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I imagine the rest spots in dungeons to be somewhat like the safe rooms in Left 4 Dead. That is easily guarded locations where a group of people could hold out for some time if necessary.

Edited by illathid
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"Wizards do not need to be The Dudes Who Can AoE Nuke You and Gish and Take as Many Hits as a Fighter and Make all Skills Irrelevant Because Magic."

-Josh Sawyer

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I hope there is some side-quest thing that allows you to choose whether or not to ressurect 1 character or get another reward.

Like... being able to bind one of your dead characters souls into an animat or similar. Let's take an example: Cadegund dies. We continue the journey without her, then we find this "location" which allows for ressurrection if we want to. We choose to reanimate Cadegund and now she's an animat.

There's 2 ways to do this:
A) Simple method: Cadegund is gone (now her true name is Cademat!), the Cademat won't talk in dialogues or intervene in the plot anymore, there's only a soul in bronze armor! The "perk" with having her ressurrected is that Cademat has all her skills before she died, can level up and gain experience. This is the simple method.

B) A bit more time-consuming method: Cademat can talk, but she has a new dialogue (due to her predicament). Maybe she or whoever becomes the Animat gets the same dialogue tree which is all spiritual and tormented "Why have you brought me back?". Basically, ressurrecting a dead soul to become an Animat isn't a very nice thing to do. So you pretty much forced someone out of the dead dimension and into the living world again. Existing in the physical realm as a spiritual being from the dead lands could be more seen as a curse than a blessing.

Having the same dialogue tree for a ressurrected companion is in my opinion the way to go (if this would be an option Obsidian would choose would they allow for a single ressurrection), otherwise they'd have to write 8 new dialogue trees (for each companion).

Why do I think this is cool? Shale in DA:O is one of the coolest companions in my opinion. She's a beast! But you kind of just find her on the way... what if you could make one of your companions into a golem? If there was a choice to make a character into one? I think that would be more interesting than simply finding a finished golem. The same thing with this animat thing.

What the reward could be if you choose not to ressurrect a companion (if this could be possible in some side-quest stuff) I don't know. Reputation? An item? Plot-points? I don't know.

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Might I point out once more, to the folks who seem to be extraordinarily worried about the limitation of only healing at rest spots, that you're not going to be playing BG with rest-anywhere stripped from it. BG did not have separate Stamina and Health pools designed specifically for a system that only lets you rest every so often (distance/progression-wise).

 

The point of rest spots is to give you an incentive to actually manage your Health wisely, instead of always just recklessly thinking "as long as at least one person still has like 1HP at the end of battle, I'm good, 'cause after the battle I can just replenish EVERYTHING! MUAHAHAHA!". It's not to make sure you never ever get to replenish your stuff, and it's always troublesome. You're not going to constantly fight groups of enemies that require every spell you have, and 90% of your Health, but only find a campsite/rest-spot every 17 encounters. I can't tell you they're not going to fail to do it perfectly, but they didn't implement a whole separate Health resource as a long-term, multi-fight resource (if everyone hits 0 Stamina, then you're dead and it's Game Over, no matter how much Health you have left) just to approach the entire thing as if your Health is just supposed to last you one battle and you'll never need to replenish it.

 

Your Health is designed to last you about as long as your per-day stuff is. This worry would be similar to worrying that they'll limit your Level 1 party to (example) 10 total spells/abilities per day, but each fight will require that at least 11 be cast, just to achieve victory.

 

Just like how in the IE games, if you died before finishing the fight (the point at which you could rest again), it wasn't because they didn't allow you to rest often enough. It was because you didn't make your resources last until you could rest again. In this game, if you're just traveling through your run-of-the-mill cavern or dungeon or fortress or something, and there are 10 fights between this rest spot and the next one, and you only make it two fights before you're down to 5% Health with everyone, it'll be because you're failing at combat, horribly. Not because the combat's designed to take that much out of you, but you're somehow supposed to become a divine being and forcibly will those creatures who deal 80 damage per hit to deal less damage per hit and/or be less numerous.

Should we not start with some Ipelagos, or at least some Greater Ipelagos, before tackling a named Arch Ipelago? 6_u

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Might I point out once more, to the folks who seem to be extraordinarily worried about the limitation of only healing at rest spots, that you're not going to be playing BG with rest-anywhere stripped from it. BG did not have separate Stamina and Health pools designed specifically for a system that only lets you rest every so often (distance/progression-wise).

 

The point of rest spots is to give you an incentive to actually manage your Health wisely, instead of always just recklessly thinking "as long as at least one person still has like 1HP at the end of battle, I'm good, 'cause after the battle I can just replenish EVERYTHING! MUAHAHAHA!". It's not to make sure you never ever get to replenish your stuff, and it's always troublesome. You're not going to constantly fight groups of enemies that require every spell you have, and 90% of your Health, but only find a campsite/rest-spot every 17 encounters. I can't tell you they're not going to fail to do it perfectly, but they didn't implement a whole separate Health resource as a long-term, multi-fight resource (if everyone hits 0 Stamina, then you're dead and it's Game Over, no matter how much Health you have left) just to approach the entire thing as if your Health is just supposed to last you one battle and you'll never need to replenish it.

 

Your Health is designed to last you about as long as your per-day stuff is. This worry would be similar to worrying that they'll limit your Level 1 party to (example) 10 total spells/abilities per day, but each fight will require that at least 11 be cast, just to achieve victory.

 

Just like how in the IE games, if you died before finishing the fight (the point at which you could rest again), it wasn't because they didn't allow you to rest often enough. It was because you didn't make your resources last until you could rest again. In this game, if you're just traveling through your run-of-the-mill cavern or dungeon or fortress or something, and there are 10 fights between this rest spot and the next one, and you only make it two fights before you're down to 5% Health with everyone, it'll be because you're failing at combat, horribly. Not because the combat's designed to take that much out of you, but you're somehow supposed to become a divine being and forcibly will those creatures who deal 80 damage per hit to deal less damage per hit and/or be less numerous.

agreed. the stamina/health system is a nice change of pace. i am sure it will be tested and balance properly

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It's been a long time since we've talked about our resting system and it's changed in the past few months.  It's largely the same overall, but key mechanics have changed in important ways.

 

* The Stamina/Health mechanics still work as they have previously.  The one exception is how Maimed works on non-Expert settings.  Maimed is now only a stop-gap before death.  I.e., even on ordinary difficulty settings, any character can die if they are currently Maimed and lose their remaining Health.  As before, Maimed characters have terrible penalties to their Accuracy and all defenses but move at full speed.  Using a Maimed character in combat is asking for them to get killed.  The reason for this change was to prevent the use of Maimed characters as immortal trap-sniffers or recipients of an enemy's hard first volley.

 

* We still restrict where you can rest (as in the IE games), but resting does not have to be performed at very specific spots in the world (there are still a few camps where you can rest anytime, for free).  Instead, each time the party rests in the middle of nowhere, they consume 1 unit of Camp Supplies.  Based on your difficulty settings, the party can carry a maximum number of Camp Supplies (currently ranging from 6 to 2).  The supplies are a single item type and can be purchased from vendors (also rarely can be found in the world).  The supplies represent a party count, like wealth, and are represented by a number in the inventory and on the rest button in the main UI.  To rest, all you need to do is press the rest button.  The game checks to make sure it's okay to camp in that location at that time and will give you the option to access your Stash or go directly into rest.

 

* You can also rest at inns and your house (once you acquire it).  Based on the room you select at the inn, you will gain temporary bonuses that generally correlate to the expense of the room.  I.e., more expensive rooms grant larger or more bonuses.  These bonuses last for a specific number of rests following your stay at the inn.  Only a single resting bonus can be active at a time, so you can't just chain-sleep for a collection of bonuses.  If you sleep at your house, you select from the bonuses you've unlocked from your upgrades.  These tend to be less varied than those found at inns and you have to pay for the upgrades upfront, but after that it's effectively a free bonus of one specific type that lasts for a number of rests.

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Wonderful info, Josh! :)

 

Two questions:

-If we press the "rest" button, will there sometimes (often) appear baddies that rudely awaken us during our beauty sleep?

-Will any resting take whatever hours to get the party to full health/stamina? Or will it be a more natural rest time that you'll have to redo, if you are really wounded overall?

*** "The words of someone who feels ever more the ent among saplings when playing CRPGs" ***

 

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Alright. That's much easier! And I guess the camp supplies are the rest limiter, as well as more areas being non-restable. I mean, in IWD2, you could always force-rest in the midst of goblin fortresses etc, even with a few enemies wandering the edges of the palisades. You took the hit of one or two new encounters, but then you finally got a rest that worked.

Edited by IndiraLightfoot
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*** "The words of someone who feels ever more the ent among saplings when playing CRPGs" ***

 

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I like the idea of the camping supplies instead of rest spots. Will be interesting to see how that shapes up.

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I cannot - yet I must. How do you calculate that? At what point on the graph do "must" and "cannot" meet? Yet I must - but I cannot! ~ Ro-Man

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I assume rest spots are still actually in game, but are simply not flagged as such and are more organically presented as safe areas, where one can use the aforementioned Camp Supplies. Which I think personally is probably a very smart move to mollify players who are upset about the percieved limiting of freedom.

Quite an experience to live in misery isn't it? That's what it is to be married with children.

I've seen things you people can't even imagine. Pearly Kings glittering on the Elephant and Castle, Morris Men dancing 'til the last light of midsummer. I watched Druid fires burning in the ruins of Stonehenge, and Yorkshiremen gurning for prizes. All these things will be lost in time, like alopecia on a skinhead. Time for tiffin.

 

Tea for the teapot!

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Huzzah!

Was curious to see what you thought about this. I thought it'd be a step in a direction more to your liking!

I cannot - yet I must. How do you calculate that? At what point on the graph do "must" and "cannot" meet? Yet I must - but I cannot! ~ Ro-Man

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* We still restrict where you can rest (as in the IE games), but resting does not have to be performed at very specific spots in the world (there are still a few camps where you can rest anytime, for free).  Instead, each time the party rests in the middle of nowhere, they consume 1 unit of Camp Supplies.  Based on your difficulty settings, the party can carry a maximum number of Camp Supplies (currently ranging from 6 to 2).  The supplies are a single item type and can be purchased from vendors (also rarely can be found in the world).  The supplies represent a party count, like wealth, and are represented by a number in the inventory and on the rest button in the main UI.  To rest, all you need to do is press the rest button.  The game checks to make sure it's okay to camp in that location at that time and will give you the option to access your Stash or go directly into rest.

Funny, a couple of days ago I was wondering why you didn't go for a similar system rather than the camp spots.

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It's been a long time since we've talked about our resting system and it's changed in the past few months.  It's largely the same overall, but key mechanics have changed in important ways.

 

* The Stamina/Health mechanics still work as they have previously.  The one exception is how Maimed works on non-Expert settings.  Maimed is now only a stop-gap before death.  I.e., even on ordinary difficulty settings, any character can die if they are currently Maimed and lose their remaining Health.  As before, Maimed characters have terrible penalties to their Accuracy and all defenses but move at full speed.  Using a Maimed character in combat is asking for them to get killed.  The reason for this change was to prevent the use of Maimed characters as immortal trap-sniffers or recipients of an enemy's hard first volley.

 

* We still restrict where you can rest (as in the IE games), but resting does not have to be performed at very specific spots in the world (there are still a few camps where you can rest anytime, for free).  Instead, each time the party rests in the middle of nowhere, they consume 1 unit of Camp Supplies.  Based on your difficulty settings, the party can carry a maximum number of Camp Supplies (currently ranging from 6 to 2).  The supplies are a single item type and can be purchased from vendors (also rarely can be found in the world).  The supplies represent a party count, like wealth, and are represented by a number in the inventory and on the rest button in the main UI.  To rest, all you need to do is press the rest button.  The game checks to make sure it's okay to camp in that location at that time and will give you the option to access your Stash or go directly into rest.

 

* You can also rest at inns and your house (once you acquire it).  Based on the room you select at the inn, you will gain temporary bonuses that generally correlate to the expense of the room.  I.e., more expensive rooms grant larger or more bonuses.  These bonuses last for a specific number of rests following your stay at the inn.  Only a single resting bonus can be active at a time, so you can't just chain-sleep for a collection of bonuses.  If you sleep at your house, you select from the bonuses you've unlocked from your upgrades.  These tend to be less varied than those found at inns and you have to pay for the upgrades upfront, but after that it's effectively a free bonus of one specific type that lasts for a number of rests.

very interesting and significant update about the game mechanics, I love every bit of it. Edited by Mor
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I wonder what the Inn-specific bonuses will be like. At the stronghold, it's easy to see how electing to use the library or training grounds etc. while resting would provide different advantages, but what distinguishes rooms in an inn besides how soft the beds are and how many roaches there are? Not necessarily complaining, however. It sounds like a cool mechanic even if it ends up being really gamist.

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Because of the changes to resting, the crafting UI is launched from the inventory panel.  You can't craft during combat, but otherwise there are no restrictions on when you can do it.

Will there be any stationary (pun totally intended) crafting stations that will allow for additional crafting options, as compared to just standing around in the woods and selecting "Crafting"?

 

Or... maybe put a better way, do you have full access to all crafting from anywhere (as long as you're out-of-combat)?

Should we not start with some Ipelagos, or at least some Greater Ipelagos, before tackling a named Arch Ipelago? 6_u

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Because of the changes to resting, the crafting UI is launched from the inventory panel.  You can't craft during combat, but otherwise there are no restrictions on when you can do it.

 

So does this mean the anvil, hearth, campfire stuff is gone? Aww. It would still be nice to only be able to craft when resting.

Edited by Hormalakh

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That sound Great

 

I liked every part of the implementation of resting.

 

Being able to rest outside of Inns is a Good Thing,

Limiting it to a certain number keeps the Health/Stamina Strategy still being Important

No enemy Random Encounter = No Save/Reload when you are badly wounded which is one of the things I hated the most in Baldurs Gate.

 

Bonuses to spending more money in an Inn is also Good... it always struck me as stupid why should I pay more for a luxurious room when the cheap one does the trick (though usually I would spoil my characters at a Royal Suite even though its stupid)

 

The Only question i have is about the Maimed/Death

Will Death be Permanent? 

if yes, how can we avoid a situation where AoEs are happening in a Closed room? especially after a teleportation of some kind.

I am ok with the idea of having the risk of character being taken out completely, and not just maimed.

But I would really hate it if it will be a Permanent Death especially if there is a lot of hard to avoid AoE damage in an area.

 

 

Keep up the good work.

Thanks for an hopefully great game.

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I like the idea of the camping supplies instead of rest spots. Will be interesting to see how that shapes up.

It actually worked really well in Might and Magic Legacy aka MMX.  At least until late game when you started getting inns that let you carry like 15+ camp supplies.  However it sounds like they already have a handle on that so I think it will play out nicely.  It gives you the ability to recover, but keeps you limited enough so that you know you can't just throw caution to the wind.

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Because of the changes to resting, the crafting UI is launched from the inventory panel.  You can't craft during combat, but otherwise there are no restrictions on when you can do it.

It seems easier to have it linked to your invo as well. It's logical too. :)

*** "The words of someone who feels ever more the ent among saplings when playing CRPGs" ***

 

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Party resources... Nostalgia  :)

 

 

Like when in pen-and-paper D&D you took note on your Character Sheet how many more provisions you have left to keep travelling.

 

PoE people not only try to bring back the 'magic' of the old games, they are working on making them how they were supposed to.

 

 

Again, congratz !

Matilda is a Natlan woman born and raised in Old Vailia. She managed to earn status as a mercenary for being a professional who gets the job done, more so when the job involves putting her excellent fighting abilities to good use.

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