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In-game Tutorials

Wandering MistWandering Mist Moderator, Member, Founder, Kickstarter, Alpha One
edited February 2021 in General Discussion
I'm sure we've talked about this before but I'm curious to know what you would like to see in the tutorial section for Ashes. What do you think should be included? (feel free to reference other games that you thought had good tutorials).
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Comments

  • Artisan Professions tutorial. What to do, how to do it, and how to proceed afterwards.
    This link may help you: https://ashesofcreation.wiki/
  • WarthWarth Member
    edited February 2021
    Everybody should know, that the one-boarding experience is vital to the long-term success of any online multiplayer game.
    • An option to skip it.
    • A good pacing. New players will neither pay attention to nor want 1 hour of pure tutorial missions 5 minutes into the game. Neither do they need to know how advanced crafting or enchanting works when they stop out of the gate. Place Tutorial missions smartly or people will click through them mindlessly and later on get frustrated on why it wasn't explained properly, potentially even stop playing because of it.
    • Let them learn intuitively and give them the lessons once they have actually build some interest into the mechanic.
    • I do like games, that allow you to play your class as max level during the tutorial section, it provides you with a great overview on how your class will play later on. There is nothing worse than reaching high level and realizing, that you simply do not enjoy the class you have chosen based on some empty descriptions of the class in character creation.
    • Don't hide meaningful rewards behind them, people shouldn't be forced to grind through them.
    • Also, Protogames Academy from Wildstar was a great "intoductory dungeon" teaching new players about the mechanics of the game. Punishing enough that you had to learn, but gave a very good insight into the mechanics surrounding combat and PvE. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhahp97rHvw)
  • EloElo Member
    edited February 2021
    The first time I was in a group in an MMO, I was quite nervous not to do anything wrong. And the first time grouping was when I first encountered the "need/greed" loot system. My intuitive thinking was that I only want to receive what I "need" and I don't want to be "greed"y. (so I always clicked "need") People started getting angry, so after that I just "pass"ed on everything. So I would suggest including a tutorial that includes some aspects of being in a group, including loot rules.
  • VhaeyneVhaeyne Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I talked about this a few times before, but I don't like the idea of in game tutorials. They just amount to hand holding quests. There are a few ways to get around in game tutorials.

    1. Have the tutorials offline like Elite Dangerous. (Nothing is brought into the game world from this.)
    2. Have a just a detailed guild book in game as part of the menu, and no quests.
    3. Don't have tutorials, and let the community figure it out. (People are just going to watch Youtube anyways)

    My closing points against tutorial quests is that they take away from the open world nature of this game. Not much, but a little. I also just hate the idea of players getting rewards for tutorials, knowledge is its own reward.
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    If I had more time, I would write a shorter post.
  • akabearakabear Member, Braver of Worlds, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    In general an option to skip the tutorial and an option to activate again at any stage.
    But if were going to be more in-depth, then it might be good also to have abilities to turn on/off specific tutorials.
  • NoaaniNoaani Member, Intrepid Pack
    edited February 2021
    What I'd like to see for the basic tutorial (the one that explains movement, quest mechanics and such basic things to new gamers), is for it to take place in Sanctus, and thus also be a bit of an introduction to the lore of the world, and perhaps a bit of detail in regards to the lore of each archetype.

    This should also be 100% optional, though I'd personally be ok with it being required once.

    It shouldn't be a curated experience like most tutorials are, as this is too far removed from what the game will be. Rather, it should be an area in which there are options that the player can take.

    This tutorial could have optional aspects that cover different professions, augments, caravans and what ever other aspects are needed.

    Nothing from it needs to be taken over in to the game - and probably shouldn't. Players should also be able to run this tutorial any time they wish, without needing to create a new character (there is no need for the tutorial character to be tied at all to the players characters).

    I would be all for this tutorial being completely offline, as there is no specific need for it to not be. It could perhaps even being shipped with the character creator.
  • maouwmaouw Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    My favourite tutorials are the completely optional ones, where you just get dropped into the world to interact with things/people, and when you encounter something new - then the tutorial for that thing is unlocked in the menu and a pop-up lets you know it's available.

    For the tutorials themselves, I like them stripped back - When would I use this system? What are the basic controls/terminology? Do a simple but full run through the system once, then leave me to discover/explore/research the deeper hidden mechanics of the system on my own.

    One thing I appreciated from FFIV were the icons that let you know who was proficient in what, and the game encouraged you to ask these people questions. Maybe AoC could have an achievement/title for players who repeatedly complete low-level dungeons like "Dungeon Tour Guide" that lets new players know who they can ask questions.
    I wish I were deep and tragic
  • bloodprophetbloodprophet Member, Braver of Worlds, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    Explains the basic's then leave people alone to explore and discover. Have a page that shows commands available so people don't need to tab out to figure out how the sheath their weapons and other basic stuff.

    Not this
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxwy8kpFwZ0

    or this
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UuZQyTWiF0
    Most people never listen. They are just waiting on you to quit making noise so they can.
  • Warth wrote: »
    Let them learn intuitively and give them the lessons once they have actually build some interest into the mechanic.

    I want to use this as a springboard and say that the tutorials should be easily accessible through some sort of interface. However, this should never be forced on the player. If they have an interest in a craft or type of content they should be able to open up a tutorial for it.

    I don't think the game needs a forced in-depth tutorial past basic combat training, the rest of the tutorials can be searched for by the player. If you add on little tip popups when a player first encounters a new type of content, such as entering a caravan defense/attack scenario, they can then check out the more indepth tutorial on the interface at their discretion.
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    Commissioned at https://fiverr.com/ravenjuu
  • JamationJamation Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I liked the way FFXIV did their tutorials. They had this optional tutor guy you could talk to and he'd teach you the basics of your class, but also movement/game mechanics(like AOE/range type attacks/kill the healer first).
  • VolgaireVolgaire Member, Braver of Worlds, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    In-game I would like any kind of pop up interface tutorials to be gone, instead implement an npc or let players figue out things by themselves. The less hand holding (good or bad) the better in the long term at least for me.

    Going back to the NPC it would be pretty good if the tutorials were implemented into the game rather than being a foregin pop up on the screen, 9 out of 10 I will skip those and end up looking things through reddit and the wiki since it tends to be presented in much easier to understand manner.
  • Jamation wrote: »
    I liked the way FFXIV did their tutorials. They had this optional tutor guy you could talk to and he'd teach you the basics of your class, but also movement/game mechanics(like AOE/range type attacks/kill the healer first).

    Yes we need a Hall of the Novice and Hall of the Intermediate to teach people not to stand in aoes. Not even joking. Some people in FFXIV are doing normal raids and still don't understand the stack markers or aoe indicators.

    Plus it provides you with a good lesson on your role and it awarded you a set of gear that was really decent for that level range. (Usually around 15 was when you did your first dungeon and thus Hall of the Novice)
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  • This is how I envision the very beginning of the game.

    It should start APOC style, everything is on fire, corrupted monsters are invading the city, you are a high level player and get ready to fight, but a voice in your head tells you to rush to the divine gate, you follow the path until you encounter a few weaker monsters and corrupted humans so you get a feel on how to fight and how your skills will look like. You fight your way trough the collapsing city to the divine gate, and when you arrive a blinding light takes over and your body vanishes....then you wake up XXX years later, and the voice in your head present herself as the Goddess of Y, and explains what happened during the apocalypse and how she saved your body but being so long in stasis drained your strength, and so she commands you go back and retake the old world and are dropped to the divine gate of your choice.Now with the artisan system, you should be forced to experience a little bit of each branch trough early game quests, and then if you feel like diving deeper you can do that by yourslef.
  • Asgerr wrote: »
    Jamation wrote: »
    I liked the way FFXIV did their tutorials. They had this optional tutor guy you could talk to and he'd teach you the basics of your class, but also movement/game mechanics(like AOE/range type attacks/kill the healer first).

    Yes we need a Hall of the Novice and Hall of the Intermediate to teach people not to stand in aoes. Not even joking. Some people in FFXIV are doing normal raids and still don't understand the stack markers or aoe indicators.

    Plus it provides you with a good lesson on your role and it awarded you a set of gear that was really decent for that level range. (Usually around 15 was when you did your first dungeon and thus Hall of the Novice)

    If i recall currently(LOL i was mentor) this wasn't in the base game but came in the second expansion.
    It was truly a nice idea to do this before entering the first dungeon.
  • What an ingame tutorial SHOULD NOT be: A giant popup that displays a wall of text. Adding two gifs does not help, nobody likes reading those, and they are awful for retaining any kind of information. FF14 does this exactly wrong, with a cluttered UI and giant walls of text that are forgotten in 5 minutes because they all look the same. It may as well just display: Read Page 14 of the manual. I do not want to read page 14 of the manual, I want to immerse myself in a world of novelty jrpg fantasy nonsense please.

    What a tutorial SHOULD BE is giving a player little steps to conquer as they're already playing. You want to get to step 2? Learn to use WASD movement. Step 3? Use an ability. The tutorial should flow so well that an experienced player will already go through the steps naturally, because they're the most natural way to approach the game.

    The Cuphead tutorial (known for the infamous footage) is actually an excellent tutorial. If you're a pro, you can speedrun it in seconds, while a complete beginner can concentrate on mastering each of the steps that will help them play the game successfully later on.
  • Song_WardenSong_Warden Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I like the little videos associated with each class in BDO. Would be nice to have similar skill videos for each class in The Character Creation Screen. Of course, these would be rather limited due to the augments.
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  • Dark Souls had a the right amount of tutorial.
  • Kr0_ValKr0_Val Member
    edited February 2021
    Valheim gives hints throughout, but you're also left in the dark in a large way, so to speak. I really love the natural dopamine recieved at my own achievements/ progression/discovery, and dislike when my hand is held, or if I'm fed on a silver platter. I appreciate the need for core principles to be within tutorials however. It's a fine balance influenced really by the direction you guys want to take it. The relatively modest leveling system you guys plan on having(I love btw), would couple nicely with a limited tutorial system, that allows for healthy, engaging self discovery, and not more lengthy than it needs to be at any part of the game.
  • When I first started player Final Fantasy 11, there were ZERO tutorials, or even quests at all that directed players where to go, or give them a task to do.

    I was dropped right into the city of Bastok. Annnnnnnd, that was that.
    Haha!

    I didn't even know how to MOVE! It was confusing. But eventually I figured out how to type in chat and asked someone how to move. Shortly after, 2 friendly players showed up and coached me along. Giving me tips and hints and lead me around the city to various useful locations. And after about 30-40 minutes, they bid me farewell, releasing me into the wild world of Vana'diel.

    As discombobulating as that experience was, it was also very memorable and fun. And felt warming that other's would stop what they are doing to help a newbie out.

    I prefer no tutorials.

    We are arriving on Verra as newborn-pups...and must figure out how to survive on our own, or alongside our fellow friends that have exited the Gates alongside us.


    -


    Steven Sharif is my James Halliday (Anorak)

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    “That is not dead which can eternal lie,
    And with strange aeons even death may die.”

    -HPL
  • KhronusKhronus Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I want to see nothing in terms of a tutorial that relates to the actual gameplay. Teaching someone how to use wasd to move is just silly.

    When it comes to artisan paths, this should be something taught through a quest chain. This should be an EPIC quest chain that includes lore, helping/working with others, and send you on missions to kill specific lvl threats.
  • ShoelidShoelid Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I always liked the OG World of Warcraft tutorials. They're pretty out of the way and, as far as I remember, were just a sentence or two to explain something that was going on. They mostly existed to explain the very basic UI and game elements. Everything else was left to the player to interpret.

    A game with as many systems as Ashes definitely needs a tutorial of sorts. Imagine trying to figure out the hybrid combat system with zero explanation. It doesn't need to be super extensive, just a couple sentences to get the player started. There should also be an in-game "glossary" of sorts to look up terms, systems, abilities, classes, lore... Anybody that's played games like Crusader Kings III or Civilization will know how great these things can be. A glossary would allow people to quickly look up in game what the difference is between a scientific node and an economic node. This way people can easily learn in-game if they want to, without a super extensive tutorial to cover every detail.
  • WhitneyHagasMatsumotoWhitneyHagasMatsumoto Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I am fine with just a minimal tutorial.
    While you are offline, a very brief Verra lore will be told to you, and you will be taught only basic operations, including combat.

    And if I want to know about efficient crafting, for example, I prefer to be able to get non-meta information in the form of specialized books. 👀

    I've never played an MMO before, but I've played a few hundred hours of Kenshi, and I've been knocked down by goats and scavenged the belongings of criminals killed by guards, so I know how fun it can be to live in a world of exploration!

    And in an MMO, you can ask other players for help.

    Maybe that's why players communicate so well with each other, and maybe that's how you find your future best friend! ;)
  • Cinematic introduction: Yes, it can be re-used for marketing.

    Tutorials: None or minimal.
    They can easily become a waste of dev resource as many players will ignore them.
    .
    Ask your official content creators to do videos on various orientation subjects and launch an Intrepid copy of those videos (permissions vs. referral money) when the player clicks on them in the HELP menu.
    .
    If you get the players used to asking content creators then you farm out front line support to the content creators (they get referrals!), which takes some workload off Intrepid staff.
    .
    You might even get players to read the wiki for help. Imagine that.
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  • VhaeyneVhaeyne Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    When I first started player Final Fantasy 11, there were ZERO tutorials, or even quests at all that directed players where to go, or give them a task to do.

    I was dropped right into the city of Bastok. Annnnnnnd, that was that.
    Haha!

    I didn't even know how to MOVE! It was confusing. But eventually I figured out how to type in chat and asked someone how to move. Shortly after, 2 friendly players showed up and coached me along. Giving me tips and hints and lead me around the city to various useful locations. And after about 30-40 minutes, they bid me farewell, releasing me into the wild world of Vana'diel.

    As discombobulating as that experience was, it was also very memorable and fun. And felt warming that other's would stop what they are doing to help a newbie out.

    I prefer no tutorials.

    We are arriving on Verra as newborn-pups...and must figure out how to survive on our own, or alongside our fellow friends that have exited the Gates alongside us.
    -

    You are right about that. No other MMO I have ever played required the players to teach each other so much. The lack of hand holding really helped with both the sense of accomplishment when actually doing something, and the socialization. I met a lot of people just asking them basic things like: "why are you in this area at your level? Ohh there is a job quest here? cool. Sure i'll help." boom, just like that you are making a new friend.

    Tutorials shift the game slightly toward being a solo experience, and I will never be in favor of that. If I wanted to play a solo game I would.
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    If I had more time, I would write a shorter post.
  • Wandering MistWandering Mist Moderator, Member, Founder, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    Vhaeyne wrote: »
    When I first started player Final Fantasy 11, there were ZERO tutorials, or even quests at all that directed players where to go, or give them a task to do.

    I was dropped right into the city of Bastok. Annnnnnnd, that was that.
    Haha!

    I didn't even know how to MOVE! It was confusing. But eventually I figured out how to type in chat and asked someone how to move. Shortly after, 2 friendly players showed up and coached me along. Giving me tips and hints and lead me around the city to various useful locations. And after about 30-40 minutes, they bid me farewell, releasing me into the wild world of Vana'diel.

    As discombobulating as that experience was, it was also very memorable and fun. And felt warming that other's would stop what they are doing to help a newbie out.

    I prefer no tutorials.

    We are arriving on Verra as newborn-pups...and must figure out how to survive on our own, or alongside our fellow friends that have exited the Gates alongside us.
    -

    You are right about that. No other MMO I have ever played required the players to teach each other so much. The lack of hand holding really helped with both the sense of accomplishment when actually doing something, and the socialization. I met a lot of people just asking them basic things like: "why are you in this area at your level? Ohh there is a job quest here? cool. Sure i'll help." boom, just like that you are making a new friend.

    Tutorials shift the game slightly toward being a solo experience, and I will never be in favor of that. If I wanted to play a solo game I would.

    I see where you're coming from, but at the same time if you have absolutely no tutorial at all, you can potentially create a barrier to entry that relies on the community to fix.
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  • akabearakabear Member, Braver of Worlds, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    Agree with both but personally I think there is still an absolute minimum of tutorial to get you started in a game.
  • Wandering MistWandering Mist Moderator, Member, Founder, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    akabear wrote: »
    Agree with both but personally I think there is still an absolute minimum of tutorial to get you started in a game.

    Yes, and as I stated in my video on this (thanks to everyone for your replies by the way), the absolute minimum I would include in the beginning is:

    character movement
    camera control
    accepting and completing quests
    basic combat

    Everything else can be left to the player to learn or given in an offline information codex (ala ffxiv).
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  • akabearakabear Member, Braver of Worlds, Kickstarter, Alpha One
    From own experience after returning to a game that I had left alone for 6, 12 or even a year or so, I was completely put off by not being able to remember how to play and with no capacity to turn on a tutorial again, and not really wanting to discard a character that I already had developed to relearn, I just wrote off the game instead.

    So, I do believe there should be the capacity to redo a tutorial at a later date and even turn on particular areas too if you want a refresher.
  • VhaeyneVhaeyne Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I see where you're coming from, but at the same time if you have absolutely no tutorial at all, you can potentially create a barrier to entry that relies on the community to fix.

    I think that can be good for the community though. In my experience the more obtuse the new player experience is the more helpful veteran players are.

    I thought about it more. I think the fairest compromise would be a in game manual. That way there is always an official explanation of how things are expected to work that can be referred to at anytime, but new players would still be likely to just ask questions about how do things in world or local chat.

    Most people are going to just click though those quests any way then ask questions later.
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    If I had more time, I would write a shorter post.
  • Please just make the tutorial elements optional.

    I would initially assume that it is all intuitive enough for me not to need hand holding and skip the tutorial. Later you might find me asking guild mates or googling what I need, when I need it.

    I respect that others may prefer to play through the tutorial.

    Maybe a poll would give a better idea of how many would use the tutorial?
    1) I will play through the tutorial fully
    2) I will skip to play through only the more complex functions in the tutorial
    3) I will skip the tutorial and find out what I need to know elsewhere
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