Arcen Games

General Category => A Valley Without Wind 1 & 2 => AVWW Brainstorming => : x4000 November 28, 2011, 07:29:00 PM

: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: x4000 November 28, 2011, 07:29:00 PM
While I'm posting brainstorming threads here today, I figured I'd lob out one more.  The idea of some sort of food system, whereby player characters have to eat or even sleep, is something that of course a lot of people find really attractive and interesting from a distance.  After all, anything that makes the characters feel more like people and less like little boardgame chits is a good thing, right?

The trouble is, and the conclusion that Keith and I always seem to arrive at whenever we talk about food systems, is that food systems are annoying.  There are some exceptions, and I hear that -- for example -- the food system in Skyrim is really interesting and extremely fun.  But that's in the context of a much slower-moving western-style RPG, and that's just a really different sort of game flow in general.  I've seen some food systems work out pretty well in some other western-style RPGs myself, again largely due to the general pacing and structure of those entire games.

Those games are a far cry from AVWW in almost every gameplay sense, though.  So the question really is: in the context of an action game, like Zelda or AVWW or Minecraft or whatever, is there any system of "you periodically have to eat" that wouldn't be just an annoying chore of "time to press this button every so many minutes?"

Keith and I sure haven't been able to think of anything, so it's the sort of thing we just would normally lay to rest and forget about.  But since I'm in a brainstorming mood today (apparently), I thought I'd pose the question to the forums.

As a side note: One of the cool things about having a playerbase that remembers games from the 80s and 90s is that there were all sorts of cool or almost-cool systems used in some obscure game but then never used again.  Those sorts of things were definitely an enriching influence on AI War in particular after 1.0 came out, but it's not something I'd really sat back and thought about until today.  It's kind of cool to be able to call on this "obscure game mechanic encyclopedia" that exists in the forum, if you think about it. :)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Coppermantis November 28, 2011, 07:38:48 PM
I personally don't like food systems like in Minecraft, but that's just my playstyle. I prefer building (but legitimately, so creative mode isn't really an option) and having to go out and hunt pigs to get food is annoying. Especially during the time period of 1.8, when once you killed something, it was gone for good. Now that you can breed animals it's more acceptable, but I still consider it less fun.

That said, AVWW isn't in the same vein as MC the way I play it. IT is an adventure, not a building game, so a food system wouldn't interfere with that as much. However, having to periodically go out and craft/hunt foods doesn't sound like very much fun. I don't know what to do with this. I'm starved for ideas at the moment.


Sleeping, though, sounds like it could be good if done right. I like the way that it is in Minecraft: Optional, but a benefit for doing it. Perhaps in bedrooms of buildings you could find beds (and in settlements) which, when slept in, give some sort of benefit. (partial stat recharge, or perhaps your spells decrease in power slowly over time, and sleeping resets this. So, you could theoretically go forever without sleep, but would become very ineffective and vulnerable if you go too long.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Olreich November 28, 2011, 08:01:57 PM
The reason we enjoy food in real life is that it's a sensory experience. Eating actually gives us pleasure, and takes away pain when we're hungry. Without something hurting and food being completely bland, eating in life is just a chore too. Video games can't feed us, nor do they take away hunger pains, so you'd be hard pressed to find a way to put in our system of eating into the game.

The only way to make food fun would be to have it be that you're hunting for food, and have to do something fun to get it, then you eat it and your counter restarts. But that seems unnecessary because you can just get rid of food and have the fun stuff without the monotony of "I'm doing this on my daily schedule", instead giving better rewards.

So, scheduled eating, that's really tough to make fun. Unscheduled eating... well, if you have an interesting and useful ways to get food, then all you have to do is make that food something that's desirable but not required. You'll have OCD people stocking up for nuclear winter, but for the most part, you should be able to have people enjoy food.

Some possible ways to make food desirable: status effects, making you stronger for a period of time based on the food and quality, bait and AI control, allowing players to change the behavior of enemies, or even tame them to help you in other systems. Both sound pretty good, and the first would create an obvious settlement management improvement of adding shops (which are hopefully planned already), to sell you some food items with food quality based on morale, happiness, and natural ability of the worker. And by sell, I mean "use X resources/shards from the settlement/character to make food items".

tl;dr No scheduled eating, that makes most fun things unfun in this style of game, where time is an essentially unlimited resource. Make food a commodity that helps you, maybe via status effects or AI adjustment (bait/taming come to mind).
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Ixiohm November 28, 2011, 08:04:28 PM
The only way I see a food system fitting with this game, would be in the strategic view. Somehow make the availability of food limit movement on the strategic map, similarly to how movement previously was restricted by the occurrence of wind storms.
If this resource was shared between the player and the NPCs it could potentially lead to some interesting scenarios. Manage the availability of food between player and NPCs, and how to extend your reach by establishing new settlements and outposts at which you can resupply. Build more farms to create supply for more frequent and longer expeditions. Use NPCs with slow metabolism to extend your scouting range within the limits of available resources. Trade of between inviting NPCs into settlements and using the excess food supply for further exploration missions.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: FallingStar November 28, 2011, 09:41:23 PM
Eating on a personal level can be good if you want to get more into the survival aspect, basically as a limiter of how long you can be out (or something to make being away from settlements seem harder/ more dangerous to keep going), or if there's some inventory management aspect (which I doubt you want to add).

If it was just a matter of a buff, it have a food item in your pack and have it reduce (or use) every x moments, it would be a bit dull, just another bonus to farm.  I suppose it could also be done like the malaria shots in Far Cry 2 - use every once in awhile, and when you run out you're forced back to settlement.  If done on a personal level I'd probably leave it like a rested buff in MMO's, eat (somehow) and get bonus to xp . . though it might not make sense as you're leveling your civ not your avatar.

I do think that you should always have food so long as your settlement does, would be weird if they were eating and you were starving.  As such, as others have mentioned, might work better on strat map level than during your fight with a miniboss having to eat a sandwich.  I guess that could be how you "carry" food- in settlements if you're closer to one with food, you eat too, if you're near one without food (or int he deep wild), you're going hungry.

Personally, there are enough elements in AVWW to make it have a good survival feel without having to make food an item to use, outside of its mention as an aspect of the strategic game.  I wouldn't hate it if it was put in interestingly, and I enjoy such tings in RP oriented games, just don't see it fitting in yet.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Teal_Blue November 28, 2011, 10:09:04 PM
:)   As one who does advocate 'eating', i would like to quickly explain why, and how.  :)

... on the personal character pov, yes, it probably does turn into a click this button every 20 minutes.  :)

Which can be a pain.

But what if it is on a settlement scale... Our farms produce x amount of food for use by characters at x value for every x turn.

What this means is that food becomes a settlement enhancing or limiting factor. That bad guys can raid our caravans or our settlements and over run them. We can lose settlements, we can lose npc's, and we have the possibility of 'losing everything' if we lose all of our farms. Everything.

Like say, losing all our cruisers in AI War, when we are facing Starships, well... we have nothing to compete, we are moments or hours, away from losing the game.

For AVWW, what that cost may be, is we are  back to square one. We lose our empire, we have gambled and lost every npc and settlement we had in the game, we have had our head handed to us and we are now back out in the wild fending for ourselves, trying to stay alive.

Some mechanic, ANY mechanic that makes it interesting to keep my character alive is something i think adds greatly to the game.

So,... i have to nurture my settlements, i have to choose carefully the kinds of settlements that i create and where i put them and how i recruit and who i recruit (is it possible i have recruited a spy?)  :) 

Anyway, 'food' fits that role, i have to have it to keep my settlements and my npc's and my characters viable, and functional and useable.

Its not a click this every 20 minutes mechanism, its a click this every once in a while for your character , or your settlements or you are going to die and NOT make it.

That it interesting.

What hoops do I have to jump through to make things worthwhile? What must i do to expand, or defend, or just maintain the status quo?

Food fits a lot of those circumstances.
And fits it very well.

Not in a boring way.
But in a do i 'castle before i move my pawn?'  Or do i move my pawn first, and reap the consequences of not preparing beforehand? way.

Action can be quickly  paced and intense and filled with on screen slaughter, but the preparing our loadout,  building buildings and jobs and skill sets for my npc's, building new settlements and focusing on their specialties and what resources are used and where is all strategic and slower, and thoughtful pondering of the lay of the board, so to speak. Food and what it represents to continuing the survival of characters and settlements fits into that overview very easily i think.

That is my opinion,

I think it could work, and work well and bring some new and interesting twists to how things play out.
Whether or not it will, however, depends on what everyone else thinks.

:)

But a game that gives players 'different ways of playing the same game' make for a wider audience of players, and the game a multiple style kind of game.

Thank you for listening,


-Teal


: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Hearteater November 28, 2011, 10:24:14 PM
Consider one of the below totally separate ideas:

1) Combine this with the health tank idea.  Somehow your health tanks get damaged and eating food repairs them.  If health tanks get damaged easily enough, you'll want a good supply of food when exploring.

2) Food buffs you with a damage reducing benefit (-20% damage) that lasts until you take X damage.  Scale damage so what we take now is what we take with the food buff, so not having it increases damage taken by about 20%.  Optionally add a time duration to the buff as well.  Optionally add a cooldown to eating, so heavy damage in a short period forces you to go without the damage reduction buff.

3) Exploring (entering) each new chunk costs you 1 food.  Returning to town restores a small amount of food at minimum, but can be developed to supply more later.  Some chunks might require more food to explore.  The penalty for entering a chunk without food could be a large hit to health (but never fatal).
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Martyn van Buren November 28, 2011, 11:42:48 PM
I'm pretty sure I'm against eating.  It's either going to be just another item you have to click on, or something terrifying like Teal_Blue's suggestion of having to manage your economy well or starve to death --- that would be great in some game, but not one where the strategic map is supposed to be all-but-optional.

Basically, I don't think these are going to add anything if you just have to keep track of them and push a button once in a while --- if they're going to be there, they should be involved enough that you really have to think about them.

I could see sleeping, though.  We were talking in the first brainstorming thread about "towers" and no-warp zones --- it seems like it could be an interesting challenge that would fit into the game well if you had to build yourself a little safe place in order to sleep.  I don't think I'd want to have to do this regularly, but it would make sense if it gave you a short buff that you could use for a difficult fight, so you could get a bonus if you could make yourself safe for a few "hours" first.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Teal_Blue November 29, 2011, 08:06:01 AM
:)   @Hearteater,  :)  I like your ideas, very nice, and well said. 

@Martyn Van Buren,  although i think eating can and should add depth and consequences to the game and not just be a clickfest, and has a place in a game, in this game as a mechanism that makes player decisions and choices interesting and different for different 'style' players, I also like your idea of sleep.

Having to build your own shelter out in the wilderness in order to stay alive when you have journeyed out more than several tiles distance from the settlement can be interesting, and adds consequences for going to far, or for getting caught out in dangerous territory. Which is in my mind more interesting than having the run of the map for whatever period of time without consequence.

I am beginning to realize that i play differently than many players here, but i hope that doesn't rule out the possibility that this game can be fun to play in many different ways. Not in a single way alone. But i'm not the one making this game.  :)  So i have to temper my requests with an understanding of what everyone else, and what Chris and company see as what is interesting for them.  :)

That i can chip in my own two cents i am grateful for at all, so even though i am passionate!   :)  I  still feel I am only one girls voice.  But thank you for listening.

:)

-Teal


: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: tigersfan November 29, 2011, 08:20:03 AM
I hate the idea of having to eat. I think that eating can have a place in the game (such as, sitting and eating will heal you, or eating will buff you in some way), but being required to eat will just add a degree of monotony, and likely add to the desire to farm, no pun intended. :-)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: x4000 November 29, 2011, 09:52:09 AM
If eating were a system of buffs, then that really kind of does double-duty with what enchants are already planned to do (and will do in a more structured, choice-based fashion).  So... yeah.  This is why Keith and I haven't been able to come up with anything for this specific game.  There are lots of great ideas, which would fit with all sorts of games, but most of them don't fit with the core design goals of this specific game.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Gallant Dragon November 29, 2011, 09:55:18 AM
What exactly are the core design goals of this game, again?  Maybe those would give me some ideas; I 'm high and dry atm... ::)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: x4000 November 29, 2011, 10:57:40 AM
What exactly are the core design goals of this game, again?  Maybe those would give me some ideas; I 'm high and dry atm... ::)

You know, that's a really good point.  Here ya go: http://www.arcengames.com/forums/index.php/topic,9524.0.html :)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Dizzard November 29, 2011, 05:49:04 PM
Well I do sort of like the idea of needing to camp and eat food.....but it seems like something that would be great when you're in the mood and absolutely horrible when you're not. Food in theory is a great idea...but it just seems to get annoying too easily when you HAVE to eat it. On the other hand if you don't HAVE to eat it then what's the point of it?

It needs looking at from a different angle. Maybe we shouldn't think about how we (the player) use the food but focus on how others (npcs) use the food instead. We won't care if npcs are slaved into having to eat food/dealing with food. Then we can look on from the outside and sort of monitor it but not have to be pulled into having to do anything ourselves if we don't want to.

How about from a cooking/baking perspective. Npcs in your settlements could have jobs as chefs or bakers. They could have some kind of cooking skill that they develop. As for uses, well let's imagine you have a VIP from another civilization coming to your settlement for talks....you should assign one of your best chefs to make them a meal and really suck up to them. Or you could always make the chef toss poison in the soup. Then of course there's the obvious better cooks = more happiness for the settlement. Hey, how about a cook-off between warring civilizations? :P

AVWCM: A Valley Without Cooking Mama
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: superking November 29, 2011, 06:24:54 PM
I dont see much room for a food/stamina system in a world where I can magic myself back to full health or mana in about 3 seconds. In any case, this isn't the kind of game where you furtively carve a nook in the monster population of of an area, light a campfire, set defenses, eat dinner and sleep- its the kind of game where you magically dash across the landscape at 100 mph firing lightning and fireballs from every orifice, then just teleport away. The difference in tempo between a survival game - where resource management is crucial - and AVWWs headlong charge of damage, hp/mana boosts, items etc suggests to me that a food system has no place here, for player characters at least. I mean, player characters are rarely in a chunk for more than 30 minutes - I dont see how they would grow hungry and starve in that time.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Martyn van Buren November 30, 2011, 10:40:16 AM
That is a good point.  Agreed.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Drjones013 March 10, 2012, 08:33:10 AM
I'd personally like to see a food system like Civ 3; your city only has x potential for number of citizens and anything past that forces you to create a new settlement. This could be used to limit tech advances within a city. Food gathering is implied, player never touches it at the micro level (maybe sees it and recovers health upon destroying food items).

Settlements along these lines would emphasize building cities in the most optimal spots (which could be tile dependent or series-of-tiles dependent) and perhaps even chains of cities (total number of tech in so much area) could allow for large upgrades. An example: City A has 3 tech, City B has 4 tech, City C has 5 tech, for a total of 12 tech, which allows the building of bonus structure at City C (region check for tech + minimum tech level at building site). This would provide a built-in limit for crafting at early levels and would encourage more development at others.

It could also mean that survivors from a low-resource continent may have to be moved to a high-resource continent (read: more bonus missions, yay)

edit: upgrades should also have population minimums. They don't have to be high but this'd definitely give a player a reason to seek out rescue missions. I don't think I've seen a reason why I should bring people back to the colony which is a central point of the game.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Mánagarmr March 12, 2012, 05:45:42 AM
I've played a lot of games with food systems and they always come down to "Press this button ever so often." The one game where food actually matters is Project Zomboid, because the damn thing is so scarce you are afraid of actually starving to death :P
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: BobTheJanitor March 12, 2012, 09:59:42 AM
The only non-annoying food systems I know of are those that provide some sort of temporary passive buff. So you eat it periodically to get that buff, but without it you aren't much weaker and you're not forced to eat it all the time. But that would require some system of passive buffs and tracking time frames for those buffs. Enchants pretty well have that covered, without time limits.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: zebramatt March 12, 2012, 10:06:38 AM
Dr Jones's suggestion is food as a strategy level resource, which is pretty well established in that arena.

I think it could work well to flesh out the side of the game which focusses on building a civilisation in Valley. But it's definitely superfluous at this point. Something for an expansion, perhaps?
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Mánagarmr March 13, 2012, 04:42:40 AM
I'm inclined to say that any food system at all, except on the strategic scale, would be a waste of development time. AVWW is not a survival game, hence any such mechanics would be annoying at best.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: tigersfan March 13, 2012, 07:13:41 AM
I'm inclined to say that any food system at all, except on the strategic scale, would be a waste of development time. AVWW is not a survival game, hence any such mechanics would be annoying at best.

I was on the fence when this thread started, but, now I'm inclined to agree with you.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: keith.lamothe March 13, 2012, 11:39:50 AM
AVWW is not a survival game
I wonder what Chris thought when he saw that, seeing as this project began as a commerical redo of a game whose subtitle (on the title screen) was "A Game of Survival" ;)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: x4000 March 13, 2012, 11:46:29 AM
AVWW is not a survival game
I wonder what Chris thought when he saw that, seeing as this project began as a commerical redo of a game whose subtitle (on the title screen) was "A Game of Survival" ;)

I thought: yep, that's totally accurate. :)

Alden Ridge was primarily an environmental-puzzle/action-survival game, but it stalled out as a project when I started trying to get adventure bits in there, which was what I realized I was more interested in.  So from the get-go, this project has always had the adventure bits at the forefront, and other stuff has kind of come and gone as support of it.  I thought the survival bits would be one of those things that would stay, but that's just not how the game evolved (and I'm happy for that).

Someday I want to properly remake Alden Ridge for what it was supposed to be, MINUS all the adventure bits that were fouling it up.  But that's really a very different project than this one, at this point!
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Mánagarmr March 14, 2012, 04:36:53 AM
What I meant was that while AVWW is a game about the survival of the human race, survival as a game mechanic (like Rogue Survivor, Project Zombiod and Dwarf Fortress Adventure mode) are not part of it. ;)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: x4000 March 14, 2012, 08:55:21 AM
I know -- and I agree.  But survival as a game mechanic was something that we had thought was going to be more a part of it, plus more the general theme of survival.  Which still lives on here, in some forms, but not like Zomboid or similar.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: silverhound March 26, 2012, 08:53:09 PM
Reading back on topics like this, it's really noticeable how the game changed over the span of a couple of months, not just in gameplay but in gameplay philosophy too.
As such i have a couple suggestions that might be more in line with how the game is right now:

How about having food and sleep not as a requirement but as a way to open new areas?
You drink a magic beverage, go to sleep in a bed in one of the many buildings, and it opens up a dream-setting version of a mission.
Depending on the beverage and the timeshard the area you went to sleep in belongs to, you get different missions/versions/difficulties.

Or eating a 'tiny robot sandwich', and taking a nap in a bed afterwards, that allows you to temporarily transport your mind into the robot by magic and 'improve' a part of yourself.
reward would be an extra upgrade aside from the 10 times you can already upgrade your character, and maybe limiting it to doing it only 3 times per individual character, that way only giving 3 more upgrade levels.
You'd be in an organic-setting, allows different enemies (like showing how magic protects the body), and possibly the other robots in the sandwich going haywire and you having to take those out aswell.
You could add in a consequence to failure, in that it would undo a previous upgrade.


This would still have a food system of sorts be present, in that you would need an npc to create such sandwiches and drinks, and you having to gather the resources in the world to do so, you could make it so that when the npc is level 3 you can make a sandwich for the first upgrade, at level 4 a croissant for the second upgrade, and level 5 a... uh...  :-[ hmm.. well something ::) for the third upgrade.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: jwbarry May 04, 2012, 12:48:13 PM
I do think there's a very good idea that's hidden in the various parts of this conversation. It was suggested that one use for a food system is for buffing. The response was then, correctly, stated that buffing is the purview and purpose of the enchantment system. I agree, and don't think that should be changed, it does that very well at this point. However, the enchantment system can be enhanced to give additional moments of choice and player tension.

Right now, enhancements have 2 total player choices involved with them.
1 - Equip or not.
2 - Hold on to or boil down for X progress towards a new one.
While decision point 1 is fairly straightforwards, point 2 has the ability to expand into a more complex player decision. If when players break an enchantment down they have 3 decisions, all 3 destroying the item but providing different progress/benefit.

1 - Gain X% progress towards a new enchant.
2 - Gain the enchantments stats as a non-stacking buff for X period of time (time potentially shaded by enchant tier). No more than 1 buff either total or per enchant slot active at any one time. Could stack if needed, but I think more interesting if it doesn't to figure out what to combine for buffs and equips.
3 - Gain X% progress towards the chance of obtaining a higher tier enchant when you next acquire one.

Numbers of how much advancement is provided can be tuned as necessary.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Guswut May 04, 2012, 11:59:18 PM
Personally, I think that a food system, on a character level, would be fairly out of the scope of the game's design goals. Your glyph sustains you, right? At least, when it's not shouting "Hey, listen!", heheheh.

As a part of the macro game, though, it would likely be extremely interesting. I would say that the general gain from dealing with the food system should be that your survivors are much healthier, ergo when you die, you have a better pick of survivors.

If you ignore the food system, when you die, your survivors are going to be, on average, of lesser quality (likely affected by game difficulty, tier, continent, etc, to some degree). Maybe even have the survivor crop start at a low level of health, and make supply raids, farming ventures, hunting trips, fishing trips, and the like mission-styled events that would give you the ability to raise that level, therefore raising the general health of your survivors (for a timed period, which, if ignored, goes down slowly).

Assuming that your survivors started at a low level of health, there would only be carrot and no stick in regards to dealing with the macro game food system.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Chex Warrior May 08, 2012, 08:58:40 AM
I agree with the others that a food system for characters would most likely be tedious, but what about growing/finding food to help your settlement?
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: BenMiff May 09, 2012, 06:48:46 PM
I like DrJones idea of having food act as a survivor quantity cap in your settlements. In addition, I'd like to flesh it out a bit though. Firstly, I'd suggest that it should be provided by buildings rather than through raids; you get a guardian scroll for a Farm, or Meat Cloning Vats, or whatever, and it increases your food cap. More food buildings = higher food cap = more survivors. Secondly, I'd suggest that these buildings should require Technozoologists (since then it'll make Technozoologists something you'll want.) Thirdly, I'd say that there should be some kind of passive buff for having surplus food or tons of survivors, to force a choice in which you go for once you have a decent number of food producing buildings. Finally, I'd suggest that you shouldn't be able to build duplicates of specific food producing buildings; your survivors need a variety of food to be healthy, and it makes for a more interesting settlement if the Hunting Ground, Farm, Meat Cloning Vats and Synthetic Vegetable Factory rub shoulders rather than just 4 Farms (i.e. a Really Big Farm.)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Robby89 May 20, 2012, 08:24:33 PM
I've noticed this post, and I wanted to pitch in my two cents. A food system would add an extra layer of things to gather and consume, however, on a needed basis. I am one for it. I could use something else to keep me busy. I'd advise though, it be tweak-able through means of using difficulty changers. Same way you did the rest of the game's various difficulty calibrations.

Have it say "I can go forever without sustenance" (Original Game Setting, no food bar, no food)
"I can eat little, and still be full" (Easiest setting, doesn't require much food bar attention)
"I eat like any other" (Moderate setting, requires almost as much attention as real life eating)
"I am a huge pig and will starve later on"
(This will likely be the highest setting for bragging purposes only, require food every 5 minutes)

I can't wait to see whats up next!  8)
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Denninja June 04, 2012, 05:15:27 PM
Lemme just sneak myself in here...

Here's a way to combine food with Grow Gem personalization.
I recommend a circular gauge bar around HP, that fills by consuming a "rations" bar which you fill by picking up anything edible.
For a settlement, there could be a "farm" room built in, which the player can manage by planting specific Grow Gems.
The farm room could be expanded through Guardian Power Scrolls.
The farm room's planted gems produce food pickups after the player completes a certain number of missions.
Common food would grow fastest yet fill the Rations gauge the least, while rarer food would fill the gauge more while growing slowly.
The Rations gauge could be divided into sections, each providing a % bonus to all base stats.

I agree with Robby89's difficulties idea; each level could affect Rations gauge decrease and food growth time.
: Re: Brainstorming Thread: Food System.
: Acetyl June 06, 2012, 01:49:06 PM
Theres quite a lot to address in the past replies to this thread.  As such, I'll just copy and paste my take on a food system -

This idea originally spawned from when I noticed small towns and grasslands lacked stores, or anything beyond residential buildings. The idea is that you have to periodically go out and scavenge for food to support your settlement, as you're the only one who can leave. You could do this via fruit and berries in Grasslands with groves, finding them in abandoned stores (if they were ever added), so on and so forth. It would be immersive because the survivors you rescue would start seeming more alive.

To keep it balanced, and less intrusive, have each day the settlement goes without food, lower the tier at which they can perform at by 1, regardless of personality structures. When they reach 0, the Illari will put them in a state of suspended animation, to prevent them from dying, and you'd be unable to use any applying guardian scrolls until you've brought food. This way it isn't required that you keep food stockpiles up, just recommended. Perhaps the food could be visually seen, or just added to the supplies manifest when you enter the settlement chunk. (Maybe even a "retrieve food supplies" secret mission could seed periodically, to further make secret missions worthwhile to check out.)