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28967: Re: [MUD-Dev] [DGN] The psychology of random numbers
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From: Chanur Silvarian <chanur@guildsite.com>
Newsgroups: nu.kanga.list.mud-dev
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2004 15:02:37 -0700
References: [1]
Organization: Kanga.Nu
From: Sean Kelly <sean@ffwd.cx>
> What you're talking about is a shift in the entire focus of the
> game. One displays numeric attributes and statistcs to the player
> at various stages of the game (be they static attributes, combat
> rolls, etc). The other hides all of these mechanics behind
> descriptive terms than communicate generalities rather than
> specifics: "Bubba hit Buffy very hard!" If the game is
> combat-oriented I will assume two possible outcomes. Either
> players learn to interpolate the vague terms in a statistically
> meaningful way or they become frustrated because they aren't given
> sufficient indication about whether they are losing a battle.
But do you need to even display the generality? Do you need to
display the "Bubba hit Buffy very hard!"? I don't think so. The
most direct combat oriented games out there, the first person
shooters, don't display this. They neither display the numeric
attributes nor the general descriptions.
I would contend that simply having a health bar for each of your
combatants would be sufficient. The bar displays health as a
percentage of the whole, but your combatants never know what that
"whole" is. All Bubba would know is that he took 21% of Buffy's
health/life. Since he has no way of knowing if she had 70,000,000
life or 7 life the number is meaningless in knowing whether or not
he should have won.
- Chanur Silvarian -
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