Author Topic: Faction Uniqueness?  (Read 12780 times)

Offline Zebeast46

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Faction Uniqueness?
« on: November 06, 2014, 08:14:45 am »
I am just wondering how unique everyone wants the playable factions to be. Do you want them to be boring like civ with 1 special ability and 2 special units/buildings throughout the whole game to decrease balancing issues, or do want them to have, say 3 special abilities and 4 or 5 special buildings so that they are possibly unbalanced?

Or do you have any ideas on Faction uniqueness yourself like suggesting that instead of having missile silos, Peltians have suicide bombers. 
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Offline x4000

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #1 on: November 06, 2014, 08:35:40 am »
Personally I'm a fan of having a lot more variance than Civ does.  I have some ideas for some fairly major deviations in the tech tree and in the diplomacy department, among other things here.  Buildings as well, of course, but also they all already are set to have three unique terrains (flying races aside, but those are unique enough).

A note about Civ: it's trying to be an "everyone starts equal, so everyone must be equal" simulator, more or less.  It's expected to be played either solo against the computer, co-op against the computer, or competitive between players.  Whew!  What a nightmare for balancing.

Here we just have solo or co-op against the computer, which is a simpler sort of task.  And, as with AI War, the concept of "balance" is something that we view as a very asymmetric one.  With Civ, the story is that of the rise of humanity from basically the stone age, so everyone is growing from the same place.  With SBR, the premise is that you are LATE to this planet, and everyone else is already established.  Yes you have some high tech, and you have some toys that the other races didn't develop, but the bottom line is that you are the little guy (or guys, in co-op) trying to fit into a larger established ecosystem.

Those things make the concept of balance a lot easier, because we aren't trying to make all civs equal.  We're trying to make it so that the situation is always interesting, and so that the player(s) versus the simulation (all AIs included) is an equitable arrangement.  Your faction versus some specific other faction in that ecosystem, though?  Matters a lot less.  It's how you relate to the ecosystem as a whole that is important.

For a lot of examples of how I think about this sort of thing, you can see the David vs Goliath aspects of our game AI War, and you can see the faction differentiation in The Last Federation, as well.

Hope that answers your question!
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Offline Zebeast46

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #2 on: November 06, 2014, 07:09:47 pm »
This is the only forum page I actually look at because Chris Park answers all the questions that he can, and not to mention it seems to me he is always on.
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Offline x4000

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #3 on: November 06, 2014, 07:26:28 pm »
Cheers, I appreciate it -- and welcome!

Keith and I both make sure to have time to get plenty of work done, but also try to respond to as much as we can.  It helps that I'm a speed-reader and a fast typist, or I'd really never get anything done. ;)
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Offline x4000

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #4 on: November 26, 2014, 08:47:57 am »
I just wanted to make an addendum here, since I was reminded of this topic by your other topic. ;)

The uniqueness of the factions is going SKY HIGH compared to what I was thinking.  Here are the bullet points distilled down (I'm short on time):

1. The story behind this game is being adjusted so that the race that is landing has one human -- you -- with them.  In the case of multiplayer, which is co-op only, then of course it's one human per race that is landing.

2. You-the-human are basically cooperating side by side with the racial leader that you select for your faction at the start of the game.  So it's a partnership between the human and the racial leader.

3. The cities that the human-co-led factions are building are all using the same general tileset, and they are fairly human-inspired.  The tileset is huge, and varying those between races would just make the game impossible to understand, we feel.  Aside from the art costs, of course.

4. When races are already on the planet -- aka, controlled by the AI -- then they have no human influence on them, and are much more entrenched.  They have completely unique building tilesets for each race there, and the tilesets are STRANGE.  Previously it was just going to be tilesets for the 6 races you never play, but now it's for all 14.  Each race (in the hands of the AI) has its own rules for how it builds and so on.  They are extremely unique from one another and from you.

5. AI-controlled races also have "underground buildings" that you can detect via sonar, but not directly see.  These can form kind of an underbelly under the part of the city that you can see.  So this basically lends a form of uncertainty/fog-of-war that is implicit, because what you see on the surface is not guaranteed to be all there is.  Sometimes certain key buildings like power generation and so forth will be hidden away underground or underwater.  Bring your remote sonar crews to find out!

6. There is a "social progress" screen that is kid of vaguely like the Culture screen in Civ 5, and there are 9 categories on there.  8 of which are actually rewards, and the 9th of which is progress toward a social victory condition.  Only human-controlled races use Social Progress at all.  Out of those first 8 categories in which you can gain your social levels, 1 per human-controllable race is swapped out each time.e  So if you play as the Skylaxians, for instance, you'll lose the social category of Climatology, but you'll instead gain Skylaxian Lexicon.

7. Out of the 8 races that you can play as, there are some special rules that apply only to them when they are in your hands.  Really the way the AI uses... everything... is completely different from how you use anything.  Two different games.  Or really, 15 different games, I guess.  Anyway: when the races are in your hands, depending on which you pick, the special rules and bonuses can make things implicitly harder or easier to manage.  The Krolin, Skylaxians, and Zenith are considered Standard complexity.  The Burlusts, Evucks, and Fenyn are considered Hard.  The Boarines and the Peltians are considered Very Hard.  Note that this is independent of actual difficulty level, and instead refers more to how complex that race is to play, and how hard it is to win with that race on a given difficulty level.  So if you are disappointed that your favorite race is not "hard enough" or is "too hard," then you can always just adjust the main difficulty to make the overall scenario harder or easier as appropriate.  For your first playthrough, it's advised that you go with one of the ones that is more standard complexity, though.

8. Various technologies get replaced depending on which you are playing as.  Additionally, various diplomatic options appear, disappear, or get replaced depending on which race you are negotiating with (so that's one that varies only when the AI is controlling them, since you can't do inter-player diplomacy since it's co-op).


There is other stuff as well, but that's enough for now. ;)

About Balance
The most immediate question is "how do you balance a game like this?"  The most clear answer is "you don't."  In the same sense that AI War is not balanced between all its scenarios, neither will this be.  With AI War, depending on what you select in the lobby, you may have an easier game or an insane game.  It's like fine-tuning your difficulty.  Turn on the Zenith Trader, and that's a nice little boost for you for the most part.  Turn on the Human Colonies, and that's a nice little penalty.

So when talking about the game from the standpoint of what options you start with, it's not meant to be balanced.  If you get really good with the Burlusts and can win on difficulty X with them easily, but have trouble with that same difficulty with other races, the game is not broken or unbalanced.  That just means that for the particular scenario you are working with, you need to crank up the difficulty for the Burlusts.  There's a good chance someone else is going to have a harder time with the Burlusts than you do, anyway.  I can hardly play Age of Empires III with any faction other than the French, for instance; and I know they are not the most powerful.

When it comes to the lobby options, the idea is the same as with AI War: let the player customize, and come up with scenarios that are easier or harder on lots of vectors.  Whatever the case, you're going to have an interesting game either way unless you're just really playing way below your skill level for some odd reason.


To the larger question of balancing things ONCE you are in the game, the answer to that is basically the same as with AI War: it takes a while (like Starcraft), and is an iterative process.  And having differentiation between the races in the hands of the AI doesn't affect that at all, because they are meant to vary in difficulty.  Same as with dealing with different planets in AI War.  So it's really down to balancing your own options and making sure that there are none that are completely useless, and none that you use exclusively.

If this sounds a lot like AI War (partly because I keep comparing it), then that's because it's rather the same philosophy.
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Offline wwwhhattt

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #5 on: November 26, 2014, 09:26:14 am »
2. You-the-human are basically cooperating side by side with the racial leader that you select for your faction at the start of the game.  So it's a partnership between the human and the racial leader.
Would that mean that the race you're playing with isn't entirely in your control, or are you given complete control over the parts of the colony relevant to the game?

Offline x4000

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #6 on: November 26, 2014, 09:38:51 am »
2. You-the-human are basically cooperating side by side with the racial leader that you select for your faction at the start of the game.  So it's a partnership between the human and the racial leader.
Would that mean that the race you're playing with isn't entirely in your control, or are you given complete control over the parts of the colony relevant to the game?

I think the most direct of your questions is "is this like TLF where you aren't really in control," and the answer is definitely NO!  For practical purposes, this plays like SimCity or Civ or whatever, where you are in direct control of pretty much everything.

THAT said, morale is a thing, and there are other needs that can cause problems for you where you kind of have to go with the "will of the people" for a while.  One of the reasons the Burlusts in particular are hard to play as is that their morale goes down if they aren't fighting wars.  So you either have to do other things to pacify them, or you have to have a strategy in which you do a lot of warring.

By the by, that's one big difference from the Krolin: the Krolin don't have that incessant need to fight, and they are very much under centralized control more.

In terms of exactly what the nature of your relationship is with the racial leader you select is, I have not firmly decided on that.  Honestly I think that the idea is that you-the-player are actually representing the combined will of both that leader and the human that came with.  Possibly I'll do something sci-fi-like and actually merge the brain of the human with that of the racial leader, so that you are one mind, but two personalities in one.  That might be fun.

THAT said, I do intend to also have some large institutions (Central Military Command and Central Bank are the two semi-designed thus far) that involve independent subordinates of yours.  All of your mayors are puppets, but these guys would not be.  You wouldn't have to construct those buildings, but if you did then you would gain benefits as well as a new layer of complexity in terms of having to please the finance guys or the military industrial complex, etc.

I hope to make it so that you have threats from within your empire IF you create those institutions and then displease them enough.  So that then basically you might be deposed and lose the game if you opt to establish the military that way and then don't at least align your interests with theirs somewhat.  But if you DO align your interests with them at least enough to keep them from deposing you, then having that extra might can be a big asset to you, so it's a tough choice.  You're basically introducing an independent element into your own faction that otherwise doesn't exist.

Anyway, to the core question: yes, you are as autocratic as in most any strategy game.
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Offline Draco18s

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #7 on: November 27, 2014, 01:38:29 am »
About Balance
The most immediate question is "how do you balance a game like this?"  The most clear answer is "you don't."  In the same sense that AI War is not balanced between all its scenarios, neither will this be.  With AI War, depending on what you select in the lobby, you may have an easier game or an insane game.  It's like fine-tuning your difficulty.  Turn on the Zenith Trader, and that's a nice little boost for you for the most part.  Turn on the Human Colonies, and that's a nice little penalty.

"Screw balance, by the time the player finds something that's truly broken, no one will be playing it any more."

Offline Histidine

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #8 on: November 27, 2014, 07:54:22 am »
"Kahuna won 10/10 game as Peltians again, fix plz"

Offline x4000

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Re: Faction Uniqueness?
« Reply #9 on: November 27, 2014, 09:55:39 am »
Haha, that's funny.
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