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View Poll Results: Is the resource limit needed? | |||
No, the resource income rates will balance it. | 29 | 42.03% | |
Yes, because there will be "resourceless" playstyles. | 40 | 57.97% | |
Voters: 69. You may not vote on this poll |
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2012-04-18, 12:37 PM | [Ignore Me] #17 | ||
Second Lieutenant
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I think it just depends on the resource type.
I think some cheap and basic resources should have no limit, and some more rare (heavy, hazardous, etc) types should only be gathered very slowly, only last a short time, or have a small storage capacity. |
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2012-04-18, 12:43 PM | [Ignore Me] #18 | ||
Contributor PlanetSide 2
Game Designer |
If the soft-cap is "realistically" 40, then make the hard cap a little under that and call it a day. It's effectively the same and a lot easier to balance.
Gotta keep the resource system simple so resource management isn't a chore. What's the purpose? That should be the question you ask. Nobody is being "punished" for saving if a hard cap exists. You can save. You just can't save forever. Resources aren't meant to be saved forever. They're meant to be spent. Ideally you spend roughly as much as you bring in but i the absence of that a low cap on the total number of resources ensures you never feel like you have enough. It is vitally important to the game that resources remain something people care about and always feel like they need more. That is what will drive people to The purpose of a stockpile is so you have a cushion to where you don't actually have to worry about income for a bit and can survive without it. The larger you make that stockpile the more people you will have operating without a limit. And the AFK bot issue is something that will come up without a resource cap and they'll have to have quite a few designs built on top of that to combat the problem. As long as resources are paid out as dividends you're going to have people sitting around leaching them. If you have no limit on the amount they can leach it's going to be a widespread problem. You'll have people that play all day, then turn on their AFK bot to farm resources on some continent while they sleep or are at work/class. Then they'll come back and not care about resources again because they have this huge stockpile. Worse, they ate resources from people actively on the continent at the time doing things and reduced active population. A cap won't completely eliminate this problem but if the cap is reasonably low there won't be all that much benefit to doing it so motivation will be low. If there's no cap or a soft cap that allows you to stockpile significantly more resources then that's what they'll do. There's more options to the developers for balancing, it's simpler to balance, and motivation for resources stays high with a cap. It's pure win. |
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2012-04-18, 01:16 PM | [Ignore Me] #19 | |||
Brigadier General
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Let's say both the example hard cap and example soft cap are exactly the same cap. Both will be 100 for this example. With the hard cap, I earn 10 resources every hour. If I don't spend any for 10 hours, I will max out. After that point, no matter how much I play or how well my empire does, I will never gain any reward of any kind. With the soft cap, I earn 10 resources every hour. Once I hit 50, I earn 5 resources every hour. Once I hit 75, I earn 2 resources every hour. Etc etc. Instead of maxing out after 10 hours, I would only be at 75, or three quarters of the maximum amount I could hold. There is still plenty of potential to still have some reward for doing well or for my empire doing well, just at a slower rate of return than if I only had a few resources. This is why your example makes no sense. A balanced soft cap will always be higher than a balanced hard cap, because it's harder to reach the cap. It's the whole point of having a soft cap, so that you can still get something, but at a balanced rate proportional to how much you have stockpiled. It's not hard to balance a soft cap. You just pick what amount you want the average player to have and you start diminishing their resources earned once they pass that number or slightly before it, and then you figure out what the maximum number of resources an individual player could have without it becoming unbalanced and place the end of the soft cap there, where diminished returns trickle to nothing. Resources are meant to reward. What exactly is the harm in rewarding both big spenders and misers in their own way? It's very easy to balance and you would never run into a situation where you felt cheated out of resources because you couldn't get to an inventory station to grab some grenades or a vehicle because you were stuck in the middle of a long drawn out fight in the middle of nowhere. Last edited by Xyntech; 2012-04-18 at 01:17 PM. |
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2012-04-18, 01:43 PM | [Ignore Me] #20 | ||
Contributor PlanetSide 2
Game Designer |
I know what a soft cap is, thanks.
It isn't needed in this instance. In a place like WoW it makes sense so people target certain stat goals and then hit them, with the soft cap making it so if you go a tad over you didn't waste the stat points, or you could go over intentionally if you wanted to take the loss in efficiency to boost a particularly beneficial stat. The key part of a soft cap is a goal that you want people to hit (soft cap) and a level you don't want them to go past (hard cap). Here a simple resource cap is sufficient and keeps the model simple. At the cap? Spend more! Not at the cap? Get more resources! It stays simple. The problems with soft cap is that it adds unnecessary complexity to the game. Stat point formulas in WoW were one of the more tedious parts of that game. I don't want to have a resource formula in PS to see whether I'm making optimal use of my resources. It's silly. In the end you still have the same effective result - people target X amount of resources. Whether X is a hard cap or a soft cap in Planetside doesn't matter, it's still the number people will try for. The soft cap doesn't net you anything in here and adds unnecessary complexity. What is the problem that soft cap solves? |
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2012-04-18, 02:02 PM | [Ignore Me] #21 | ||
Brigadier General
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I've said several times. It solves the problem of players not getting rewarded by a system that is meant to reward.
What is better, being stuck capped at 100 resources and being unable to get any more, or getting a reduced, but still decent reward up to 150? Imagine you are fighting inside a base as some sort of infantryman. Your play style requires no resources of any kind and you would prefer to save up your resources for vehicles. You have been fighting in this crazy drawn out battle inside this one base for 2 hours now and you have hit the hard resource cap of 100. Now you know that you are going to have an epic tank battle coming up shortly after you finally take this base, because the area between this capture point and the next is perfect for tank battles, but now you are getting absolutely no reward for your effort. "just get some grenades" Why? That's not the way they play infantry. "they just get no resource reward then" Most of the reason that resources are in the game is as a reward for players. Obviously there isn't much point if the player NEVER spends resources, but those players would eventually hit the end of the softcap anyways and it would be a non-issue. What about players who only like spending resources for specific parts of the game, where they may blow through their entire stash quickly, but may go for entire long stretches without spending any at all. I don't see what has to be so complicated for players either. You get normal resources until 100. Then you get less and less until theoretically you get nothing at 150, or 200, or whatever the cap is. It's not like something you need spreadsheets to plan for. You just know that you should probably spend something once you have 100 because you aren't earning quite as much as normal if you have more than that. For those looking to build up a stash, you just know that you will never get to x number, so don't even bother once you get close. It's simple for the devs, it would have little impact on most players and it does solve some problems, even if you want to ignore them. Last edited by Xyntech; 2012-04-18 at 02:04 PM. |
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2012-04-18, 02:59 PM | [Ignore Me] #22 | |||
Contributor PlanetSide 2
Game Designer |
And the system isn't meant to reward players. It's intended to motivate players to attacking all sorts of different types of territory and to help make all types of territory valuable. It gives reason to take a particular piece of territory. High resource cap can mean many players don't care about a particular piece of territory because they feel they have enough of it. Reward is part of the motivation, but it is the means, not the end. It's intended to make resource denial an effective tactic. Not having a cap severely impairs this design intent, and having a high cap limits the effectiveness of resource denial. The deeper the pocket of the player the less likely they are to be impacted by shortages of a particular resource. Too large of a resource supply cap and the tactic is completely ineffective. Think of a tech plant in PS1 - no tech means vehicles severely limited and disadvantaged. Resources replace that functionality in PS1. If you lose a resource to pull a tank for an hour and it doesn't interrupt your ability to pull tanks the tactic is ineffective and the design has failed. It's intended to provide another axis for balance - economics. Not having a cap also impacts this design intent. I gave the orbital strike example earlier. Having a higher cap lowers the effectiveness. Strictly speaking sure they could add a soft cap. But it doesn't solve anything. There's no reason to do it. |
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2012-04-18, 03:06 PM | [Ignore Me] #23 | ||
Master Sergeant
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I voted No
I don't consider game money as resourses you cannot buy resourses in PS2. Resourses affect side / up grades only . They will not affect your damage out for any weapon. They will give you additional ablities, like a flash light that blinds, a muzzle that increases range, a clip that holds more ammo. Nothing that could be bought with money. If PS2 allows all Empire Resourses one can accumlate to decay over time to a base low basic level so a 1st time player, or a person who was out of game was gone for a period of time had some side grades that coulld be added it would solve the problem. Use it or lose it to a base level. Outfit Resourses would could be degraded based on the number of active players. This would then stop Outfits that have 500 people units with only 5 people ever on line an active. Start decay times after 2 or 3 weeks. The more one plays the more indivual resourses that would be open to him. If your AFK for 5 mins auto kick out of game - no resourse coming in. Solves resourse mining. If you can't get a cup of coffee, beer, whatever, do a bio break in that time ur playing with it.
__________________
OL - Dangerous Operations Group {DOG} "There is NO "I" in Teamwork" DOG SLOGAN - "It's not the size of the DOG in a fight, it's the size of the fight in the DOG" DOG BATTLE CRY - " Cry 'Havoc,' and Let Slip The DOG's OF War. " And Hamma I see the VS and the NC have infiltrated your board. So the TR will have to kill them all and make them the yellow bastards they are |
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2012-04-18, 03:34 PM | [Ignore Me] #24 | |||
Contributor PlanetSide 2
Game Designer |
The best way to stop it is not allow it to be worth doing. Low resource cap means there is little benefit in doing it. Unless they get smarter and modify their scripts to spend resources on things like certs too, heh. PS2 will have to address it in some fashion. They might have an experience requirement on the dividend to ensure you have some minimal amount of effort before you start receiving resources. That'll raise the bar on the bots and hopefully make it a non-issue. |
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2012-04-18, 05:16 PM | [Ignore Me] #25 | |||||
Brigadier General
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A quarter isn't as valuable as a dollar, but I doubt you would find a lot of people who would say no to a .25 cent raise. You bother to have them so that you can still have a reward for those who spend a little less often.
The original goal may not have been to have a reward system, but a reward system is how they are achieving those original goals. By your own admission, the system rewards players to motivate them. Kinda hard to use it to motivate them if they aren't being rewarded, no? Obviously not all players want or need a reward system to motivate them, but that doesn't mean a reward system shouldn't still be ever present trying to do it's job.
Considering that the devs have suggested having an offline resource collection as a perk for subscribers, I highly doubt the cap will be too low, soft or hard. Now we don't know how things like orbital strikes will be balanced, like whether they will require multiple types of resource, but let's just keep it simple with a single resource type. Soft cap starts at 100 and ends at 150. Orbital strike costs 100. Nobody can ever fire off 2 in a row, but a person at 145 can fire off a second one a lot quicker than someone at 100. Tanks cost 40. Someone who keeps spending all of their resources the moment they get them will have a harder time if they need to pull a lot of tanks in a row to push back an enemy assault, but someone who has been saving their resources up to 120 can pull 3 tanks in a row the instant they respawn, potentially being a large factor in helping turn the tide of a battle. We can also look at it from the point of view of resource denial, as you have mentioned. As far as we know, losing control of a resource won't instantly get rid of any you have banked, or start trickling it away, it just means you don't get any more until you take the resource back. What this means is that, again, the player who has saved some up will be in a significantly stronger position than the player who has spent it all the moment they earned it. With a hard cap, everyone has up to 100, meaning that if you had it maxed out, you can pull 2 tanks and that's it. With a soft cap, you could potentially pull 3 tanks, at the cost of having not earned resources as quickly while you were saving up. A cap of some kind, hard or soft, is needed to keep from having players with millions of a resource where they can pull whatever they want no matter what territory they hold. Comparing a soft cap to no cap is just insane. You claim to know what a soft cap is, and I'm sure you do, but it's hard to take you seriously when you make such comparisons. No doubt a soft cap would be different than a hard cap, both for better and for worse, but I believe the good would outweigh the bad. The bad being that it would take a small amount of extra consideration when balancing how much things like orbital strikes cost and potentially confusing a player or two who isn't very smart but tries to think about it too hard. The good being that those who spend resources quickly and freely would be rewarded in their own way while those who saved up resources would also be rewarded in their own way, as opposed to only rewarding those who flippantly spent what they had because "fuck it, I'm near the cap anyways, may as well go for a joyride in a tank" while ignoring those who see that they could potentially lose access to a resource soon and decide to save a little extra for a rainy day. It's not even that big a deal to me, but I think it would be an improvement over a hard cap. Both would be balanced, but a soft cap would allow for more variety and just generally be smoother. Less rigid, still balanced. Just don't be so flippantly dismissive of an idea you don't agree with. No doubt there is room for debate between having a soft or hard cap, but it's not like either idea is without merit, or that either kind of cap are even in the same ballpark as having no cap. I'd ask that you lay forth what advantages a hard cap would have over the type of soft cap I have suggested. I believe I have done as good a job at laying out the advantages of a soft cap as I can, but I see little advantage to hard caps myself. Maybe you can make a better case for them that I haven't thought of. "It isn't needed" or "what problem does this solve?" don't count as valid arguments for a hard cap either. Last edited by Xyntech; 2012-04-18 at 05:21 PM. |
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2012-04-18, 06:36 PM | [Ignore Me] #26 | ||
Contributor PlanetSide 2
Game Designer |
Fulfilling one intent at the expense of the others isn't success.
Having a cap on resources doesn't make the reward worthless. Players adapt and change spending habits so that the cap isn't an issue. |
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2012-04-18, 06:59 PM | [Ignore Me] #27 | |||
Brigadier General
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There is nothing inherent about a soft cap that would hurt the ability to have an economy based on territory control. No expense would have to be paid for a soft cap if balanced appropriately.
You still haven't made a case for the virtues of why a hard cap is superior to a soft cap. A hard cap could have all of the same problems as a soft cap if it were balanced poorly, so I think it goes without saying that either a hard or a soft cap would have to be well balanced. We're just about at the point of derailing the thread. I think we can both safely say we are on the side of having some kind of cap on resources. Will the game be hurt terribly if that is a hard cap? No, not at all. I think it would be better with a soft cap, but it would really still be fine either way. I get the impression you feel like it would either be a complete waste of time, or that it would be less balanced than a hard cap. Maybe both. The way I see it, a soft cap would be very easy to implement, and would be barely any more difficult to balance, while adding the (marginal) benefits I have expressed previously. So I ask again. What makes a balanced hard cap so awesome in comparison to a balanced soft cap? What does a hard cap add to the game that couldn't be achieved with a much nicer, gentler, soft cap? I feel you may drive me to start extolling the virtues of having no cap at all just to be contrary to you at the current rate Last edited by Xyntech; 2012-04-18 at 07:01 PM. |
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2012-04-18, 07:02 PM | [Ignore Me] #28 | ||
Captain
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Let try having no cap first, if it becomes a problem then it can be adjusted, quit trying to nerf crap that we don't really know all the particulars of yet.
the cap can always be added if its needed so lets give it chance |
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2012-04-18, 07:28 PM | [Ignore Me] #29 | |||
Brigadier General
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They may even do something like F2P get capped at 12,000, subscribers get capped at 15,000. There are other ways they could balance it as well. Maybe there is no cap, but your resources drain any time your side doesn't have access to the resource. Maybe it never drains, but it costs 10x as much out of your reserves when your empire doesn't currently control any of the resource. Higby has already stated that we will never have more than we know what to do with though, so that right there indicates some kind of limiting factor. It may not be a cap, but there is no way that statement would make sense if we could just endlessly stockpile resources to use freely whenever we wanted, regardless of what territory we controlled at the time. As Malorn has pointed out as well, the whole reason a reward system like the resource economy was introduced is because the devs wanted to make sure that all territory would have tactical value of one kind or another. Even ignoring what Higby has said, it would make no sense to have players able to endlessly stockpile resources. The vets wouldn't care where they would be fighting, because they would probably have built up a healthy reserve a long time ago. The only way you could have a completely uncapped system is if it took so long to collect resources that 90% of players were almost entirely depleted most of the time and you had to save up for a couple hours just to purchase a single vehicle. That would just end up making players turtle with their vehicles, never wanting to put them in harms way. Ideally, they will strike a good balance where you have at least some vested interest in avoiding having your vehicle blow up, while still be willing to take risks and push the battle lines forward. I don't think this balance will be possible if there isn't some method or another of preventing players from amassing millions of a resource. |
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2012-04-18, 08:04 PM | [Ignore Me] #30 | ||
Contributor PlanetSide 2
Game Designer |
Cap is in the plan per Higby's AMAA, which is great. One of the things they need to test is whether the cap is set to the right place. Too high and resource deprivation becomes unreliable and ineffective. Too low and we're living paycheck-to-paycheck and that ain't fun. Somewhere in between is the sweet spot.
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