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Slariton

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Everything posted by Slariton

  1. Didn't most of the ungrateful Blosk people die before the adventurers got there?
  2. That's an acid baton against a Brain Rat. Brain Rats don't have armor, and acid batons do 1-6. That ramps our damage estimate up to 84 with the normal formula, only 17 points below your result. Your sword strikes also did more than the formula suggested, so it's likely there is another element, maybe a random factor in the multiplier rolls, that pushes things higher on average. (Meanwhile, the Oozing Sword would be expected to do 99 damage against a Brain Rat, from the formula.) Missile damage ramps up faster because missiles ramp up multipliers and weapons don't, while missiles have significant base damage and spells don't.
  3. Quote: Originally written by Delicious Vlish: As far as actual damage numbers go, with, say, the oozing blade, I do about 60 to 80 damage with an attack, a little more if blessed, and on a lucky hit, a double strike. Compare that to doing 100 to 150ish damage straight up with the venom baton. Hmm. This is somewhat odd. Both Venom Batons and the Oozing Sword do 1-5 damage per level of damage. What's more, the sword is 6 levels higher than the baton and you also have 3 more points in Melee than Missile. And they both do physical damage. This is *really* odd. Well, let's do the math the way we'd expect it to look: Weapon level + str/dex + melee/missile Sword: 12 + 9 + 12 = 33 Baton: 6 + 9 + 9 = 24 Multiplier average of 3 Sword = 99 Baton = 72 Monarch has 40% armor, so multiply by .6 average: Sword = 59 damage Baton = 43 damage Luck, or some other factor, might push damage up a little, so the sword damage is about what we woudl expect. But clearly, something is making the baton do damage very, very differently. 43 damage is nowhere near the 125 or so average you're reporting. I'm honestly a little befuddled, because I've never seen missiles do damage so drastically different. Certainly not in G3 when I ran a missile agent. I don't think the thorns are a factor at all since you can fire a baton with the same results with or without a thorn item in your inventory, and without the thorn item, there's no chance of using its multiplier or anything else. What's amazing is that you are reporting damage three times above what the formulae predict. Doubling the impact of dex AND missile skill AND the item bonus doesn't cover it. Doubling the multiplier doesn't cover it. Maximizing the multiplier results doesn't even cover it. It would have to be some combination of these kinds of effects. And I'm skeptical, because as far as we have seen, these parts of the attack are dealt with uniformly for every single attack in G4. They're handled the same in the item defs, too. Jeff would have had to hardcode in a different way of handling missiles. Vlish, are you sure about those numbers?
  4. There are so many different opinions... I think a wiki would be a disaster. A collaborative project might work great, but it would need someone to moderate it.
  5. I'm not entirely clear how this stun exploit works either. I understand DV's math, but your opponent gets a turn right after you strike and will presumably attack you then. That said, in G3 I used the Stunning Blade for a VERY long time with my Melee Agent. Under G3's system, it could stun twice (once for the ability and once just for being a damage-dealing attack), which with Quick Action meant up to four stuns per turn. Most enemies could be incapacitated in a single hit if they were alone. It stopped being useful late in the game due to most enemies having stun resistance or extra APs, or appearing in large groups.
  6. Quote: Originally written by DrPraetorious: Offtopic: Okay - which of the five classes would you say is the weakest overall? One of the five has to be. The differences between the classes are actually fairly minute and usually come down to a couple levels worth of skill points; them seem different because they tend to promote different character development strategies. The Shock Trooper and Warrior both suffer from the large extra cost to learn magic skills, however, which is much worse than the other 3 classes' penalties. Melee skills are for the most part easy to boost with items and shaping skill, as you observe, is almost irrelevant and also boostable with items. Serviles are the most survivable, lifecrafters the most offensively powerful, and infiltrators the most versatile.
  7. Quote: Originally written by DrPraetorious: ...a servile/lifecrafter... it's the weakest class overall, I'd say. It just became quite difficult to take you seriously.
  8. I suppose it's possible guilds/sects/whatever exist in some form. But if they had any relevance, power, or size whatsoever, I would expect to have heard something about them in G4, if not the earlier games. G4 does not take place in an isolated corner of the world, not by a longshot.
  9. The word "guild" (including plural and possessive permutations) appears exactly once in all four Geneforge games (I just searched). There's a sign in Valeya (in G4) for a Woodworker's Guild.
  10. It doesn't say "guilds," it says "sects." The exact line is: "The Shapers are the oldest, most respected, most secretive, and most powerful of the magical sects." That's the very first line of G1. Since we haven't seen ANY other human magical sects, I think it's safe to assume this has been retconned out.
  11. 20-30% hit after a curse? What difficulty level is this?
  12. Yeah, Cryoa are the new Vlish, in some ways anyway.
  13. What, you didn't like the 50 gp Piercing Crystals?
  14. Quote: Originally written by Stillness: This model is not as good as design because right off the bat it doesn’t deal with the parts that actually make vision irreducible. It only deals with one part. And even that is vague. We all know that someone with substantial intelligence can put parts together to make a machine work. We don’t see nature doing it though... (snip) In terms of observable evidence purposeful agency is clearly superior! But how does design/agency/whatever deal with those parts? With our current understanding of evolution, it isn't possible to explain the way things happen in sufficient detail for you. I want to hear an explanation of how design explains things in comparable detail. I'm willing to let you off the hook for the nature of the design itself, because that's outside the scope of this discussion just like the origin of life is. My question is: once that design had been made, what actually happened in the world of physical objects to get from organisms without eyes (or whatever "irreducibly complex" characteristic you prefer) to organisms with eyes? Evolution doesn't explain those mechanisms in perfect detail, but it does attempt to explain them. // IF your answer is "spontaneous creation of eyes" please give the evidence suggesting spontaneous creation happens. You don't contest that evolution happens on a small scale, so you agree there is an analogue for it, although you take issue with the mechanics involved in extending the analogy; fine. I contest spontaneous creation. I say it doesn't happen at all, on any scale. Prove that it happens. //
  15. They're both handled by SDFs, so yes. Find a place you know reputation changes, look it up in the scripts, and you can figure out the relevant SDFs. IIRC the reputation SDF was 100,something.
  16. Quote: Originally written by Stillness: Quote: how the heck does intelligent design seem more plausible or likely (as you have been arguing) under these criteria? When have we observed intelligent design of species? (Don't say we've observed humans designing things and that's analagous to ID, because we've also observed speciation analogous to common descent.) Where are the witnesses? How can we reproduce it? Excellent! Who said we're not getting anywhere? They are the same. We need to figure which one fits better. You cut off the first part of my first sentence! That's why it seems like we're getting somewhere! If you put that back in, it's pretty clear that I do not agree with a statement like "They are the same." But if you feel they are the same in terms of observable evidence, why have you been arguing that the evidence better supports ID?
  17. Capping hit chance at 95% (and 5%) is a very old RPG convention that stems from D&D and its 1d20 combat rolls. It has displayed remarkable robustness for a rule that isn't essential, showing up in RPGs all over the place. That may be because it makes sense. You can always get a lucky dodge somehow, can't you?
  18. No. There is a Reputation stat, but more is better (as opposed to having to choose between pleasing different factions). You get more reputation mainly from completing quests and helping people.
  19. Quote: Originally written by Stillness: As I said before, I do believe it’s impossible for evolution to make these systems, but my argument is not “it’s impossible.” So if I said, “it can’t happen” that was not intended to be the strength of my position. AHA! Okay, now this makes sense. Correct me if I'm wrong Stillness, but basically, you keep track of what you believe separately from what you argue in the debate. That makes sense. It's very reasonable to say "I believe X and Y, but on the strength of evidence I can only argue Y." The only problem is that you tend to mention your beliefs in the same breath as your argument, which makes it hard for others to distinguish between them. Quote: But you have hit on a problem that I have been identifying from the beginning regarding NDT/common descent. It deals with origins and is not operational science. It’s impossible to observe, there are no witnesses (at least none forthcoming), and we can’t reproduce it... Putting aside several issues related to how evolution is being evaluated here, I really have to ask: how the heck does intelligent design seem more plausible or likely (as you have been arguing) under these criteria? When have we observed intelligent design of species? (Don't say we've observed humans designing things and that's analagous to ID, because we've also observed speciation analogous to common descent.) Where are the witnesses? How can we reproduce it?
  20. Ooh... you know what else this means? It's possible to get the AP bonuses from both the Cryos Spear and Quicksilver Bulwark, which means you can get 1 AP higher than we originally thought. 8 base +4 spear, shield, sandals, armor +1 Fast on Feet +2 Quick Strike -- 15 before Haste 22 with Haste Fast on Feet is inconsistent, of course, but you can still get to 14 without FoF. With Haste, that gives you 21 AP per turn. It wasn't possible to break 19.5 without Fast on Feet, before. Now you can get a reliable four hits per turn. Woo. Four a 4 person party, this makes it easier to get the 4th PC to 10 AP per turn using high Quick Strike as well, since there are so many weapons that boost QS.
  21. *blinks* Is this really true? Wow, what a powerful undiscovered exploit. Wow.
  22. Quote: Originally written by Stillness: I see the difference, but as of yet have seen no detailed theory as to how such a thing could occur. The problem is that you haven't been saying "This is conceivable in theory, but I haven't seen a detailed theory as to how it could occur." You've been saying "This is impossible. It just can't happen."
  23. Fresh Exiles. No, seriously. The Darkside Loyalists, assuming they have some real political power, make this plausible as a plot device. The real limiting factors are that we know from other comments of Jeff's that you can still be humans, nephils, or sliths, and you can still use the same unusually varied set of skills. There aren't many occupations that welcome multiple races and have such a varied skill set. Adventurer. Bandit. Uh... Unspecified Services, which is basically the same as the first two. Prisoners? Hostages? Mercenaries?
  24. Quote: Originally written by Student of Trinity: You start as a Chitrach. DIE. But seriously, this isn't even funny.
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