View Full Version : Incoming ESRL Changes
Hamma
2013-03-25, 10:07 PM
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316370772702683136
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316369621559148544
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316369766883405824
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316370014196363264
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316370199672651777
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316370613558202368
DirtyBird
2013-03-25, 10:14 PM
Hopefully that will means they fix the other projectiles that don't render all of the time.
RSphil
2013-03-25, 10:23 PM
I find the flight path of the stricker rockets a little off and need to be looked at. they do some strange stuff sometimes.
ChipMHazard
2013-03-25, 10:29 PM
No mention of changing the Phoenix's infantry killing capability? Don't really think being able to shoot it down is going to help all that much.
Bocheezu
2013-03-25, 10:53 PM
If you have full flak armor, you should be able to survive one Phoenix rocket. Currently, it's a OHK against all softies.
Calisai
2013-03-25, 10:58 PM
No mention of changing the Phoenix's infantry killing capability? Don't really think being able to shoot it down is going to help all that much.
If I read the NV post correctly, I think he means making it a permanent NV... and make infantry not show up as easily. Check Ikea Catalogue (https://www.catalogueau.com/ikea/) and innovations Catalogue (https://www.catalogueau.com/innovations/). So without changing the damage, makes them harder to hit in the first place.... Sort of how cloaked infils are to NV right now... maybe not completely invisible, but make it so it's hard to see them unless you fire right at them, and then only give you a split second to try and steer into them.
Might work... we'll have to see. (A reason never to buy things like this the first week of release...)
Hobnail
2013-03-25, 11:01 PM
If you have full flak armor, you should be able to survive one Phoenix rocket. Currently, it's a OHK against everything.
Not a bad solution but that would make the Pho the only projectile in the game that is attenuated on direct hits by flak armor. Currently flak only protects you from AoE damage and the Pho inflicts little if any blast damage.
wasdie
2013-03-25, 11:22 PM
I like how there are no straight damage nerfs.
Baneblade
2013-03-25, 11:31 PM
The Phoenix isn't even as good as the Decimator at killing infantry.
nteger
2013-03-25, 11:45 PM
Still nothing about manual detonation for the Phoenix?
Rbstr
2013-03-25, 11:53 PM
If you have full flak armor, you should be able to survive one Phoenix rocket. Currently, it's a OHK against all softies.
Not a bad solution but that would make the Pho the only projectile in the game that is attenuated on direct hits by flak armor. Currently flak only protects you from AoE damage and the Pho inflicts little if any blast damage.
The Phoenix isn't even as good as the Decimator at killing infantry.
:rofl::rofl:
Yup, nothing wrong with a one hit kill guided missile you can fire from behind shit. You should need to spend several hundred certs to survive.
NUKABAZOOKA
2013-03-25, 11:58 PM
http://i2.kym-cdn.com/entries/icons/original/000/005/600/its-something.jpg
Sirisian
2013-03-26, 12:12 AM
They still have the main issue that it feels like their goal is to remove all other AV weapons from the game except for the Decimator. I get that in order to make money every weapon in their model needs to be better than the last, but they're going to run out of options after a few weapons with that strategy especially if the players don't accept the release of increasingly overpowered weapons. They need to find a different way to approach things.
That said I don't think the balance will ever be right after Rev 2 or 100. You have distinct weapons with different playstyles meaning they're going to be used differently. Balancing that is frankly impossible and I'm surprised the developers don't realize that after analyzing PS1. We had this exact same issue over many years as the developers back then released balance patches.
DirtyBird
2013-03-26, 12:44 AM
Wouldnt hurt them to allow weapon trade ins and a bit of SC to upgrade to the latest.
That said I don't think the balance will ever be right after Rev 2 or 100. You have distinct weapons with different playstyles meaning they're going to be used differently. Balancing that is frankly impossible and I'm surprised the developers don't realize that after analyzing PS1. We had this exact same issue over many years as the developers back then released balance patches.
How do you define balance? People use the word to mean many different things. Are the ESRL's balanced in relation to an Empire? In relation to each other? If each other, by damage per clip? Damage per round? Situational usages? Clearly they can never be "perfectly balanced" against each other as they operate differently..
But then again, people don't play games with unique sides to have perfect balance.
Balance is then making sure that when a side has an advantage its not too much of an advantage; or when side is at a disadvantage it's not at too much of a disadvantage. And that's entirely possible to do.
Edit: I do agree though that they've really gone gung-ho on AV weapons for the HA. I personally think the NS ones should never have been added, but oh well.
Falcon_br
2013-03-26, 03:09 AM
Well, it is official, Higby plays for the NC.
Everyone complaining that the Phoenix can 1 shot kill infantry and ESF. Without any warning.
So, they increase the damage it does do air units.
Dude, wtf!?
Highlighting tanks and obscure infantry, is a even lame decision, I just hope maxes units does not get highlight, or it will be the end of the VS/NC maxes on the game! Also highlighting vehicles = best way ever to scout for enemy parked sunderer with minimal effort.
A really small damage reduction so you could survive with flak armor 4 from a Phoenix missile would make me happy.
At least the Lancer now will have some useful tactics, you can crouch behind cover, fully charge it pop up and fire. Normally I am ignoring lancer users to deal with real threats on the battlefield, like a flash with m40 that does more damage to my tank, \o/.
Sirisian
2013-03-26, 05:37 AM
How do you define balance? People use the word to mean many different things.
Yeah this is the big question. I think the primary issue is the view of balance leaning toward an RTS. It seems so simple to use the analogy since it's 3 factions with varying vehicles and unit types. In an RTS you have combined arms. Simple right? The problem is with an RTS it's a player controlling the combined arms of the different classes and units rather than a player controlling one unit. This doesn't seem like a big deal since in Planetside 2 we have squad leaders and platoon leaders to command the individual units just like an RTS. When the enemy brings tanks we spawn rocket launcher infantrymen to counter them. When they bring infantry inside we bring infantry and maxes. So what's different? I'm arguing that asymmetrical balance is impossible, so what makes an MMOFPS different from an RTS?
In an RTS each unit has very specific attacks for each faction. This is still a lot of variables. I could list them, but attack range and damage will have to do and modifiers for strengths and weaknesses against every other unit in the other factions. This is a matrix of weights (http://i.imgur.com/vDeNHWg.png) for the damage, 0 if it can't attack at all. (Not all RTS games balance this way but sometimes it's necessary). In an RTS a player at the highest skill level is expected to execute roughly the same actions per minute as their competitor such that overall skill is determined by strategy (global resources and build queues) and tactics (individual unit movements).
In terms of tactics terrain is often simple with attacks that use it defined very simply. Take Starcraft 2 where some units could climb slopes. Simple booleans for yes or no a unit can do something are defined. Same for flying or not flying. SC2 has a unit that transforms between ground and air, but the rules still apply. Limiting a units variables to make balance manageable. Terrain is one of the more important points since how a player uses their special abilities like flight or walking up hills drastically changes balance so keeping these simple is necessary.
In an MMOFPS individual units spawn units of their choice. There is no strategic resource model at the global scale, nor really at the local scale in Planetside 2. What this means is the unit types on the field can be whatever the commander wants at any moment to counter the enemy. Tactics are still there but the strategy that comes with limited resources is missing. (Not advocating global resources, as I'll explain later that's flawed). So what about units. They are specialized in an RTS with rock paper scissors strength and weaknesses in an effort to make their balancing "simple". This still involves, in more complex RTS games, a few attacks, but most limit their specialization. Let's jump to the point units in PS2 are weakly specialized. At any moment a class has a rifle and secondary pistol with sidegraded specializations, grenades, C4/Proxy Mines/Mines/AV Mana Turret, and numerous types of rifles further (un)defining their role. Even maxes are not one role, often quickly switching between AA and AI in a single battle. How does this compare to an RTS with specialized roles. Within the classes a player is specialized right? Not really. An engineer out of a vehicle is both infantry and AV specialist with mines and an AV turret. An HA with a Phoenix is heavy infantry and also AV. What this means is that no unit type can be defined trivially by a set of numbers on the battlefield like damage or range. At any moment they can switch weapons changing those numbers drastically and affecting the weights against every faction specific unit.
Those variables aren't limited to range and damage though. They are range, damage and drop off, bullet drop, base CoF, AV damage, recoil, CoF modifiers, etc where some have modifiers and some don't. In the case of AV damage you have front and back modifiers for simplicity in the matrix. So a tank has modifiers for each faction (could be different, but they aren't) that define how much more damage a weapon does. Now taking into consideration all the variables and combination you come to the other difference. How players use those with terrain and base layouts. Unlike an RTS with usually defined levels in a somewhat 2d restricted world you might attack from a cliff wall down one level. Nothing insane, but that scenario is well defined. In an FPS a player can be essentially anywhere using whatever weapon, almost, with a lot of variables. We've seen what happens when a grenade launcher and ammo pack are combined with high altitude or what a Phoenix does with a rock to hide behind. The number of variables to balance is insanely high. In the case of the grenade launcher each faction has one and its damage and modifiers against every faction unit seems well defined until you take into account flak armor which is essentially random in a large battle and impossible to detect. It would be like in an RTS if units randomly spawned with a 50% resistance to explosions that landed next to them. In the case of the Phoenix there is no faction weapon to compare it to directly. Its hundreds of variables including player position on the map and cover and turning rate, projectile speed, range must all be compared against every faction unit in the game and balanced. Using modifiers to do this is naive. You can easily apply a 0.5 damage across infantry not taking into account that this weapon bypasses flak since it always does direct hits, but that doesn't take into the fact that it can't be compared against any other faction weapons.
You might be thinking, "but this doesn't matter since in an RTS many faction units have no direct comparison and they were balanced", but it doesn't take into account how it's balanced. I've tried to make a point, but the number of variables and how a player chooses to use a weapon in an FPS is drastically higher than what you'd find in an RTS environment. (If it isn't clear. When you target an enemy in an RTS you have a target and possibly accuracy. In an FPS you have 3 dimensional aiming. Slight difference in the number of variables). Even in an RTS environment exploited strategies are found and fixed after a lot of testing. The ramifications of a small change to variables or terrain to stop a weapon's exploit is multiplied by the sheer number of tactics (variables) available in a 3D world.
Are the ESRL's balanced in relation to an Empire? In relation to each other? If each other, by damage per clip? Damage per round? Situational usages? Clearly they can never be "perfectly balanced" against each other as they operate differently..
But then again, people don't play games with unique sides to have perfect balance.
That's the issue right there. Getting people to realize they would lose very little and gain a lot if the game had symmetric playstyles by setting all the weapon and hitboxes and stats equal with different graphics and particle effects. I'm a bit biased since I wrote this (http://sirisian.com/planetside2/#Faction_Redesigns) before tech test with my experience from playing PS1 since launch. It seems like a lot to change, but it takes the number of variables per faction and removes them from the balance equation completely. Surprisingly this doesn't remove the bigger issue which is a lack of specialization. It doesn't have to though. That analogy of Planetside 2 being an RTS is impossible.
It should be obvious in an RTS there are build queues and global resources that define a commanders strategic objectives and how they should best execute them and in what order. There are no build queues or global resources in Planetside 2. Players don't start on the same foot. It's a never-ending war. To go back to the RTS analogy it would be like 30 people on 3 teams playing an RTS but everyone starts at different times jumping in and out of the game every hour to play for a bit but starting with infinite resources to build units with massive customization. As you move your units into the fog of war you rarely know what you'll be fighting against and are forced to think on the spot. Now also imagine 100s of players but some of them are controlling one unit. By the time you spawn counters the target you were fighting against is gone as you're pushed back. The infantry unit you were fighting with a tank has now set down an AV turret and is firing rockets removing what rock paper scissors existed. This isn't an RTS. It's closer to what is known as an MMORTT or MMO real-time tactics game. When everyone controls one player in first person you're at an MMOFPS. The difference between an RTS and MMOFPS should be clear.
So why can't an MMOFPS just implement very strict specialization and spawning rules with global resources? It can and it's called Savage 1 and 2 which had a global commander, global resources, and build queues where each faction started and progressed at the same time with semi-specialized units. It frankly isn't that fun. Even in their goal to make specialized RTS like units they were forced to diversify them with tons of attacks sacrificing rock paper scissors combat to allow skill. They even had to make the factions very similar to remove variables that would completely destroy the balance if exploited. Planetside 1 and 2 aren't those kind of games as much as some people would want them to be.
The nice thing about an MMOFPS like Planetside 2 is it can have symmetric balance and have deep asymmetric balance between players on how they choose their loadouts and playstyles. You don't really need classes for this, but you do need a sane system to limit choices. Dozens of threads have discussed the same basic concept. I have a rough explanation here (http://sirisian.com/planetside2/#Territory_and_Resources-Universal_Playstyle_Resource_Sink) and better one here (http://www.reddit.com/r/Planetside/comments/16rn2o/metagame_design_meeting_idea_resource_denial_and/). The idea to use resources at the local player level to promote specialization while using player purchasing power denial at the global level (http://sirisian.com/planetside2/#Territory_and_Resources-Problems). It's a lot to read, but the gist is that global resource supply lines are a failed concept and just play into the idea of an RTS model that isn't suited for how players play the game. That is casual players and small outfits don't want to be burdened in the 1 or 2 hours they play a day, but at the same time a model must exist to limit players on the front lines over a very short period. (Thus resource denial through hurting a player's purchasing power making it harder to acquire specializations for cheap).
Balance is then making sure that when a side has an advantage its not too much of an advantage; or when side is at a disadvantage it's not at too much of a disadvantage. And that's entirely possible to do.
Indeed. However, the number of variables involved makes that an interesting challenge when keeping faction asymmetrical balance. Even in the faction symmetric balance model players still specialize their roles. One person might be engineer and have a shotgun and another engineer has a rifle. In this way players define their own asymmetrical balance through their own specialized playstyle. The asymetrical balance isn't gone really except if you want weapons (playstyles) that only one faction can employ. In that case I usually view it as lowering the skill ceiling. I have a serious issue when an FPS game specifically limits a player's playstyle choices to put them at a clear disadvantage to another player no matter their skill level. If someone pulls a sniper another player could pull a sniper. Two players using their best AV weapon even has a clear winner when one has no counter. (Even with the balance changes it won't change the outcome. PS1 tried its best to limit Phoenix damage to infantry, but people still did it). In a biolab if I pull my dual cosmos and my NC friend pulls his dual hacksaw we can try to pretend its a fair fight as he uses his skill to charge and I use my skill to attempt to charge away, but my playstyle has been limited.
The idea that you can balance an FPS with asymmetrical faction playstyles such that a disadvantage is not too much of a disadvantage isn't happening. In fact with that line of thinking the Phoenix would do no damage to Infantry since the damage is so high. In fact that's what the NV scope is attempting to do to make the advantage no longer and advantage. You can still fire without getting sniped. TR and VS have to keep them self open for vehicle and infantry fire to damage a tank. The advantage of hiding is so great in fact that it's what made the Phoenix so hated in PS1. I mean the Lancer and Striker might have been powerful kind of but you could see your enemy. Using your logic the Phoenix should be removed for balance reasons to remove an advantage that is too much of an advantage. In a symmetric model the best course of action would be to give each faction a Phoenix with a different name and colored rockets and aesthetics and compare it to the striker in usefulness when all the factions have on and a Lancer. From that perspective the Striker would be removed for balance since it outshines all other AV lock-on weapons and you are left with the Phoenix and Lancer as unique weapons that add something to the game and are both situational for each empire to take advantage of.
I digress since this is looking a tad long, but playstyles shouldn't be defaulted to one faction. It's the only reason we have the fourth empire at all and accounts for most of the complaint threads. Reading the threads you either come out of them with the realization that they need to be patched or like me, from watching this through Planetside 1, you realize that maybe asymmetrical balance isn't offering people the kind of customization they really want with their playstyles.
Gatekeeper
2013-03-26, 05:47 AM
Well this is good news, it's a shame the Lancer was released in such a broken/ineffective state but at least the devs are listening to feedback.
Not sure if the changes will be enough to make it useful, but I'll definitely trial it again and see. One thing they really need to fix though is how charging and aiming are linked - you should be able to start charging and then aim and fire once charging is done, rather than having to aim through the whole charging process.
Baneblade
2013-03-26, 07:12 AM
:rofl::rofl:
Yup, nothing wrong with a one hit kill guided missile you can fire from behind shit. You should need to spend several hundred certs to survive.
Have you tried the Phoenix? If anyone is managing to hit infantry with it, they deserve the kill tbh.
Ketadine
2013-03-26, 07:23 AM
https://twitter.com/mhigby/status/316370772702683136
I hope they improve the lock on mechanic. Currently, of your 5 rockets, only 2-3 hit. They also seem to travel slower than other rockets.
Shamrock
2013-03-26, 08:37 AM
Have you tried the Phoenix? If anyone is managing to hit infantry with it, they deserve the kill tbh.
Phoenix Sniping! - YouTube
The principles of hitting infantry with phoenix rockets isn't that hard to guage, if you have a ready supply of ammo near a safe spot in cover you can fire off a few test shots to scout out targets and figure out what you can hit before your rocklet runs out of fuel.
Baneblade
2013-03-26, 08:39 AM
Ok... and?
Bocheezu
2013-03-26, 08:51 AM
Have you tried the Phoenix? If anyone is managing to hit infantry with it, they deserve the kill tbh.
What exactly is the counter to it? Can't pull a tank because they'll just turn the Phoenix on your tank. Can't pull infil to shoot them because they're hidden behind a rock. ESF, I guess? I don't fly, so I don't know how useful ESF are.
In PS1, they were a two-shot kill and had less range than the PS2 version (range was about equivalent to maybe 150 PS2 meters). You can't drop ammo in PS1, either. They were annoying, but counterable if you flanked them. OHK with infinite ammo is just idiotic.
Assist
2013-03-26, 09:12 AM
I think the biggest problem with the Lancer is no one bought it. People went to the VR and tested it out by themselves and decided it sucked. No surprise, as it does suck by itself. I still think it's amazing when used together with another Lancer. The charge time is a problem with it, as it's terrible close range because of it.
The Striker is amazing though, it is the only gun in the game that completely locks down an area from aircraft. Similar to what I mentioned in the promo stream from Higby, it's just too good against ESFs. If you see [LOCK] flashing on your screen now you have to run, you don't have a choice. Pop your flares, get your shots off on your target, and boogie out before they have another chance to lock. Before the ESRL it could of been just an Annihilator or two, something you could live through. Now it could be one Striker(you have to repair), two Strikers (you're dead) or a Striker and Annihilator(you're dead).
Koadster
2013-03-26, 09:19 AM
Have you tried the Phoenix? If anyone is managing to hit infantry with it, they deserve the kill tbh.
Dude try my trick, sit at TI alloys and farm the crown with the phoenix.. Also Wrel uploaded a video about the new phoenix.. he gets plently of inf kills in the video.. Its easier then a dumbfire rocket and can even double as one!
Its easy to get inf kills, just need to be safe because while in the camera you're quite exposed!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsFh5IcbRQM
Gimpylung
2013-03-26, 10:22 AM
It's confirmed then, the n00brocket is back. I died a little bit inside.
EDIT, actually nevermind, they nerfed the camera against infantry, thank God.
Phreec
2013-03-26, 02:35 PM
I think it's fair to nerf the Phoenix against infantry but it will still remain useless against Air with its laughable speed and range. I'm not too fond over the IRNV nonsense either, I would've rather seen a range buff and reduced infantry damage tweak.
Falcon_br
2013-03-26, 03:06 PM
So the noob rocket does not kills ESF in one shot I was wrong, but they will change it so it can kill it.
You'll have to excuse me for cutting down on the quotes; don't want to make this too gigantic :)
Yeah this is the big question. I think the primary issue is the view of balance leaning toward an RTS. <snip RTS detail>
Games like SC2 are easy to look at for not only three sides as opposed to two, but unique sides as well. However I wasn't think of an RTS, for many of the reasons you touched on - in an RTS the entire kit of the faction is available to a single player, and the challenge is correctly utilizting it. A game like E&B however has much more relevant similarities, although it was not Empire vs Empire.
ESRL's feel like an odd man out right now because they are - they are the first things to function differently between empires. The closest we've had so far are MBT's, and those aren't wildly different. So they definitely can't be balanced in relation to the whole empire, because the empire's don't have unique "kits". Personally I think with the proposed changes (especially the quite brilliant idea of making infantry hard-to-see on the phoenix) things will be in a good place.
I digress since this is looking a tad long, but playstyles shouldn't be defaulted to one faction. It's the only reason we have the fourth empire at all and accounts for most of the complaint threads. Reading the threads you either come out of them with the realization that they need to be patched or like me, from watching this through Planetside 1, you realize that maybe asymmetrical balance isn't offering people the kind of customization they really want with their playstyles.
I believe the contrary: If all empires have the same weapons and only their particle effects differ, why would does it matter what faction I play as? Just find the one that has the most population or the most organized outfits - (or the opposite if you like being and underdog). At that point you just have Team Red, Team Yellow, and Team Purple.
I completely agree the customization people want isn't available, but I don't believe it has anything to do with faction proficiences. Using myself as an example - I absolutely loved running around in PS1 as a Rexo with the Lasher and Pulsar. What I liked was 1) Vanu Rexo looked awesome and 2) I had one gun I could use "surgically" and another I could go crazy with. The HA in this game almost captured what I wanted, except I don't want an AV tool. Let other people deal with tanks. And I don't want an LMG either. I'd be just fine with the Pulsar AR and Lasher. Now lest this turn into a bring-back-inventory-down-with-classes discussion, I'm not saying that classes don't have their place. I just don't understand why some of the restrictions are the way are (cloak guy with a rocket launcher or shutgun bad, ok... why could an LA not pack some kinda of ranged AV?).
I do appreciate your clarification on what you want out of balance, but I still believe that uniqueness is very important to Planetside.
Badjuju
2013-03-26, 09:48 PM
Have you tried the Phoenix? If anyone is managing to hit infantry with it, they deserve the kill tbh.
After a little practice I have no trouble hitting infantry at a full sprint. At the crossroads I was able to fire them from on top of a hill, into the vehicle bay, and then maneuver them back up to pick people off at the top of the stairs. It is quite silly really. Best AI weapon in the game.
Sifer2
2013-03-27, 01:36 AM
Well, it is official, Higby plays for the NC.
Yeah he has never tried to hide that fact actually. Thankfully he isn't the only guy that handles weapon balance. But his twatter stuff is often very biased sounding.
In any case I didn't hear him say they were changing the Striker to a guided launcher instead of lock on so i'm still unsatisfied. When is the second stronger batch of ESRL's coming so TR can have that option? lol
Hamma
2013-03-27, 07:16 PM
Only change that has come thus far is the Lancer buff and a couple phoenix changes.
Sirisian
2013-03-28, 06:12 AM
I believe the contrary: If all empires have the same weapons and only their particle effects differ, why would does it matter what faction I play as? Just find the one that has the most population or the most organized outfits - (or the opposite if you like being and underdog). At that point you just have Team Red, Team Yellow, and Team Purple.
I didn't choose my faction for the Magrider or Scythe's hover ability. I chose VS purely because of the lore, color scheme, and outfits from PS1 I played with. That's actually how I'd prefer people to choose their factions rather than by default playstyles. It might seem odd to just have that to choose, but I think it's a far better than choosing on default playstyles or faction playstyles that are currently overpowered.
Also with the changes the developers made to make the Phoenix more powerful now with one-hit kills on aircraft I think it should be clear they have little understanding of balance. I mean their decisions for balance are extremely random and usually go in excess of what is required. The Striker is probably the most obvious case after the Phoenix which they released fully knowing it could one-hit infantry. We went through a launcher that could lock onto ground and air was too powerful so they released a buffed version of one faction. These kind of decisions probably won't stop and the balance cycle is already mirroring what happened in PS1 when balance patches were attempted over and over. I mean as an example the prowler never had the ability to hit aircraft as easily as it does now. In balancing one thing they create bigger problems especially when it's faction specific.
I'm probably not going to convince you of anything, but choosing a faction based on lore and graphics is preferable to what is currently happening where players choose based on the flavor of the month weapon or vehicle that gives them a playstyle advantage that can be exploited. It's not creating some mystical balance where players learn how to fight other factions in special ways as some people think it is. If we wanted that we can have that based on what we see. If you see a VS or TR max with dual shotguns you approach the situation differently. Same exact mechanic that we get when one faction has an overpowered feature, but it can be objectively evaluated by the community and everyone is open to that playstyle.
I think that last point is good because it shows how little faction specific features add to the game and how much more it would add to give them to everyone allowing equal skillcaps in identical situations.
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