Game Feedback Wanted - Results

Started by Halaster, May 03, 2022, 02:52:39 PM

May 03, 2022, 02:52:39 PM Last Edit: May 03, 2022, 02:54:46 PM by Halaster
About 8 months-ish ago I created a thread seeking feedback from people who don't play anymore.  Relevent thread:

  https://gdb.armageddon.org/index.php/topic,57217.0.html

I think anyone who is going to reply and reads our forums anymore has done so by now.  There were a number of people who replied in a request or directly to a staff member on Discord.  I'm sure if you individually went through all this you could find other ways to categorize it than we have.

The amazing Usiku took some time to compile the feedback from this thread and put it all into some broad categories.  There were a couple more bits of feedback that came in after she compiled it, but they were on theme with the rest.  The number is how many separate mentions the category had, following by a general category name, followed by a brief description.

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32 - The Grind - Desire to start the game 'ahead', not have to start weak and from square one every time.  Skilling up taking too long.  Establishing new characters takes too long.

24 - Player Agency / Empowerment - People feel like they're told 'no' too much, not given the trust to get big things done.  Impact to the world, glass ceiling.

23 - Staff Support (tools, request turnaround times, communication style) - Request response time was the main one, but mentions of attitude towards players, consistency between staff and RP standards, de-escalation techniques.

15 - Character Death - Character death can be draining and not being able to talk about it makes it more difficult.  People often take long breaks after the death of a beloved character. Death to annoying stuff.  Death of other characters around you.

14 - Can't Find Others to Play With / Decline in Playerbase - Some clans too restrictive, especially when it's quiet

13 - RP / Social Progress Too Slow - Similar to the Grind above, but more about internal ladder-climbing in clans or socially.  Takes too long to get promotions

12 - Change of Features - Someone's favorite clan closed, or favorite class no longer available.  Mostly centered around old classes going away.

10 - Toxicity in the Community, GDB, Discord - How players treat each other, how staff treat players

5 - FOIC (Find Out In Character) Makes It Hard to Learn - self-explanatory

3 - Karma - Karma timer regen too slow, not having enough karma, losing karma

3 - Offpeak Players Alienated - Miss out on most RPT's

3 - Not Being Able to Talk About PC's/Plots for Too Long - Similar to Character Death above

3 - Overapplication of Political Correctness RL Culture - Some people get tired of being told some word they used for a long time is now banned.

2 - Tuluk Opening - Feel it has negatively impacted the game

1 - Steep Learning Curve - self explanatory

1 - Stats - When you put a lot of effort into a concept and the stats are terrible

1 - Crafting System - general frustrations with the crafting system

------------------------

The 'legitimacy' of any of the above is not really relevant, it is simply the feedback provided.  And by that I mean, you may see something you don't agree with, but it's other peoples' opinions and isn't really up for debate.

NOTE:  These are reasons cited for people not playing, these are not necessarily general 'gripes' about the game such as "Poison is too hard to get".
"I agree with Halaster"  -- Riev

Thank you Usiku, I feel heard.
-Stoa

I find #3 interesting...

While I am one that finds the PC crap more then annoying, it is not something that would cause me to quit, I ignore and wait to get yelled at then open that discussion for how retarded it is. Of course the results of that could get me to quit...but I have yet to be called out on it. :)
A gaunt, yellow-skinned gith shrieks in fear, and hauls ass.
Lizzie:
If you -want- me to think that your character is a hybrid of a black kryl and a white push-broom shaped like a penis, then you've done a great job

Quote from: stoicreader on May 03, 2022, 04:16:33 PM
Thank you Usiku, I feel heard.

And thank you, Halaster, for starting the call for feedback.
Fredd-
i love being a nobles health points


So, what are the plans around the feedback? Are we going have more "Coming Soon" posts like last year?
Fredd-
i love being a nobles health points

Quote from: Barsook on May 03, 2022, 06:18:04 PM
So, what are the plans around the feedback? Are we going have more "Coming Soon" posts like last year?

Most of the discussions we've been having recently as staff focus around the first two items - The Grind, and Player Agency.  And a little bit about the 3rd one (Staff Support).  We don't necessarily discuss them from the approach of "Ok, this was the top item on the feedback", but things that are in discussion involve those in some form.  We have a wide range of staff opinions on these topics, and it is pretty obvious we tend to move slow.

If you maybe remember, that rolecall for 5 people I put out a few months ago for the new tribe - that was definitely done with Player Agency in mind.  The group worked through the documentation, got a finalized version, and it's now "in game".  The rest of the playerbase will see and hear about it soon enough.  It's a tribe that's about 90% player-created content with the last 10% being the guidelines and background they had to work within.

There's probably not a lot more to really announce or talk about just yet.  Armageddon is nearly 30 years old and it can be a slow ship to turn sometimes.  I wish that wasn't always the case, but Big Decisions can take a lot of work, time, discussion, and energy.  But there's one thing I can tell you, our internal discussion boards are pretty darn active these days with ideas and debate about a whole gambit of topics.  We really want to continually make the game better, provide enjoyment for people (including ourselves), and do what's good for the game.  We just have to all agree on what that looks like, and preferably try to do those things in a smart way.
"I agree with Halaster"  -- Riev

I really appreciate the follow up.

Asking for our opinions, and telling us that we're heard is more than can be asked for from any organization.

Especially one run by volunteers.
-Stoa

Quote from: stoicreader on May 03, 2022, 09:56:15 PM
I really appreciate the follow up.

Asking for our opinions, and telling us that we're heard is more than can be asked for from any organization.

Especially one run by volunteers.

This needs to be quoted because its said well. Telling and SHOWING us that we're being heard means a lot.
Quote from: IAmJacksOpinion on May 20, 2013, 11:16:52 PM
Masks are the Armageddon equivalent of Ed Hardy shirts.

In the case of Grind, it is a very delicate point that usually ends up with solutions that revolve around player cooperation.
Please keep in mind that this has the potential to destroy the game for off peakers, as they cannot find other players to teach them, or spar with them as much as those in peak hours.

A few things to note:

It is likely that some things that people sent in as negatives are things that others see as positives.  Like - I would say that the slow build up of skills is something that I find very satisfying and rewarding about the game.  Branching a new skill or getting one up to a level that it is useful after weeks (or months) of work is a really fun.

It feels like the last few years has seen a massive shift in how the staff interacts with us.  I've been around this game a long time (off and on).  My interactions with staff from years ago was either non-existent or negative.  All of my interactions with staff in the past couple of years has been positive.  Even one time when I was mildly scolded for something in game, it was done politely.

I echo what other folks are saying:  the work that has been done here on the GDB to demonstrate staff attitude has been really helpful.

Quote from: Athapaxis on May 04, 2022, 11:34:11 AM
A few things to note:

It is likely that some things that people sent in as negatives are things that others see as positives.  Like - I would say that the slow build up of skills is something that I find very satisfying and rewarding about the game.  Branching a new skill or getting one up to a level that it is useful after weeks (or months) of work is a really fun.

It feels like the last few years has seen a massive shift in how the staff interacts with us.  I've been around this game a long time (off and on).  My interactions with staff from years ago was either non-existent or negative.  All of my interactions with staff in the past couple of years has been positive.  Even one time when I was mildly scolded for something in game, it was done politely.

I echo what other folks are saying:  the work that has been done here on the GDB to demonstrate staff attitude has been really helpful.
+1

I appreciate the grind, honestly. it makes getting a master thief, or badass warrior feel like an achievement while they are alive.

And it makes really badass people stand out as really badass.  If everyones a badass, no one's a badass. And if everyones a Master Thief, No one is  (everyone is likely complaining about stolen knives though)
I remember recruiting this Half elf girl. And IMMEDIATELY taking her out on a contract. Right as we go into this gith hole I tell her "Remember your training, and you'll be fine." and she goes "I have no training." Then she died

Quote from: Athapaxis on May 04, 2022, 11:34:11 AM
A few things to note:

It is likely that some things that people sent in as negatives are things that others see as positives.  Like - I would say that the slow build up of skills is something that I find very satisfying and rewarding about the game.  Branching a new skill or getting one up to a level that it is useful after weeks (or months) of work is a really fun.

I suspect that this is very true, and if staff were to remove or reduce the grind significantly you'd have a roughly equal number of players (different ones though) complaining.

That said, I don't think we have to choose between a grind-heavy and grind-light game. There's ways to accommodate both playstyles, and without giving a clear advantage to one or the other. Personally I'd like a system where you had some sort of meta-resource you could spend at character creation to get higher starting skills (NOT KARMA), or you could spend it on other things that might be cool to have but not necessary for a functional character. Then players that wanted to avoid the grind could opt out of the "select something cool" in exchange for higher starting skills.

Quote from: Narf on May 04, 2022, 12:42:39 PM
Quote from: Athapaxis on May 04, 2022, 11:34:11 AM
A few things to note:

It is likely that some things that people sent in as negatives are things that others see as positives.  Like - I would say that the slow build up of skills is something that I find very satisfying and rewarding about the game.  Branching a new skill or getting one up to a level that it is useful after weeks (or months) of work is a really fun.

I suspect that this is very true, and if staff were to remove or reduce the grind significantly you'd have a roughly equal number of players (different ones though) complaining.

That said, I don't think we have to choose between a grind-heavy and grind-light game. There's ways to accommodate both playstyles, and without giving a clear advantage to one or the other. Personally I'd like a system where you had some sort of meta-resource you could spend at character creation to get higher starting skills (NOT KARMA), or you could spend it on other things that might be cool to have but not necessary for a functional character. Then players that wanted to avoid the grind could opt out of the "select something cool" in exchange for higher starting skills.

I don't know... If you let people skip to much, you run smack into the problem of no one feeling like they are actually great at what they do. Cheapening the whole experience. If everyone who's played for a couple years can start a new person who's good at things, then you are saying only new players deserve unskilled characters. And I dunno. that sits wrong with me.

Just train, rp, and put in for a skill bump after an IG year with some logs. Boom, grind lessened, and it feels meaningful.
I remember recruiting this Half elf girl. And IMMEDIATELY taking her out on a contract. Right as we go into this gith hole I tell her "Remember your training, and you'll be fine." and she goes "I have no training." Then she died

May 04, 2022, 01:39:50 PM #14 Last Edit: May 04, 2022, 01:46:08 PM by Jarvis
Quote from: Fredd on May 04, 2022, 01:24:07 PM
Quote from: Narf on May 04, 2022, 12:42:39 PM
Quote from: Athapaxis on May 04, 2022, 11:34:11 AM
A few things to note:

It is likely that some things that people sent in as negatives are things that others see as positives.  Like - I would say that the slow build up of skills is something that I find very satisfying and rewarding about the game.  Branching a new skill or getting one up to a level that it is useful after weeks (or months) of work is a really fun.

I suspect that this is very true, and if staff were to remove or reduce the grind significantly you'd have a roughly equal number of players (different ones though) complaining.

That said, I don't think we have to choose between a grind-heavy and grind-light game. There's ways to accommodate both playstyles, and without giving a clear advantage to one or the other. Personally I'd like a system where you had some sort of meta-resource you could spend at character creation to get higher starting skills (NOT KARMA), or you could spend it on other things that might be cool to have but not necessary for a functional character. Then players that wanted to avoid the grind could opt out of the "select something cool" in exchange for higher starting skills.

I don't know... If you let people skip to much, you run smack into the problem of no one feeling like they are actually great at what they do. Cheapening the whole experience. If everyone who's played for a couple years can start a new person who's good at things, then you are saying only new players deserve unskilled characters. And I dunno. that sits wrong with me.

Just train, rp, and put in for a skill bump after an IG year with some logs. Boom, grind lessened, and it feels meaningful.

I have a love-hate relationship with the grind in this game, and have been mulling over a way to actually get rid of it without devaluing having actual expertize, and having badasses be few and
far in between, etc etc.

Any existing resource to be spent to exchange skill bumps would not only feel like something would be taken from me personally, but I'd also never do anything but. 

What you COULD do is, like Narf said, add something to the game that people could opt out of to get skill bumps.
It'd be cool if everyone spawned in with a unique, randomized "perk".

It could be absolutely shit and menial like getting an increased cap for foraging, increased alcohol tolerance, inversion of his hands (so that es is the primary and ep goes off dual wield).
Or something great, like being inexplicably immune to this one specific spell, or being a natural with X skill which gives them an extra cap or something.

That's a feature I wouldn't either always disregard or always take, I can see good balance in those if done properly. Of course practically it'd be a stupid and ridiculous amount of work and as such its being used as an example of what I personally think that constitutes value of what I'd trade interchangeably with skill bumps.

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Edit: Something that could work with considerably less effort would be for everyone to spawn with a chance of getting a "talent" on a random skill of theirs, which means they have a naturally increased cap, resulting the trade of general grindless competence vs the possibility to really really excel at something.
The man puts his tongued, grotesque, translucent groin rig on over his eyes.

Quote from: Fredd on May 04, 2022, 01:24:07 PM

I don't know... If you let people skip to much, you run smack into the problem of no one feeling like they are actually great at what they do. Cheapening the whole experience. If everyone who's played for a couple years can start a new person who's good at things, then you are saying only new players deserve unskilled characters. And I dunno. that sits wrong with me.


I get the sense that you're making a lot of assumptions about how this would work that I didn't actually propose and then objecting to the results of those assumptions.

I didn't, for instance, designate how much of the grind could be skipped. I didn't mention anything about "players who'd been playing for a couple years," not sure where that came from. You didn't really address that people could opt to go through the grind and come out on the other end of it better than the players that opted to skip it, which was the central tenet of the suggestion. That players that still wanted to grind could do so, /and/ get benefits from it that wouldn't be available for those that skipped it. I mean if you're ignoring that, yeah, it's a terrible idea. But again, that trade off is the central tenet of the proposal.

I have kids and I don't have time to grind all that much anymore, which is why I usually play medium or less combat guilds. I've wanted combat heavy always, to try it out, but I really don't have time to sink into it.

At least, it seems like it's harder to grind up than crafting or other skills in my light experience anyway.

I don't know. I'm here for the RP. But the RP can totally be lambasted and superceded by code, so... :/
Peace is a lie, there is only passion.
There is no room for doubt in power. -TJA, 5/20/22

May 04, 2022, 01:54:34 PM #17 Last Edit: May 04, 2022, 01:57:13 PM by lostinspace
I enjoy the grind until I reach a point I can't make progress with regular play.

Both my badass fighters have only been truly badass because they had dedicated, highly-skilled sparring partners from being a part of combat oriented clans, not because I was good at grinding or anything like that.

If I could have any change to affect the grind, it'd be either lesser restrictions on clans so off-peak players can do other stuff when there aren't sparring partners online, or make combat skill gains in the outside world more viable so as to compete with clans.

edit: Alternatively a 'rested xp' type system similar to MMOs. If you haven't raised a skill in X IRL hours, the next time you raise it, the skill gain is increased as well.
3/21/16 Never Forget

May 04, 2022, 02:36:06 PM #18 Last Edit: May 04, 2022, 02:37:37 PM by Delirium
I like the grind. I dislike the timewasting barrier of having no way of working on those skills in a realistic and reasonable fashion.

I dislike the request tool pileup, I dislike the enormous amount of red tape that gets in the way of reasonable requests, and I dislike toxic players/staff who remain unchecked, the latter of which have led me to quit the game for varying periods of time. Trying to work through a contentious issue has historically left me burnt, insulted, angry, and demoralized, rather than empathized with.

There have been exceptions to that rule, but they're unfortunately rare.

Staff tend to circle the wagons and refuse to admit fault on their end, leading to an imbalance where I as a player try to collaborate and meet in the middle, freely apologize to any part I may have had to contributing to a conflict (despite that part generally stemming from frustration from feeling ignored, misunderstood, or sometimes outright attacked, and wrongly so), but despite that attempt at reaching out to reconcile and offer the olive branch of apologizing for my part, it seems to be taken as an excuse to blame me entirely and I get stonewalled and/or dismissed.

It seems like the best way to enjoy the game has been to engage only in roles which don't require staff oversight; that seems telling.

On a personal level, I'm really torn on the whole Grind part of the discussion.  I totally agree with the notion that if you skip the grind, you have a less developed character.  The journey of the Grind can be what molds a character, helps them develop a personality, builds the relationships and all of that.  Skipping that part can often lead to a more shallow character.  And I agree with the notion that "if everyone is special, no one is".  I really like it when someone eventually rises above the rest and truly is very skilled - they stand out and are remembered.

On the other hand, I haven't played a character in about a year now because I don't want to spend the time doing the Grind - despite everything I just said!  I'm literally one of those people not making a character because of it.  Granted, I get my "Arm fix" by staffing so that's not really the same as someone not on staff.  I probably would have made a character by now if I weren't, but my point is, I really get that side too.

"I agree with Halaster"  -- Riev

May 04, 2022, 03:47:10 PM #20 Last Edit: May 04, 2022, 03:56:24 PM by Fredd
What if... And I know this is nuts...

Training dummies weren't useless?

Then people with less time, and off peak could actually train there skills.

edit: Also what if: Teaching gave a bonus for a day (or two!), to  skill gains in that skill, letting people who are role playing gain skills a little quicker. Combine the two, and it might solve ya'lls issue of wanting to have a combat person, but not having 5 hours a day to train?

Further edit for clarification: The current use of Teach more or less gives the person a wits test, and if they pass they learn. This means there's no real point in doing actual training after a lecture, codedly. Despite it making the most sense to do so right after the lecture to hammer the lesson in. My proposed change would make it reward rp, instead of working against it.
I remember recruiting this Half elf girl. And IMMEDIATELY taking her out on a contract. Right as we go into this gith hole I tell her "Remember your training, and you'll be fine." and she goes "I have no training." Then she died

Can we get offline training options yet? You know it's going to be a thing eventually, so why postpone it.
"When I was a fighting man, the kettle-drums they beat;
The people scattered gold-dust before my horse's feet;
But now I am a great king, the people hound my track
With poison in my wine-cup, and daggers at my back."

it wqould be so good if mounts could regen stamina while wilderness quitted in a not blatantly abusable way

Quote from: Malken on May 04, 2022, 04:34:15 PM
Can we get offline training options yet? You know it's going to be a thing eventually, so why postpone it.

I'm down for this, if it's tied to clans.
I remember recruiting this Half elf girl. And IMMEDIATELY taking her out on a contract. Right as we go into this gith hole I tell her "Remember your training, and you'll be fine." and she goes "I have no training." Then she died

Quote from: Fredd on May 04, 2022, 03:47:10 PM
What if... And I know this is nuts...

Training dummies weren't useless?

Then people with less time, and off peak could actually train there skills.

edit: Also what if: Teaching gave a bonus for a day (or two!), to  skill gains in that skill, letting people who are role playing gain skills a little quicker. Combine the two, and it might solve ya'lls issue of wanting to have a combat person, but not having 5 hours a day to train?

Further edit for clarification: The current use of Teach more or less gives the person a wits test, and if they pass they learn. This means there's no real point in doing actual training after a lecture, codedly. Despite it making the most sense to do so right after the lecture to hammer the lesson in. My proposed change would make it reward rp, instead of working against it.

Both of these are pretty good ideas to meet the grind halfway without compromising what people like about it.
The man puts his tongued, grotesque, translucent groin rig on over his eyes.