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Posted: June 22nd, 2007, 10:37 am
by Gothmog
I like this font too. Its ...its..... charming!

Posted: June 22nd, 2007, 12:14 pm
by Rune_74
2048 ad was not an action shooter, it was sort of a futuristic ultima game from origin
Posted: June 22nd, 2007, 12:32 pm
by Gallifrey
I wasn't implying that it was, I was just off on a tangent

Posted: June 22nd, 2007, 12:51 pm
by Rune_74
cool, tangents is what these boards do best I noticed:) we all go off on them:P
Posted: June 22nd, 2007, 1:00 pm
by Gallifrey
I figure if I don't go off on at least one tangent I'm not having a proper conversation.
Speaking of which we ought to stop cluttering the Q&A thread.
Posted: June 23rd, 2007, 10:17 am
by Vennor
A question from me: will we meet many people in towns?
It would by nice to see prosperous and densely populated city than only few persants and traders (I'm not talking about some abandoned places of course)

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Posted: June 24th, 2007, 7:41 am
by BasiliskWrangler
This is really a question about game design in general....
A town with many people would appear realistic, but what purpose does it serve in the game? In a town of 200 people, not everyone can have a quest or an important piece of information, right? So to fully populate a town, that would make for a lot of extra design work that serves little or no purpose but to inflate the sense of artificial life. And dialogue work for 200 people would certainly require a full-time, dedicated writer unless 90% of the people just gave a generic "Good day!" type of response, but that's not very realistic either.
In Eschalon, towns do contain enough NPCs to make them appear to be functional, but they're not as "filled out" as you would expect a real town to be. Shop owners are present, as are guards and other townspeople doing their business. In traditional RPG terms, the towns in Eschalon appear to be very similar in design to most other classic RPGs.
Posted: June 24th, 2007, 8:11 am
by Vennor
BasiliskWrangler wrote:This is really a question about game design in general....
A town with many people would appear realistic, but what purpose does it serve in the game? In a town of 200 people, not everyone can have a quest or an important piece of information, right? So to fully populate a town, that would make for a lot of extra design work that serves little or no purpose but to inflate the sense of artificial life. And dialogue work for 200 people would certainly require a full-time, dedicated writer unless 90% of the people just gave a generic "Good day!" type of response, but that's not very realistic either.
In Eschalon, towns do contain enough NPCs to make them appear to be functional, but they're not as "filled out" as you would expect a real town to be. Shop owners are present, as are guards and other townspeople doing their business. In traditional RPG terms, the towns in Eschalon appear to be very similar in design to most other classic RPGs.
Ok, I see, but it could be like in Fallout and like you said: many people can say only something like "good day", but I don't know if it would be a better way...
Just wanted to hear the answer, thanks.

Posted: June 24th, 2007, 8:20 am
by BasiliskWrangler
No problem Vennor! The issue really comes down to development resources. I often point to Fallout's credit listing...there were 100+ people on that game and probably 3-5 million dollars of development cost. Basilisk Games has barely a fraction of those kinds of resources.
We'll see where the future takes us. If Eschalon is successful, I have about 10 project ideas that I'd love to see make it into development, and future projects may not be as hampered by resource limitations.
Posted: June 24th, 2007, 10:14 am
by Vennor
BasiliskWrangler wrote:No problem Vennor! The issue really comes down to development resources. I often point to Fallout's credit listing...there were 100+ people on that game and probably 3-5 million dollars of development cost. Basilisk Games has barely a fraction of those kinds of resources.
We'll see where the future takes us. If Eschalon is successful, I have about 10 project ideas that I'd love to see make it into development, and future projects may not be as hampered by resource limitations.
Yeah, I know and once more I wish you (and Eschalon) good luck.

Posted: June 24th, 2007, 6:12 pm
by Saxon1974
I have never really felt like large amounts of people in cities added much to the game. I think about the only real requirement should be is there enough people there for the amount of buildings and structure etc....Are all the major needs covered.....
I find that including the necessaties, like a smithy, a shop, a food shop, guards and maybe a town leader is plenty enough to work for the setting. As long as there are enough of those those types of dwellings with a handful townspeople thrown in its enough for me.
I find really large cities a little too complicated at times anyway...
Another question;
How many different types of music do you have in the game? Does each town or major area have its on background music?
Posted: June 24th, 2007, 8:43 pm
by BasiliskWrangler
We are still adding music tracks so the final count is yet to be determined.
Each map (zone) has two music tracks associated with it so you don't get sick listening to the same track repeated over and over. Some zones will share a music track with other zones, but I try to not put the same two music tracks with any two zones.
Posted: June 25th, 2007, 1:31 am
by Saxon1974
Sounds good. Are you going to have area specific music? Like combat music, and dungeon music?
Posted: June 25th, 2007, 6:50 am
by flinch13
Hi there! I've got a question about items. Are there any special items with magic powers that can only be found once? I mean like swords that shoot magic missles, things that produce infinite sources of light so you don't have to go out and buy torches every other second, etc. I remember objects like this in an old game called Angband; they were really rare and awesome.
Posted: June 25th, 2007, 7:42 am
by BasiliskWrangler
[Saxon1974]: Yes, dungeons have their own tracks, as do some special locations. Combat doesn't yet, but we may have some soon.
[flinch13]: Yes.