <i>you</i> fatefully intersected the life of someone hell-bent on doing something crazy. Like many Realms adventures, this wasn't a world-shattering event, but something locally catastrophic, like Moander appearing near a town and devouring a huge swath of the landscape. It's just one of those <i>crazy Realms stories</i> where bands of adventurers and the Cult of the Dragon start throwing fireballs and leveling villages while the townsfolk run for cover.<br />
<br />
Some people have suggested that I hate high fantasy or want to subvert high fantasy. Neither of these are really true. I just don't like how most stories <i>handle</i> high fantasy: both too seriously and not seriously enough. Too seriously in the sense that a lot of fantasy conventions are considered so sacred that you can't touch them (or even question them). Not seriously enough in the sense that the scenarios and the characters don't feel like they tackle the obvious questions raised by the settings they're placed in.<br />
<br />
As an example, the Red Wizards of Thay (an FR magical organization/magocracy) underwent a transformation between 2nd Ed. and 3E. They became a "kinder, gentler" trading nation forming magical mercantile enclaves in lands that would let them in. The thing is, 2nd Ed./3E Red Wizards probably look <i>pretty weird</i> to Cormyreans and Dalesmen. They shave their heads (including the women), speak a different language, and have a lot of magical tattoos. They're also darker-skinned. After a few centuries of being regarded as pariahs everywhere west of the River Sur, they show up in these places and are doing business -- questionable business -- in broad daylight.<br />
<br />
The FR designers did something interesting in shifting their MO between 2nd Ed. and 3E. The <i>not interesting</i> thing to do (IMO) with that shift as a scenario or story designer would be to have a pack of bad guy Thayans in an enclave with the good guy locals saying, "Those darn Thayans are up to something, please help us, heroes." I was intrigued by the idea that a Thayan enclave could contain a "new guard" of diplomatic Red Wizards and an "old guard" of fireball-hurling hardasses who aren't allowed (or are discouraged from going) outside. Some of the new guard genuinely want to mend fences. Others simply want to use it as a way to re-establish safe power centers and observation posts in lands where they previously would have been killed on sight.<br />
<br />
The new guard use concealing/lightening makeup, don wigs, and wear "western" clothing to fit in. The old guard chafes at having to conceal their heritage and suffers under the jeers and slurs of locals if they dare to appear in public. The new guard speaks with good and proper "Common" grammar and pronunciation, not stumbling over foreign sounds and linguistic concepts. I thought it would create a more interesting and nuanced relationship between the Thayans, the Dalesman, and those who interacted with them, lending sympathy to the traditionally "villainous" and creating a more agonizing struggle between the sub-factions of the Thayans.<br />
<br />
An old evil wizard who strokes his beard and cackles as he unleashes chain lightning on random townsfolk isn't particularly sympathetic. But suppose he were a veteran Red Wizard who watched his fellows succumb over the years in service to the zulkirs and was forced to "step aside" as young <i>diplomats</i> smooth talked their way into trade relationships with their former enemies. He has to endure the insults of locals, hear them mock his clothing, his pronunciation, his skin, his culture. And when he expresses his frustration to his new (younger) "superiors", he's treated like an anachronism, an old artillery cannon left to rust and rot on a forgotten battlefield. That dude may still wind up casting chain lightning on townsfolk, but if we weave a compelling story around him, the player should feel that there's more to him than that.<br />
<br />
I've been rambling here a bit but let me get back to the main point: The Black Hound wasn't really *~ sUbVeRsIvE ~* "this ain't your daddy's RPG!" fantasy. It had elven ruins and fire genasi and Ilmaterian paladins and Maztican sorcerers and crypts full of undead -- all the stuff that made the Forgotten Realms the crazy blend of hardass adventurer-heavy, gods-mess-with-things, cults-and-dracoliches-under-this-rock D&D fantasy it always has been. I, and I think we all, just tried to approach the world with open eyes, asking, "Okay, so let's suppose all of this stuff about the Realms is true. What does that <i>really</i> mean for how the people in it live their lives?" It made the world more dark and grim, and sometimes that consideration wound up bucking convention, but we didn't set out to invert fantasy conventions just for the sake of doing it.
<br />
<br />
I regret that the team wasn't able to complete The Black Hound, and not just because of the time and passion we all invested in it. Some of my best tabletop RPG (and CRPG) memories come out of the Forgotten Realms. Huge, crazy, "how many more Volo's Guides can there be?" Forgotten Realms. I think those scenarios were memorable because the DMs/designers made compelling scenarios and the players gave a damn about each other and what was going on. If you take fantasy for granted, yeah, no one's going to get much out of it. I don't think we took anything for granted. We had an opportunity to make something that celebrated high fantasy without being enslaved by its conventions. In retrospect, there are a bunch of personal design choices I look back on and cringe at, but I don't regret the time I spent on it at all. When you enjoy the process of making something that much, it's hard to consider it time wasted. We had a lot of fun while it lasted.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-42859622073308254762012-07-23T01:20:00.002-07:002012-12-15T13:36:45.737-08:00Firearm Legislation: Why We Have So Much Trouble Talking About ItThis past week, there was a terrible massacre at an Aurora, Colorado theatre on the opening night of The Dark Knight Rises. The perpetrator used tear gas and a variety of firearms to inflict numerous casualties before being captured.<br />
<br />
As with the Gabby Giffords shooting and many other high-profile acts of extreme firearm violence, there was an immediate call for increased firearm legislation. This is an understandable reaction, but debates on the topic are almost universally unproductive, typically because they aren't actually debates. They are usually online shouting matches and polemics that are designed to draw agreement and ire. I'd like to give my perspective on firearm legislation and why discussions surrounding it often go so poorly.<br />
<br />
I grew up in Wisconsin, a state with a large population of hunters. Though my father hunted when he was young, he did not hunt at all as an adult. I had a BB gun and a pellet gun, but never had a non-air-powered firearm. My mother hated guns and still hates guns of all kinds. A few years ago, I started taking handgun safety classes and eventually purchased a Colt M1991, an updated version of the .45 ACP sidearm used by American armed forces from WWI to Vietnam and beyond. I also purchased some lever-action rifles, some military surplus WWII-era battle rifles, and a pump-action shotgun. I went to local indoor and outdoor ranges by myself and with friends who were also interested in firearms. I talked with range masters, gun store employees, and fellow shooters at the range on subjects ranging from practical to political.<br />
<br />
My interests were mostly academic. For better or worse, many video games feature firearms, and I don't like being ignorant about the things I work on. Don't get me wrong: I also enjoy shooting and maintaining firearms, but that enjoyment followed the academic interest. As with many of my hobbies, my interest peaked, tapered, and has fallen off. I'm about to sell most of my firearms, mostly because I don't have any practical use for them and I just don't get out to the range that often. I'm glad I learned what I have, but it's just not a big part of my life. One of the most important things I've learned is <i>what it's like to be a gun owner in America</i>. I believe it's helped me understand these debates much better than I previously had.<br />
<br />
In my (admittedly short) time as a gun owner, I've heard a lot of complaints from other gun owners about why they hate gun legislation. Some of it is rabid hostility, but it's foolish to dismiss all of it as such. I've also had a lot of criticism come my way for owning firearms and for going to ranges. From these two general perspectives, I have developed some theories about why gun control debates get <i>very </i>unproductive <i>very </i>quickly.<br />
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<b>Many of the people who are most vocal about firearm legislation are the people who understand firearms the least.</b> A subset of these people are even <i>proud</i> of the fact that they don't know anything about firearms. I believe this attitude is extraordinarily foolish. Ignorance leads to bad legislation, regardless of the subject. Most firearm legislation is <i>bad</i> because the public's understanding of the realities of firearms in America is <i>bad</i>. When I say the legislation is bad, I don't mean that it's bad because it tramples rights or isn't constitutional, but because <i>it doesn't even accomplish the things its advocates want it to accomplish</i>.<br />
<br />
The 1975 Firearm Controls Regulation Act (a.k.a. the D.C. handgun ban) accomplished virtually nothing because the legislation ignored the practical realities of how firearms are trafficked across state lines and how available they are across the country, legally or illegally. The Federal Assault Weapons Ban (AWB) was similarly ineffective because "assault weapons" as defined by the AWB are used in a fraction of firearm-related crimes.<br />
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<b>Many of the people who are most vocal about firearm legislation are transparently disingenuous about their end goals.</b> If your end goal is to reduce firearm-related crime, present your ideas and desires sincerely with that in mind. If your end goal is for all firearms to be banned and all extant civilian-owned firearms to be reclaimed and destroyed by the government, be sincere about that as well. There are many, many cases where people advocate legislation disingenuously. They suggest a modest restriction under the pretense of reform, but their actual desire is to make the United States a nation without civilian firearm ownership.<br />
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If you wonder why some firearm owners react to talk of incremental gun control as though their houses are going to be raided and they are going to be arrested for owning a bolt-action varmint rifle, it's because they don't believe in the sincerity of people advocating incremental legislation (and they are often right not to).<br />
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<b>The NRA is awful.</b> I know some firearm owners and NRA members are going to read this blog and be upset by that, but I find it hard to defend the NRA. It's an organization that frequently rabble-rouses and presents an eternal us-vs-them conflict to firearm owners. Many of their positions are extreme and unsupported. The NRA, along with many firearm manufacturers and gun store owners, "predicted" a huge storm of firearm legislation after Obama was elected.<br />
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Before his inauguration, there was an <i>astounding </i>market run on items that they "predicted" would be legislated or banned: >10 round magazines, certain types of ammunition, and anything previously covered by the AWB (that they said would be renewed despite virtually no signs the administration had any interest in doing so). AR-15 receivers were among the most insanely market-inflated, but many types of ammunition were also hoarded in large quantities. Gun store clerks were even re-selling ammunition "under the table" with dramatically increased prices.<br />
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The saddest thing is that gun owners across the country bought into it. All of it. For the past year, the NRA has been building up for the 2012 election, promising that Obama is going to go into firearm legislation overdrive if he is re-elected. Again, to date, there's no solid evidence this is going to happen, but the NRA is terribly good at spreading panic.<br />
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<b>The media is just as ignorant as the public.</b> It's also sensationalist. So despite the fact that the AR-15, one of the weapons used in the Aurora killings, fires a 5.56x45mm round realistically described as "mid-powered" (its parent round, .223 Remington, was developed for hunting "varmints" -- rabbits, coyotes, squirrels, etc.), many papers and blogs describe it as "high-powered" or "fearsome".<br />
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Writers will also draw similarities between situations that aren't really relevant, but promote radical panic. The Aurora shooter used a Glock. Jared Loughner, the man who shot Gabrielle Giffords, also used a Glock. These facts shouldn't be that surprising considering that the majority of police departments across the country use Glocks and it's one of the most popular brands of semi-automatic civilian handgun around. <br />
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Some people may say that these points of contention don't matter. When it comes to legislation, those points are very important, and popular opinion often drives legislation. When gun owners scoff at advocates of fingerprinting when people buy "handgun ammo" or restricting the sale of "assault weapons", it's because those quoted terms are vague or nonsense. Unfortunately, many members of the public become concerned about these specific ideas because they're the things that reporters in the media promote, regardless of relevance.<br />
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<b>Proposed actions are often radical and irrationally focused instead of progressive and comprehensive.</b> These discussions happen in cycles, usually launched by a national (or international) tragedy. Specific things happen in the tragedy: Glocks are used, large-capacity magazines are used, a certain type of ammunition is used. Instead of looking at national (and international) trends in firearm ownership and crime, people get hung up on the specifics of the tragedy: ban Glocks, ban large-capacity magazines, ban this type of ammunition. For many reasons, it's important to talk about the specifics, but legislating around the specifics usually doesn't solve larger problems. Most of the time, it doesn't solve <i>any</i> problems, and the divide between firearm owners and gun control advocates grows even larger.<br />
<br />
Widespread firearm ownership, legal and illegal, is a practical reality in the United States. Gun violence, even adjusted for population, is also a much larger issue here than it is in most ostensibly "peaceful" countries. It is sad that the salient times we have to discuss these problems are often preceded by terrible events like the Aurora shootings. It is even more unfortunate that all sides of the debate spend so much of their energy locked in fruitless arguments instead of approaching the subject with sober, sincere, and considerate minds.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-54624634056097098722012-07-19T02:36:00.000-07:002012-07-19T08:45:16.194-07:00Art and Appreciation<br />
I grew up in a household where one of my parents was self-employed. My mother began a career at a magazine publisher when I was young. Barring a few short stints in the late 70s and 80s when he worked as a full-time employee for various companies, my father has been a freelance sculptor for the entirety of my life. He has sculpted belt buckles, busts, fountains, seals reading books on benches, giant flamingos, torch-bearing Sauks, lamp posts, Erté-inspired art deco female figurines, the Fonz, and myriad corporate doo-dads. He also draws and paints. In our house, there's a painting of me sitting on the steps of our old house in Caledonia, Wisconsin. On another wall, there's a huge painting of some insane abstract <i>whatever </i>he made long ago. And on his computer, he uses his Wacom tablet daily to make some of the most bizarre, Boschian, hellish landscapes I've ever seen.<br />
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I never really made a distinction between these things as "art" or "not art". In my mind, I considered all of them to be art. It never crossed my mind that the commercial pieces were less art than the personal pieces, or that the giant abstracts were more art than the portraits of family members and friends. Many people attach personal drive and tenacity to artistic merit. Surrender of drive, surrender of vision, surrender of principle -- that's selling out. I never associated this with my father because, to be frank, in his professional dealings he's often been stubborn, hot-tempered, and implacable. It didn't matter if he was working for a school district, the city of Milwaukee, or a self-made billionaire. If you asked him to make a change that he thought was bad, the response was fast and often not diplomatic.<br />
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There is much to be admired in the attitude, if not always the ferocity of the response: the principle, the confidence, the determination. It says, "<i>I</i> am the artist. <i>I</i> am the one who makes the decision." This attitude is not always rewarded, and it is typically not respected by the people who are likely to do the rewarding: the clients. Throughout my life, I've watched my father sculpt many things for many clients. I've seen him frustrated and triumphant as our family went through financial ups and downs. I can't remember a time that I ever went hungry, that I ever felt poor, thanks to my parents, but I could tell that it troubled him. To me, there was no importance on the labels: "art", "fine art", "commercial art". The importance was the struggle. How important is it to satisfy an audience? Does your work need to have an audience? Can you make a bad choice and fix it later? Do you need to communicate something? Do you need to pay the rent? Do you give a shit if this person hates your guts? Does it matter if you lose all future work with this client? Are you willing to live or die on this one point?<br />
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After growing up with a sculptor; working with video game artists, writers, and musicians, for over a decade; and living with a traditional painter for almost as long, I developed a maxim for how I would approach creative work: <b>Do anything you want to do in life. Just don't expect anyone to pay you or respect you for it.</b><br />
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This, to me, is the razor. It's the distillation of any creative struggle with the audience: is the critical or financial approval of the audience worth making a creative choice you think is inferior? The audience may change: your co-workers, your boss, your client, your lover, your mother, the critics, the public. You give different audiences different weight, sometimes capriciously, sometimes rationally. Different issues may weigh on you more heavily than others. Sometimes it's easy to let go. Sometimes it hurts like hell. Sometimes you won't budge on principle. Sometimes you won't budge because <i>fuck you, idiot</i>.<br />
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We often use <i>art </i>and the <i>authority </i>of the artist (or the author, or the director, etc.) as an abstract shield to justify choices we make contrary to the desires of an audience. We make a choice, an audience complains, and sometimes -- all too often -- we say, "Sorry, but <i>art</i>." This is unproductive deflection. This is an absurd, conversation-ending non-argument. It is presented as a wall that no criticism can breach. How is the critic intended to respond?<br />
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Someone doesn't like how you portrayed a character. Someone doesn't like how you ended a story. Someone doesn't like how you framed your shots. "Art" as defense is not a response to criticism, it is a hollow <i>rejection </i>of criticism. It does not encourage dialogue, it does not promote introspection, and it does not (typically) ameliorate the audience's displeasure. At its worst, such a defense encourages non-topical arguments about the nature of art itself. These discussions, in which no parties are ever victorious, quickly spiral so far away from the actual point of criticism that they often never return.<br />
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When I see this, I ask myself: is this how authors and audiences <i>should </i>interact? I don't think so. I think both the author and the audience deserve, and can benefit, more from honest appraisals of why we make the choices we makes. Stop talking about "art". Stop talking about "entitlement". How does casting blame elevate and advance conversation about the work? This is about questioning our work, our choices, our relationship (or lack thereof) with the audience.<br />
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<b>Ultimately, our works are our answers to those questions.</b> Implicitly, what we give to our audience is indicative of our values. Everything that follows -- the sales, the reviews, the debates, the revisions, the re-releases -- should be viewed as tools for the authors and audience to reinforce or recalibrate those values for future work. Unless an author plans on quitting creative endeavors after the next project he or she completes, this process is something all of us will go through for life.<br />
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If you want to end a conversation, to cut off communication, it's easy enough to deflect criticism. Assuming you do make your work for an audience, you probably don't make it for all audiences. Sometimes, the <i>fuck you, idiot</i> instinct is the right one. If you don't want that audience to respect you or pay for your work, cut them loose; they're not worth your time and you're not worth theirs. But most of us can also accept a certain amount of dissatisfaction within our target audience. We make choices, some members of the audience are dissatisfied, but we still suspect they're the right choices. For those people, and for the rest of the audience, we have the ability to engage them, to <i>sincerely </i>explain our values and hear theirs.<br />
<br />
All people engaged in a life of creative work have to fight battles against their shifting priorities. We all make trade-offs, one way or another. The more we illuminate the specific twists and turns of our own choices, and the struggles involved in making them, the more everyone can gain from the exchange.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-58070676536495171882012-05-15T22:47:00.002-07:002012-05-15T22:48:21.056-07:00JSawyer.esp - v4Yeah, I don't have a good excuse for why it took me this long to update the JSawyer mod. But the battle.net outage gave me a nice chunk of time to fix up a few things. Updating the mod should not conflict with your current save games, but what do I know?<br />
<br />
As always, it is located here:<br />
<br />
<a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip">http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip</a><br />
<br />
<br />
v4 Changes:<br />
===<br />
5.15.2012<br />
* Added regular Hatchet to I Never Axed For This challenge + perk.<br />
* Fixed critical hit chance on Certified Tech perk.<br />
* Tin Cans and Bent Tin Cans weight from 1.0 to 0.1.<br />
<br />
4.22.2012<br />
* Tribal Pack items moved to a *~ Secret Location ~* (see End of Document)<br />
* Caravan Pack items moved to a *~ Secret Location ~*<br />
* Old CS scripts adding items to Chet's invetory have had those lines commented out.<br />
* New (single) message indicates items are placed around the Mojave Wasteland.<br />
* I Never Axed For This challenge and perk added.<br />
<br />
4.14.2012<br />
* Classic Pack items moved to a *~ Secret Location ~*<br />
* Mercenary Pack items moved to a *~ Secret Location ~*<br />
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2.12.2012<br />
* Level cap properly set to 15, adjusts up to 35 with all DLC. This was stealth fixed for v3 a day after launch, but there you go.<br />
* Auto-Inject Stimpaks and Super Stimpaks set to match Stimpak / Super Stim healing rates.<br />
* Expired Stimpak set to 50 VAL from 75.<br />
* Set the Roughin' It! Bedroll Kit ingestible to 10 lbs. from 15.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com27tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-5730474653297383822012-05-10T00:17:00.000-07:002012-05-10T00:17:13.787-07:00on, wisconsinIn less than a month, Wisconsinites will go to their polling places to cast a vote in the gubernatorial recall election. If you are unaware, Governor Scott Walker came under intense criticism for a series of bills he supported that weakened unions. Of specific note, collective bargaining rights were stripped from unions. A non-trivial section of the populace, supported by unions from within Wisconsin and from other other states, staged large protests at the capitol in Madison.<br />
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Additionally, the "Wisconsin 14", fourteen Democrats from the state senate, fled the state to stall passage of the bills. The protests and senatorial hijinks continued for months, with counter-protests forming and the political tone in Wisconsin becoming increasingly venomous and partisan. While I did not return to Wisconsin, I did attend a support protest at Los Angeles City Hall.<br />
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Even there, the tone was often mocking and negative. When I talked to people back home, I was dismayed by tendencies to demonize and belittle. Even though I supported blocking Governor Walker's bills and maintaining unions' collective bargaining rights, it was painful for me to see my home's political climate, so moderate and civil in my lifetime, turn bitter, inconsiderate, and zealous.<br />
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My mother's parents were union folks. Her father helped form a machinist's union and both he and my grandmother served as local presidents. My father's father was a shoemaker and a farmer. There were no unions for him. No unions for my father (sculptor) or me (game designer). I'm fine with not being in a union. I'm glad I am paid very well and receive good benefits, but I understand that not everyone has it so easy. I'm glad that unions can be formed and can collectively bargain for rights. I also understand that, like any organization, unions are made of people, and people can be bad. Some unions are terrible, locally and nationally.<br />
<br />
For me, the issue was never to place unions in a position superior to businesses; I don't think there's anything inherently virtuous about either group of people. I just thought Walker's bills pushed the balance too far. Maybe those who supported them thought they were fine, but certainly they could see why unions exist... right? Certainly those who supported unions could see why some would criticize some union practices... right? This is the state that produced "Fighting Bob" La Follette, and Russ Feingold, but elected Tommy Thompson governor for four terms and historically has a fair split of Democrat/Republican presidential results (excepting 1924, when it went Progressive). We enacted the Wisconsin Idea, La Follette and the Progressives' vision of the UW system working with the government to produce better lives for all Wisconsinites. We've been a state of farmers, cheesemakers, manufacturers, brewers, fishers, and miners. To me, Wisconsinites have always seemed on board with working things out and using common sense. I may have been mistaken.<br />
<br />
When I visited Wisconsin for two weeks in February of this year, I saw more hostile political billboards, lawn signs, and bumper stickers than I had in the twenty-three years I lived in the state. The recall primary, which took place yesterday, was months away and the protests were almost a year in the past, but people were still mad. Mad about everything. A family friend came over to the house. When he walked in, he pointed to everyone in the room and said, "We're all Democrats here, right? Right?" He was joking, but not really.<br />
<br />
I don't feel my expectations are too high. I don't expect people not to be mad. I don't expect them not to yell, not to protest, not to rally. I just expect them to not shake and sputter with hate, not to threaten and insult those who disagree with them, not to belittle physical or other personal characteristics of their opponents. Maybe they do that in <i>other</i> states, but not in Wisconsin... right?<br />
<br />
There's a little less than a month to go before the recall. I support Tom Barrett even though he is not "the union" candidate. I don't feel Wisconsin needs "a union" governor. In my opinion, it needs a governor who understands that there should be a balance between the power of unions and the power of corporations. If you disagree in any way, that's fine. It's all fine. We can talk about it and vote about it (well, you can vote about it, I can pay property taxes and complain if Barrett loses). We can be civil. We can earnestly accept the other side is trying to do the right thing. In the end, I'm less concerned with who winds up in the capitol and more concerned with how the electorate winds up, how we see each other and treat each other. Though I've lived in California for thirteen years, I've always considered Wisconsin to be my home. I don't want it to be just another place where partisans spit fire and tear each others' throats out.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com17tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-71083215437320813762012-03-21T00:59:00.002-07:002012-03-21T08:19:04.939-07:00Bicycle Building: The Adventure BeginsA few years ago, following a long absence from bicycling, I got back into riding. I was initially training for a sprint triathlon, but knee damage ended that in the 9th week of training, just before the triathlon. I stopped running and swimming, but I kept cycling. I can't resist learning about machines and attempting to mess with them, so I inevitably decided to modify a commuter bike I bought. Last summer, I built up a road bike from a Milwaukee/Waterford frame. This year, I built up a Handsome/Twin Six frame into a single-speed cyclocross (SS CX) bike.<br />
<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/images/bikes/handsome_t6_ss_cx_01.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="280" src="http://diogenes-lamp.info/images/bikes/handsome_t6_ss_cx_01.jpg" width="320" /></a></div><br />
<br />
I have another bike in the works, a titanium-framed hillclimber. If this sounds excessive, I agree. Five bikes is a bit much, but I really do enjoy the process of researching and selecting parts, then building up the bike. I enjoy artistic things as well, so the next logical step in my mind is to build and paint a lugged steel frame. This involves buying <a href="http://www.henryjames.com/productlug.html">steel lugs and tubing</a>, then welding (well, brazing, really) the frame together. I don't need any more bikes, so I offered to build a bike for a friend. She is currently going along with it. I will not "out" her in case she changes her mind, but hopefully she will see it through. To keep things inexpensive and classic, I'm using an 80s Italian groupset (Ofmega, Colnago, Campagnolo, and Ambrosio parts) I picked up off of Ebay. They should look nice with a lugged steel frame.<br />
<br />
I've ordered a "<a href="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1640002012/the-jiggernaut-bringing-bicycle-frame-building-to">Jiggernaut</a>", though this first frame may have to be done without a jig. I'm going to be pretty straightforward with it, though I may wrestle with some problems when it comes to the frame geometry. The would-be rider is... not tall, which means the frame size will be in the 50cm-52cm range. The quill stem is non-adjustable and has a 125mm reach -- pretty long. The wheels that came with the groupset are 700c -- standard size for larger frames.<br />
<br />
What does this all mean? Well, it all adds up to something called <b>toe overlap</b>. When a rider pedals, his or her feet travel in a circle that comes near the back of the front wheel. No big deal, typically. When the rider turns the handlebars, the front wheel moves in front of one of the feet/pedals, but the bicycle's frame geometry ensures that the feet remain clear of the wheel. If a bicycle frame gets smaller and the wheel size remains the same, the danger of toe overlap, i.e. the pedaling foot overlapping the wheel, increases. There are ways to solve this:<br />
<br />
* Use 650c wheels. Smaller wheels = shorter radius from hub to tire = less risk of toe overlap. It requires 650c rims, which means I would have to buy those rims, new spokes and nipples, then lace and true them. It also means that the fork and rear triangle of the frame would have to be designed for 650c wheels; rim brakes have to be set up to reach the rim from where they are mounted, so you can't just throw smaller wheels on a bike built for larger ones.<br />
<br />
* Increase the length of the top tube. A longer top tube means the head tube (where the fork sits) is farther away from the bottom bracket (where the cranks turn). Fork farther away = wheel farther away = less risk of overlap. But again, the rider is small, so this will force her to stretch out, possibly uncomfortably unless I...<br />
<br />
* Keep the stem short. The stem of a bicycle connects the handlebars to the fork/steerer. A shorter stem means the rider is less stretched out. Unfortunately, my stem is a quill stem with a fixed 125mm length, so that's non-adjustable.<br />
<br />
* Use shorter cranks. Pedals are mounted on crank arms. These come in different lengths. Shorter cranks = less overlap. Of course, these cranks are 170mm. Not especially long, but not short.<br />
<br />
* Change the head tube angle. This only goes so far, especially with lugs (which are cast with certain angles in mind). Essentially "turning" the fork and wheel away from the bike by changing the head tube angle can help prevent overlap, but... it's not really viable.<br />
<br />
So this is my first big challenge, and most of it is self-inflicted. As I start plotting out the target frame geometry, I'll post more updates. Until then, here's a picture of the Colnago headset and 3TTT Colnago stem.<br />
<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/images/bikes/colnago_stem_headset.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="213" src="http://diogenes-lamp.info/images/bikes/colnago_stem_headset.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-31766554244045891782012-03-19T23:30:00.000-07:002012-03-19T23:30:55.463-07:00Kickstarter and Fanvestor-Oriented Game DesignI'm really happy to see game developers like <a href="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/66710809/double-fine-adventure">Double Fine</a> and <a href="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/inxile/wasteland-2">inXile</a> making high profile Kickstarter-funded projects. I think these are great opportunities to give smaller groups of motivated fans niche products that would have difficulty finding publisher or venture capital funding. Great. This is why every fan loves it, really.<br />
<br />
A semi-rhetorical problem I've seen folks propose is, "How do you deal with fans when they're direct investors in the product's development? Fans don't know what they want." Should forum posters define the parameters of a game's systems? Its story? Should fans be allowed to design a new ending for a game via crowd-sourcing if a bunch of people are mad about it? How do you reconcile fans' conflicting interests?<br />
<br />
This seems like an odd problem to propose, as though <i>now</i>, suddenly, the wants and needs of a diverse paying audience become problematic because they're kickstarting the game's development. They're still the endusers; that hasn't changed. What's removed are random staff members -- production, marketing, PR -- at the publisher shifting the project around in the pitch phase, pre-production, and during development. Even though we're in the defining moments of this nascent trend, I have to forecast this as purely beneficial for everyone directly involved.<br />
<br />
I started my career as a web developer for Black Isle Studios. I was the moderator for a number of high-traffic message boards. Facilitating interaction between the developers and community has always been important to me. You can't make everyone happy, certainly, but you can help the community understand what you're doing -- and why. When the community gains this understanding, their expectations can be framed in a way that appreciates the process the developers go through. Not everyone will agree with the decisions developers make, but that's fine -- you can't make everyone happy, whether you're being funded by a publisher or the endusers. We shouldn't try to. But we should all try to engage our audience in the spirit of genuine interest, listen to what they have to say, give honest feedback, and formulate an experience that they will enjoy.<br />
<br />
Design isn't about asking a client what he or she wants and then doing it, verbatim. It's not about trying to make everyone happy. It's about understanding the myriad, often conflicting wants and needs of a defined, diverse audience and developing a product that brings them satisfaction. Satisfaction can come after shock, after frustration, after disappointment. These moments of pain and fear don't detract, but add to the richness and enjoyment of the final product. Like anything worth our love and devotion, the process to achieve it is often a struggle. The worst we can do is disappoint our fans -- but that's always been the case. For crowd-funded games, it's just gamers and game-makers. It may not be the way all games can be (or even should be) made, but I'm so glad it's an option, and I hope that everyone involved embraces the potential for sincere collaboration and feedback it presents to us.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-84541777254737333362012-03-11T23:33:00.002-07:002012-03-11T23:46:32.943-07:00Do (Say) The Right Thing: Choice Architecture, Player Expression, and Narrative Design in Fallout: New VegasTerrible title for a GDC talk, I know, but it turns out the convention guides had no written descriptions of the sessions, so at least the topic was (hopefully) clear.<br />
<div><br />
</div><div>Eventually, GDC will make a video of this session available at the GDC Vault, though I believe it will require some form of membership. You can check out my slides here in .pdf form.</div><div><br />
</div><div><a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/GDC12_Do_Say_The_Right_Thing.pdf">http://diogenes-lamp.info/GDC12_Do_Say_The_Right_Thing.pdf</a> </div><div><br />
</div><div>Based on feedback I've seen online, I want to attempt to clarify a few things:</div><div><br />
</div><div>* My inclusion of the ME2 "ass" screenshot was to highlight its absurdity. In the context of that slide, it's an example of how developers have improved things like butt-framing shots but haven't made great strides in choice architecture. I don't have any problem with improving aesthetics, but I believe we should continue to refine how we develop choices for players.</div><div><br />
</div><div>* When I was discussing karma/reputation displays of +1/-1, I wasn't championing karma systems, but I was championing visible changes in the GUI for all of what I call "Indirect Reaction Systems" (e.g. karma, reputation, influence, etc.). I think mechanical clarity is more important than immersion, and characters vary heavily in how much they emote reactions.</div><div><br />
</div><div>* Validating all choices specifically <i>does not</i> mean that they should all be subjectively equal. I gave two examples of "good" choice agony from Greek tragedy: Orestes and Antigone. Both of these characters have two choices for one decision. The choices have good aspects and bad aspects, but they are not "six of one / half a dozen of the other". The values implied by each choice are subjective. There is not a single right thing to do for each character: both choices contain virtue and sacrifice -- and both are valid. Validation also does not need to come through mechanics, though using something like reputation or influence (i.e. an Indirect Reaction System) can make an abstracted validation easier than hand-scripting specific benefits and drawbacks to every choice.<br />
<br />
EDIT: For a more contemporary example, please see Mookie's choice at the end of Spike Lee's film Do the Right Thing, from which the title of this talk was borrowed.</div><div><br />
</div><div>I apologize for poor communication on these points. If you have any other questions or criticism, please feel free to post them here or on my Formspring page. Thanks.</div><div><br />
</div><div><a href="http://www.formspring.me/JESawyer">http://www.formspring.me/JESawyer</a> </div>J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-64294070561641214492012-02-17T09:18:00.000-08:002012-02-17T09:24:07.613-08:00Fallout weapon skillsFolks like to talk about weapons and weapon skills in Fallout. I'm one of those folks. Since I played the original Fallout, I disliked how the skills were organized. Even in Fallout: New Vegas, I wasn't entirely happy with how I laid out the skills (though I was glad that Big Guns went away). Instead of going through all of the reasons at length, I'm going to summarize, below:<br />
<br />
1) In a game where a player makes an investment in a variety of skills, I believe those skills should be applicable from the beginning of the game to the end of the game. In F1, that wasn't the case with Small Guns/Big Guns/Energy Weapons. In F:NV, it was true for Guns and EWs, but it resulted in a lot of weapon role redundancy between the two skills.<br />
<br />
2) I believe taking different skills should change the gameplay of the character. This really has never been true between Small Guns/Guns/EWs. You pretty much use all of them the same way, especially because of role redundancy or application overlap (cf. Laser and Sniper Rifles in F1, Anti-Materiel Rifle and Gauss Rifle in F:NV). It's also not true of Unarmed/Melee Weapons.<br />
<br />
3) Not really my beef, but often comes up from other players: EWs in F:NV don't feel suitably powerful compared to conventional firearms. This comes from 1), where I wanted players in the early game to have access to items that consistently made use of their EW skill. Thus, you end up with Laser Pistols and Plasma Pistols that don't feel dramatically different from 9mm Pistols and .357 Magnum Revolvers. They're all starter weapons.<br />
<br />
4) Again, not a personal concern, but an issue for many players: there are a <i>ton </i>of weapons and ammo types in F:NV. Even taking subtypes out of the mix, there are far more base types than in any other Fallout game, and an arsenal of weapons -- some people like this, some don't. My concern as a designer is that people are overwhelmed by the number of items and cease to be able to sort, distinguish, and make intelligent choices about what to use, and when. And the more weapons there are, the more difficult they are to balance.<br />
<br />
I think there are a number of ways that you can organize weapon skills in Fallout. Based on discussions I've had recently about the above problems, I advocate reducing skill point pools further, folding more skills together, and cutting down the number of base weapon and ammo types. Guns and EWs become Guns, Melee Weapons and Unarmed become Melee, and Explosives stands alone (but absorbs Flamers, Incinerators, and like weapons).<br />
<br />
Doing this, you could cut a large number of similar ammunition and base weapon types (e.g. 9mm, 20 Ga. 12.7mm, .357 Magnum, .45-70 Gov't, .50MG and their related weapons), have three weapon skills that feel distinctive, and allow laser and plasma weapons to occupy only mid- and high-end power roles (e.g. Laser Pistols get introduced around mid-game, with weapons like the Plasma Rifle appearing in the late game).<br />
<br />
The main consequence from a role-playing perspective would be that certain character concepts would not be consistently viable. The post-apocalyptic cowboy and grunt would be missing their Brush Guns and LMGs because those roles would likely have been supplanted by EWs (or reduced in power, replacing other items like Trail Carbines/Assault Rifles). In this regard, it would be similar to F1 in progression, but without the late-game skill shift. It may be that mods could help conventional firearms creep up into the heavens, but the intended design would imply that players who take this approach are essentially handicapping themselves.<br />
<br />
From my perspective, balancing and loot distribution would become much easier and I'd have more confidence that players would intuitively "get" the sort of gameplay they expect when they focus in one of the three weapon skills. I've seen way, <i>way </i>too many players fumble around with F:NV's arsenal during playtests and Let's Play videos to have confidence that more than 50% of the players are making informed decisions (pre-patch Service Rifle against NCR Heavy Troopers when there's an AMR in your inventory? OKAY!). Perks would also have to be re-organized and, in some-cases, re-designed, but in some cases, this would clearly be a good thing (e.g. almost all of the Melee/Unarmed-oriented perks would no longer need redundant either/or skill conditionals).<br />
<br />
In conclusion,<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbmipLhow1v1W6Nxw7uTLyKAqyNf4g43qdyoTJNqzqVYaMy5bSwELIOCj7L6FmoYJwhw74zitkpn5z2PVBJo_W-u4iX56MBCAzMnU4MToSvFN7MAurJZYiokj7HGl9EsknrE7BnPTHCpU/s1600/Lead_Dealer.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbmipLhow1v1W6Nxw7uTLyKAqyNf4g43qdyoTJNqzqVYaMy5bSwELIOCj7L6FmoYJwhw74zitkpn5z2PVBJo_W-u4iX56MBCAzMnU4MToSvFN7MAurJZYiokj7HGl9EsknrE7BnPTHCpU/s1600/Lead_Dealer.png" /></a></div>J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com35tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-25956289332094572202012-01-30T06:46:00.000-08:002012-01-30T06:46:07.947-08:00JSawyer.esp - v3I had hoped to tackle some of the more difficult bugs for this version, but my lack of scripting ability proved to be troublesome. I will likely not be able to update the mod again before Ultimate Edition comes out, so unfortunately some of the issues like Chet's store refreshing/clearing the Courier's Stash items won't be addressed in time.<br />
<br />
I will likely make one more update after this, but because some of the bugs I'd like to address are more difficult to fix, it may be a while before that update is ready.<br />
<br />
As before, the mod is here: <a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip">http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip</a><br />
<br />
<br />
<b>v3 Changes:</b><br />
<b>===</b><br />
<b>1.8.2012</b><br />
* THE MOST IMPORTANT BUG HAS BEEN FIXED: "HAS BACKPACK" HAS BEEN CHECKED ON ALL RANGER COMBAT ARMOR AND RIOT GEAR!!!!!!! WOWOWOWOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!<br />
* Sturdy Caravan Shotgun added to ShotgunSurgeonWeaponsList<br />
* Super Slam, Piercing Strike, Unstoppable Force, Slayer set to have OR conditionals for equivalent Unarmed or Melee Weapon skill levels.<br />
* Lead Belly now negates ST penalty from eating raw meat (of all kinds).<br />
* IsHardcore condition on raw meat ST reduction removed. This means you will always suffer ST loss from eating raw meat unless you have Lead Belly.<br />
* Ninja now adds 15% to Critical Hit Chance with Melee/Unarmed (instead of multiplying by 1.15). Prereq allows Melee Weapons or Unarmed to qualify.<br />
* Lady Killer and Cherchez La Femme damage bonuses increased from 10% to 15% due to proportionally lower numbers of female characters in the game.<br />
* Demolition Expert now has only 2 ranks. Each rank grants +10% damage and +10% larger explosion radius. Don't worry; Explosives are still very powerful.<br />
* Marksman Carbine and All-American removed from Grunt list.<br />
* Battle Rifle and This Machine added to Grunt list.<br />
* Mercenary's Grenade Rifle, Great Bear Grenade Rifle, and Red Victory Grenade Rifle added to Grunt list.<br />
* Plasma Spaz now (also) increases attack rate with plasma weapons by 20%.<br />
* Rad Absorption now decreases radiation 10x faster (was 1 per 20 seconds is now 1 per 2 seconds).<br />
* In Shining Armor perk condition fixed to get the Attacker Weapon as EnergyWeapons.<br />
* Stonewall DT bonus vs. Melee/Unarmed weapons increased from 5 to 10.<br />
* Missing metal armors (NCR Salvaged Power Armor, Gecko-Backed, etc.) added to In Shining Armor list.<br />
* Composite Recon Armor removed from In Shining Armor list.<br />
* Loneseome Road metal armors and helmets (e.g. Armor of the 87th Tribe, Marked Beast helmets) added to In Shining Armor lists.<br />
* Elijah's Last Words Attack Speed bonus replaced with 25% damage bonus and extended to Unarmed weapons. Condition set up properly.<br />
* Elijah's Ramblings Melee Weapons critical hit bonus dropped to 25%<br />
* Roughin' It Bedroll Kit weight dropped from 15 to 10<br />
* Blood Sausage healing effect dropped from 5 points per second to 2 points per second.<br />
* Blood Sausage and Black Blood Sausage marked as Food Items (affected by Survival and count toward Desert Survivalist).<br />
* Thin and Thick Red Pastes marked as Food Items.<br />
* Red Pastes and Blood Sausages VAL reduced to the 5-15 range as an economy-preserving measure. All now Restore Starvation in Hardcore.<br />
* Them's Good Eatin' drop rate lowered from 50% to 15%.<br />
* Implant GRX daily uses dropped from 5 to 2 and 10 to 3 for each rank, respectively.<br />
<br />
<b>1.22.2012</b><br />
* Logan's Loophole updated to max out at 21 (was 20) since someone pointed out that the age limit in the book was 21 (30 in the film and original perk).<br />
* Meltdown now only triggers from plasma weapon kills (anything affected by Plasma Spaz). This was previously an undocumented change (sorry).<br />
* Cass's Caravan Shotgun spread reduced and DAM/Crit DAM increased significantly (due to her relatively late acquisition in the game).J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com39tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-62966506439697013912012-01-08T17:18:00.000-08:002012-01-08T17:21:43.821-08:00JSawyer.esp - v2A little while back, I released a mod for Fallout: New Vegas. I made a few errors and omissions in the process. I think I've addressed the majority of them. Below is the list of new changes (vs. the initial release). As before, the mod can be downloaded here:<br />
<br />
<a href="http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip">http://diogenes-lamp.info/jsawyer_fnv_mod.zip</a><br />
<br />
<br />
===<br />
v2 Changes:<br />
<br />
1.1.2012<br />
* Logan's Loophole modified to cut the player's advancement off at 20th level. I know that ruins the reference but...<br />
* Broad Daylight level prereq from 36 to 24, Sneak 70 prereq added<br />
* Certified Tech level prereq from 40 to 24, Sneak 90 prereq added<br />
* Just Lucky I'm Alive, Thought You Died, Ain't Like That Now prereqs from 50 to 34.<br />
* Gum Drops from 1.0 to 0.25 weight.<br />
* Bubblegum from 1.0 to 0.1 weight. Wow!<br />
<br />
1.2.2012<br />
* Reverted XP halving to address more comprehensively through iXPBase and iXPBumpBase<br />
* iXPBase set to 275 (from 200) & iXPBumpBase set to 200 (from 150) - Increasing required XP by a little more than 1/3.<br />
* Lowered base player HP (before any bonuses) from 100 to 50.<br />
* Reverted fPCBaseHealthMult change as it had no obvious effect.<br />
* Lowered fADVHealthEnduranceMult from 15 to 10.<br />
* Vanilla F:NV HP formula: 100 + (End * 20) + ([Level - 1] * 5) -- JSawyer HP formula: 50 + (End * 10) + ([Level - 1] * 5)<br />
* Sierra Madre Martini HP bonus dropped from 75 to 40.<br />
<br />
1.3.2012<br />
* Adjusted Dale Barton's, Lacey's, and Little Buster's Caravan decks.<br />
* Reduced weight of non-Salisbury Steaks (Coyote, Dog, Gecko) from 1.0 to 0.8<br />
* Switched all Pre-Order items to be sold at Chet's store. Nothing is given to the player outside of what Doc Mitchell hands him or her.<br />
* Switched all Pre-Order message boxes to corner messages.<br />
* Unique Pre-Order item prices raised to slightly above their non-unique counterparts.<br />
* Mercenary's Grenade rifle weight dropped from 5.5 to 5, health bumped from 100 to 120.<br />
* Mod slots removed from Weathered 10mm Pistol.<br />
* Metal Armor and Lightweight Metal armor Health set to 200.<br />
* All Raider armor weights dropped from 15 to 7.5.<br />
<br />
1.5.2012<br />
* Merc Outfits all given two bonuses: one weapon skill at +10, one non-weapon at +5. The exception is Merc Charmer: three non-com at +5.<br />
* Normal Merc Outfits all given 3 DT.<br />
* "Unique" versions have "Reinforced" added to front of name. Value from 50 to 1200, DT set to 8.<br />
* Raider armors all given misc bonuses. Unique versions have those bonuses + weapon skill bonuses.<br />
* Leather and Reinforced Leather Armor weights dropped from 15 to 9. Gecko-Backed to 9.5.<br />
* Raider armor healths dropped from 100 to 75.<br />
* Adventurer: +5 Science, +10 Energy Weapons<br />
* Charmer: +5 Barter, +5 Speech, +5 Medicine<br />
* Cruiser: +10 Melee Weapons, +5 Sneak<br />
* Grunt: +10 Guns, +5 Repair<br />
* Troublemaker: +5 Lockpick, +10 Explosives<br />
* Veteran: +5 Survival, +10 Unarmed<br />
* Painspike: +3 Critical Chance<br />
* Sadist: +15 Health<br />
* Badlands: +10 Action Points<br />
* Blastmaster: +20 Fire Resist<br />
* Sharp-Dressed Raider's Armor: +3 Crit, +10 Guns<br />
* Hand-Me-Down Raider Armor: +15 Health, +10 Melee<br />
* Highway Scar Armor: +20 Fire Resist, +10 Explosives<br />
* Psycho-Tic Helmet: +5 AP<br />
* Arclight Helmet: +10 Fire Resist<br />
* Blastmaster Helmet: +10 Explosives<br />
* Wastehound Helmet: +10 Radiation Resist<br />
* Bogeyman's Hood: +15 Radiation Resist<br />
* The Devil's Pigtails: +8 AP<br />
* Pyro Helmet: +15 Explosives<br />
* All unique Merc and Raider armors and helmets added to Mick's store<br />
* Emily Ortal's dialogue fixed so the 6 PE check is run on the Courier. Now you too can know the gross sexual history of Emily Ortal.<br />
* Removed pic of VAULT MOM AND DAD from Vault 21.<br />
* Metal Armors from 30 to 20 weight.<br />
* Gecko-Backed from 33/35 to 23.<br />
* Lightweight Metal Armor (Pre-Ord) to 15 weight.<br />
* Most Medium armor weights lowered.<br />
* Armor of the 87th Tribe weight lowered to 25 lbs.<br />
* Armored Jumpsuits to 8 weight.<br />
* Sierra Madre armor to 8 weight, Reinforced to 9.5<br />
* MM Scout Armor to 7 weight.<br />
* Vault 34 Security Armor to 9.5 weight.<br />
* Lobotomite Jumpsuit to 5 weight.<br />
* Hazmat Suit to 8 weight.<br />
* Assassin Suit to 8 weight.<br />
* Chinese Stealth Armor weight to 7, bonus to Sneak now +25.<br />
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1.8.2012<br />
* Created WithAmmo forms for the 5.56mm Pistol and Battle Rifle.<br />
* Placed 5.56mm Pistol and Battle Rifle on various drop lists.<br />
* Apocalypse Gladiator Armor DR from 0 to 17. Weight to 22. VAL to 3500.<br />
* Apocalypse Gladiator Helmet VAL to 700.<br />
* Shellshocked Combat Armor and Helmet revised.<br />
* Road Rascal Leather Armor revised.<br />
* Wanderer's Leather revised.<br />
* All-Purpose Science Suit weight from 2 to 6.<br />
* Followers Lab Coat given 8 DT. VAL from 16 to 1000. "Reinforced" added to the end of the string.<br />
* Recon Armors given +15 Sneak. Christine's COS Recon Armor given +20 Sneak. Recon Armor effect string renamed to "Recon Armor".<br />
* Metal Armor -1 AG enchantment replaced with -15 Sneak enchantment.<br />
* Salvaged NCR Power Armor given -10 Sneak instead of -1 AG<br />
* Power Armor Training carry weight bonuses halved from old (mod) values.<br />
* Commando Armor revised to be Metal Armor, Reinforced with a +20 Sneak bonus.<br />
* Shellshocked Combat Armor + Helmet and Composite Recon Armor + Helmet added to Nellis munitions vendor.<br />
* Other unique metal/leather/raider/merc armors split between Cliff Briscoe and Mick.<br />
* .308, .357 Magnum, .44 Magnum drop rates increased in Military Footlockers in Old World Blues.<br />
* Flamer Fuel weights halved.<br />
* (GRA) suffix removed from all GRA ammo subtypes.<br />
* (GRA) suffix removed from GRA weapons that have base game equivalents (e.g. Baseball Bat)<br />
* All standard weapons with moddable GRA equivalents given all GRA mods.<br />
* Instances of standard Assault Carbine Mags and 12.7mm Silencers removed/replaced with GRA equivalents.<br />
* Weapons (now) lacking GRA suffixes removed from the Master of the Arsenal challenge weapon list.<br />
* Weapons like the Battle Rifle, Bozar, Katana, Tin Grenade, etc. retain the (GRA) suffix for challenge/achievement/trophy purposes.<br />
* Fixed incorrect icons for Ballistic Fist, Displacer Glove/Pushy, and Zap Glove/Paladin ToasterJ.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-17593502236882446882011-06-10T00:26:00.000-07:002011-06-10T01:41:03.089-07:00Platonic Forms of the MarginalizedE3 was held this week in Los Angeles. Among the myriad games shown at the convention was a "reboot" of the Tomb Raider franchise. In both the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFBrgeSjj-0">CG trailer</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W6T-nF6mfVw">gameplay demonstration</a>, the series' central protagonist, Lara Croft, is presented in a fashion that is distinctly <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lara_Croft">different </a>from earlier titles in the series. Her new appearance is more realistic, her physical and emotional reactions to injury and danger are more fragile, and in general she comes across as more human, less superhuman.<br />
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Whether this is a good or bad shift for the franchise, I have seen a sizable amount of gamer (and developer) scrutiny directed at the changes. The attention goes beyond what is typical for changes to the main character of a franchise (cf. reactions to Dante's redesign in Ninja Theory's DmC) because Lara Croft is a rare thing in video games: a high profile <i>female</i> protagonist. Because most console gamers are male, most game developers are male, and most game protagonists are male, successful female protagonists draw an inordinate amount of attention.<br />
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A good portion of the discussions I've seen have focused on Lara as a representation of women and on how female gamers will react to Lara's new design: her reduced physical strength, her physical brawls with intimidating men groping at her, and virtually everything that could relate to her attractiveness. Though women make up pretty darn close to half of our world's population, they are still largely under-represented in games and in the online gamer community. This marginalization, whether actively caused or passively continued, means that many people will hold individuals of the marginalized group up as representatives <i>of </i>that group. Not many people debate Marcus Fenix's value as a representative of Caucasian male protagonists in video games because he's one of <i>hundreds</i> that cover a range including Guybrush Threepwood, Mario, Alan Wake, and Cloud Strife. Whatever type of Caucasian male you like (assuming you like playing as a Caucasian male) is there for you somewhere. Go hog wild.<br />
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Individuals often express this process of comparison and criticism in relation to an individual's expectations of <i>normativity</i> and how a character should relate to the individual's normative standards. The individual does not judge the validity of the character primarily on its representation as a human being (i.e. simply as a realized, believable character), but on its representation of the marginalized classes people associate with it. Of course, this is an impossible standard for any character to meet: despite normativity being established through social interaction, the standards are still understood and judged by individuals.<br />
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Though this process happens with minority groups in real-life professions constantly (e.g. female firefighters, Muslim American politicians), audiences often don't see their expectations of <i>characters </i>meeting normative standards as critically flawed because characters are fictitious, the products of one or more writers and the actors who portray them. Audiences believe that it is not only possible, but an admirable goal for writers to meet their particular normative standards.<br />
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This brings me to my own experience with normative audience expectations of a character in a marginalized group: Arcade Gannon. Arcade is a companion I wrote for Fallout: New Vegas. In addition to being a Caucasian male, a doctor, and a swell guy, Arcade is also gay. Though Arcade has no more than five lines out of several hundred that relate to his sexuality (and even those are, at most, strong implications), players have given more attention to his sexuality than any other aspect of his character. Perhaps the most heated discussions were generated by an article Jim Sterling wrote titled <a href="http://www.gamefront.com/homosexuality-and-fallout-new-vegas-a-gay-marriage-made-in-gay-heaven/">Homosexuality and Fallout: New Vegas: A gay marriage made in gay Heaven</a>. At the heart of the debate was Jim's assertion that Arcade was a great gay character because his sexuality is so downplayed, so "unremarkable". Internet posters far and wide both supported and contested this view, often explicitly stating their preferences for how gay characters <i>should</i> be portrayed. Like Lara Croft's sex, Arcade Gannon's sexuality dominated the definition and discussion of his character.<br />
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The obvious problem is that no character can meet every individual's expectations of how a group should be represented. Despite this, as long as a group is significantly marginalized among characters in media, whether due to simple omission or active exclusion, audiences will continue to turn rare specimens into exemplars. So, what should we do? I think that writers (game or otherwise) are already on the right track, but should continue to do the following:<br />
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* Represent marginalized groups when sensible. Diversity helps broaden the appeal of our media, can add interesting dimensions to thematic exploration, and in some cases may even generate themes that would otherwise go unexplored.<br />
* Consider your audience, but remember that they don't have one voice and they aren't all loud. We write, broadly, to entertain. Under that expansive canopy, we direct our efforts toward specific groups. It's a little dehumanizing to reduce them to demographics, but still, we aren't writing for everyone. It's our job to be the arbiter of propriety among them.<br />
* Write good characters. It's important for all characters, but it's especially important for a character drawing inordinate audience attention because she's an Asian lesbian Muslim. Audiences perceive a character as having depth if the various competing aspects of its personality resonate believably with each other, with the story, and with the themes you're trying to explore. This also applies in comedy, where a writer's temptation to use minority association as a punchline is often high.<br />
* Understand and accept that we cannot write the Perfect X to meet all fan expectations of X. The best we can do is continue to broaden the margins of the marginalized, provide enough nuanced X characters that there's no need for any individual to stand in for the whole group.<br />
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Though it may be a long time before we see as many female protagonists as male protagonists -- and we may never see a high percentage of gay, black, or transgendered characters -- we can hopefully reach the point where audiences discuss these various descriptors and associations within the context of the story and its themes. When we get to that point, audiences will see them as more than just Platonic forms struggling to escape from yesterday's margins.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-73368387171746538972011-02-28T01:28:00.000-08:002011-02-28T07:08:17.033-08:00The Roman Legion: Fact, Fiction, Post-Apocalyptic Fiction in History, The Eagle, Fallout: New Vegas, Long Blog Post TitlesI should probably get to bed but I've wanted to write something about our (very) old friends the Roman Legion. I wasn't a student of classic history and, outside of taking a bit of Latin, I never had a huge amount of direct exposure to the subject. Most of my knowledge about "the" Roman Empire came through studying their (violent) contact with the rest of the world. For example, Roman Britain. The revolt of the Iceni under Boudica, the concurrent attack on Mona, and the (unrelated) disappearance of the 9th Legion from York were my favorite episodes.<br />
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I'M GOING TO SPOIL SOME PARTS OF THE MAJOR MOTION PICTURE, <i>THE EAGLE</i>, BELOW.<br />
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When I heard that the new film <i>The Eagle</i> was being made, I was excited. The disappearance of the 9th Legion aka Legio IX Hispana is a cool subject. I saw the movie and thought it was... okay. I think one of the problems is that the Roman Legion isn't portrayed as being particularly great for the Britons and the Britons are portrayed as being ... well, not anything. They don't seem to have much character outside of really disliking Romans and having some cool Scottish Deerhounds. Considering the gravitas (yeah I went there) given to retrieving the eagle, the importance of Rome isn't built up that much outside of the main character regularly suggesting, "The eagle... is everything... that is... <i>Rome</i>!" with varying tones of profundity.<br />
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When they manage to bring the eagle back, it's a moment of triumph, but who cares? There's never a time where you can go, "Yeah, I guess this aspect of Roman Britain is really cool and the Britons sure are dumb/bad, so this is a Good Thing(tm)." Not that I'm advocating such a Braveheart-y portrayal, but if you're going to end on a high note, you have to build to it.<br />
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Alternately, Roman Britain could have been portrayed as being a mixed bag of things that were occasionally good for the Britons but almost always oppressively terrible, with the Britons being portrayed as an oppressed people who also regularly did horrible things to each other in spite of having a common enemy. Because that's pretty much what Roman Britain was: Roman legions stomping on local faces and building some roads while Britons occasionally caused the Romans some grief when they weren't busy killing and/or selling each other out. The hero could have reached this same conclusion, retrieved the eagle, and decided that the only important thing it symbolized was the character of his father during his final moments. There would be no triumphant, celebratory return of the eagle to Roman politicians, just a son coming to terms with the legacy of his father and his own place in the world. That's how I would have ended it, mostly because I think that the world and most of our societies have been differing dark shades of awful, so I find it hard to celebrate any of them.<br />
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On a related note, a lot of folks have asked me about the Legion in Fallout: New Vegas and why they aren't more fully fleshed out. The real answer is "time", and I would have liked to have more locations, characters, and quests for the Legion. Even so, the Legion was always intended to be a faction that was initially presented as terrible, much like the NCR is initially presented as heroic, with revelations over the course of the story causing you to question that initial impression in a larger context. Caesar shows a very warped plan for how the Legion can bring order to the Mojave, and there are suggestions that regions under Legion control do enjoy a sort of "Pax Romana", but there isn't enough concrete evidence for the player to directly witness to really sell it. Even so, under the most ideal of portrayals, it was never my intention for the Legion to become a heroic faction. Their methods and approach would have always been unflinchingly brutal, with proven results and a clear plan to reproduce that success being the only potentially redeeming qualities of the group.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-58253467982995763622011-02-17T01:40:00.000-08:002011-02-17T01:48:53.302-08:00Complaining About Politically Active, Intellectual Lazy PeopleI am fed up with the laziness Americans, in general, show toward political awareness and criticism in this information age. By this, I do not mean that I am fed up with political apathy, nor do I mean that I am fed up with low voter turn-out. I also don't mean to hold up other republics as shining examples in comparison to us, but we project ourselves as a beacon of what a constitutional republic should be; it would be nice to live up to that standard. Much of what of what I'm writing is similar in tone to general critiques of political discourse in recent years. I don't feel like I have a particularly brilliant insight into our political landscape, but I felt the need to write about it because it greatly troubles me.<br />
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Specifically, I am filled with intense disappointment for an American voting society that has such incredible and unprecedented access to a wide spectrum of information but chooses to squander it -- a society that dehumanizes and demonizes political opponents that are more visible and exposed than ever, simplifies complex discourse to snide partisan jokes, and overlooks sober political debate in favor of media cheerleading.<br />
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Despite all of the incredible communication and education resources available to us, as a society we generally remain politically hostile, obstinately partisan, short-sighted, lazy, bull-headed, and willfully ignorant.<br />
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In 1993, I turned eighteen and became eligible to vote. Since then, in less than twenty years, here are some of the things that I, and many other internet-active Americans, can now do that were not possible (or at least practical for many people) then:<br />
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* Look at the full text, often with ongoing edits, of bills submitted to state and federal legislative bodies.<br />
* Read the non-partisan analyses of bills by government officials, such as a legislative analyst.<br />
* Look up how any representative has voted on any given bill ever.<br />
* Look up the historical context of almost anything in our own past or the past of any civilization ever recorded.<br />
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In addition to those enormously valuable things, we also have the ability to do things like:<br />
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* Stream major legislative sessions from C-SPAN or look them up later on a variety of video sites.<br />
* Read myriad sides and aspects of political debates in literally hundreds of venues that are friendly, hostile, or mixed relative to our own views.<br />
* Watch, read, listen to, and respond to to the broader opinions and concerns of political figures, professional journalists, bloggers, private citizens, and all sorts of people from different backgrounds all over the world.<br />
* Have our internet browsers automatically translate foreign websites into languages we can read, giving us access to primary documents, news articles, conversations, etc. -- basically everything we see above, but for the entire world.<br />
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Most people who are politically active on the internet do not do these things. I feel comfortable writing this because the evidence, though based on casual observation, is impressive in its consistency. People do not look at, much less read, the full text of bills. They wouldn't even be able to tell you where to <i>find </i>the text of bills, nor do they seem to care. The blogs that cover events of political significance rarely even bother to give the names of the very important bills being discussed, and almost never the numbers by which they can be properly identified. I will stop short of speculating on the reasons for these omissions, but I will say that it is lazy, unhelpful to serious political analysis, and intellectually indefensible.<br />
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In general, politically active people do not read non-partisan analyses of a bill; they read partisan analyses of those non-partisan analyses. They don't look up voting records themselves; they listen to the cherry-picked, context-free slams from polemicists. Voters don't learn historical facts, absorb different analyses, and formulate their own opinions; they listen to other people spin historical narratives that wrap up selective facts into a story that fits their predispositions. We don't seriously read the "other side" of a debate to understand perspectives; we skim selective quotations that cast our most disagreeable political opponents in the harshest light.<br />
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Despite having enormous resources of information available to us, every day our society largely spurns the opportunity to learn more about how our world has worked, how it has failed, and what people are trying to do about it today. So much more is immediately available to us, both passively and actively, than ever has been before. A lot of it is irrelevant, confusing, and infuriating. Too bad. It requires our effort to sort through. Whatever your education, whatever your background, whatever your occupation, the world is constantly changing, and we all must continuously engage the rest of the world to make any serious critical analysis of how we should move forward. If we float along on a sea of second-hand information and opinions put out by partisans and media outlets, we're politically active while being politically brain dead.<br />
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We become politically active to accomplish things. If a goal is well-reasoned and a course is sound, all the critical analysis, slams, and distractions in the world can't detract from that. I work with a literacy program that promotes literacy in part because it is believed to be an essential part of participating in a democratic society. There are millions of people in this country who strive and struggle every day to read, write, listen, and speak with the people around them -- simply to do basic things. If you're reading this right now, you have the ability to access and analyze -- and contribute to -- a staggering, unprecedented amount of information that can inform your participation in our government and in political culture. I'm not saying it's easy. I'm not saying it doesn't take time. But compared to the entire history of the world, it has never been easier than it is right now.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8086113936852754421.post-37827850752470962422011-01-14T02:29:00.000-08:002011-01-14T02:29:49.176-08:00Actually, Some Developers Should Read Their ForumsJeff Vogel from Spiderweb Software wrote a <a href="http://jeff-vogel.blogspot.com/2011/01/three-reasons-creators-should-never.html">blog post</a> about how creators should not read their forums. I don't think he's entirely wrong; a lot of creators -- game designers, artists, authors -- will probably never be able to read forums. But if you care about how your creations are received by actual consumers, <i>you </i>should. <br />
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Please understand that I mean that in a sort of "flowing wave" aikido sense, not in the sense that we need to sagely nod our heads and actually accept everything that people say and write. A lot of critical feedback is noise, a lot of it is only relevant to a small number of people (sometimes it's actually just one person), and a lot of it is misdirected or poorly expressed (i.e. the problem a person expresses is not actually the cause of their frustration).<br />
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There are some good reasons to read our forums, even with all of the problems they present. I don't think I need to explain the benefits of reading fan forums, but I do think it's worth explaining why those who are interested in fan feedback should just Deal With It<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19px;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: black;">™</span>.</span><br />
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<b>Perception Matters</b><br />
Sometimes audiences are stupid. Sometimes, it's us, the dumb creators, who assume idiotic things. Ultimately, it doesn't really matter who's at fault; the issue is that there is a disconnect. "Communication" has the same roots as "commune" -- sharing, imparting, all that good stuff. It's our responsibility to give players the tools they need to play the game. It's the artist's responsibility to speak to the viewer using a visual language they can interpret. Not everyone will be up to the challenge -- and not everyone is in the intended audience -- but sometimes we make stupid choices and the viewer, audience, or reader really can't be blamed for not "getting it". Gauging perception is how we determine the extent to which our intended audience can "step up" and how much we need to "reach down". But to gauge perception, we need to accept that...<br />
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<b>Reality Is Still Out There</b><br />
This applies both to how you accept fan reactions and how you reconcile those reactions with what you know about the work you did. A nerd yelling in the forest is still angry, regardless of whether or not you're around to hear it. Ignoring critical feedback doesn't mean that feedback doesn't exist, and it doesn't mean that the person wasn't upset. If we have any interest in understanding the things that make people angry, we have to actually consider what they're saying. You can't separate the wheat from the chaff if you say, "Ugh that chaff is so gross!" and make a dismissive frowny face at the whole pile.<br />
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Conversely, what a person perceives, imagines, hypothesizes, and ultimately expresses does not necessarily have any bearing on reality. You know what you did. You know how you did it. You know the hours you put in. You know what you made and how it works. Anything a person says to the contrary is ultimately irrelevant unless they're in a position to legitimately defame you. Being able to step back and stabilize ourselves with the anchor of what "is" allows us to compare that to whatever wild things an individual perceives or claims to perceive. Keeping reality in mind gives us the mental distance we need to observe the flames without being burned. But...<br />
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<b>If You Can't Take the Heat, GTFO</b><br />
Many creators make products to sell to people. It's our job. Well over a million people just paid around $50-$60 USD for something I helped make. If it doesn't work right or if they feel the product was misrepresented, it makes sense that they would be upset. The extent to which their reaction is justifiable or reasonable depends on what's going on, but sometimes, we actually did do something really bad. Sometimes, we can step back and realize that if we experienced the same problem on our own, we would kick our own (collective) asses.<br />
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We have to accept that we make mistakes and we have to understand that it can really ruin someone's day. What we make is entertainment, but it's entertainment that can just as easily generate crushing lows as euphoric highs. A while ago, one of my co-workers received an e-mail from a gamer saying that she credits one of our games with <i>saving her life</i>. It shocked my co-worker. I've received similar e-mails in the past, going all the way back to to my early days at Black Isle. It shocks me every time it happens as well. I make video games, most of which I don't even think are anything to get excited about one way or another. Sometimes it's hard to accept how much what we make can impact people, positively and negatively, but this goes back to what I wrote above: reality is still out there. Sometimes we make people really happy. Sometimes we really upset them. Most people have no strong feelings about what we make. They look at it, poke at it, get bored, and move on. That's life. It's important to accept and understand these things.<br />
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<b>Not To Be Understood, But To Understand</b><br />
Our message boards aren't really there for us to make ourselves heard. They're not there for us to defend ourselves (though they can be useful for explaining things or clearing up confusion). They're there for people to express themselves to each other and to us. Sometimes, it can be useful for us to serenely participate or make some statements of fact, but often it's best just for us to take in the field, eliminate the noise, and tune in on the ideas and threads that can really help improve how our creations are received.<br />
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It doesn't matter if there isn't a consensus. It doesn't matter if there's noise or confusion or if there are ideas spread across many different threads. You're the arbiter. You can do it. Your job is to use critical thinking and make difficult choices.<br />
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And sifting through all of that stuff, you're going to see a lot of harsh words. Some of it will be at your company, some of it may be right at you. But after a while, you can take anything. You don't need to get angry. You don't need to feel bad. There's no word, no phrase, no type of insult, no emotion that you can't brush off. If you're honest with yourself and level with others, you can take whatever's thrown at you. Accept the helpful, even when it initially stings. Reject the irrelevant, even when it feels good. As long as we care about what our audiences think, we've got to be willing to dig through some mud to understand it. If it helps us refine our techniques, improve what we create, and be more honest with ourselves, it will all be worth it in the end.J.E. Sawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06903417148635418526noreply@blogger.com18