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Racial laguages

Hi! I think that language is an integral part of immersion. In your opinion, how should AOC integrate this element, if it is to integrate it?

I think several possibilities could be nice!

For Role Play:
Each race could have its own language, in addition to the common language (in the style of Wow), with, why not, a slightly different dialect between the two types of dwarfs for example. This could result in:
-An orc does not understand what a dwarf is saying, the text is totally modified.
-An orc Ren'Kai can understand what an orc Vek says, but with an accent materialized by a distortion of certain words.

For the Node Vs Node:
Nodes could have the possibility of adopting a single language, spoken by the citizens of that node alone. Thus, the use of chat in general channel in the region would allow citizens to communicate without being understood by external citizens.

Going further
The translation (and therefore the understanding) of these dialects could be a competence of technological or religious nodes,

I find that these elements would strengthen the sense of belonging to a community (race, region), while providing opportunities for PR.

This could also be very specific situation generator in PVP!
Imagine yourself in hostile territory, witness to an incomprehensible discussion between several opponents who did not know each other 2 minutes earlier, and find themselves gathered together by the sole objective of having your skin .


In short, I look forward to your opinions on this, and your ideas!

Comments

  • Song_WardenSong_Warden Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    I disliked this feature in WoW. It disrupted the usual banter between the factions. I hated not being able to communicate with the opposite faction during world pvp. The world pvp wasn't the best anyway and the language barrier made it worse.
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  • No thanks. Why segregate communities? We've lived together on Sanctus for thousands of years, I think we know each other pretty well by now.

    In Ashes, your node affiliation is more important than your chosen race. It's more important that you can communicate with others.
    This link may help you: https://ashesofcreation.wiki/
  • tautautautau Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    Perhaps between the Tulnar and the other races it would make some sense, since the Tulnar have been isolated from the returnees for ages. But the various races jumping through the gateways to return to Verra have all been living together, and doubtlessly communicating with each other...so they would know each others' languages. So, I do not believe that racial language differences make sense with the lore.

    Even though it might make sense with the Tulnar, that does not mean that it is good game design to be unable to communicate with the Tulnar, as the last few posters have pointed out. Perhaps the physical repulsion of the Tulnar will be sufficient (no insult intended towards those rolling Tulnar!).
  • Mag7spyMag7spy Member
    I've said this before ill say it again for ANY ROLEPLAYER that wants elements for the sake of RP to make that game purposely worse for everyone else that is not backed by any kind gameplay design are all very terrible ideas.

    @Heljy
    This could also be very specific situation generator in PVP!
    Imagine yourself in hostile territory, witness to an incomprehensible discussion between several opponents who did not know each other 2 minutes earlier, and find themselves gathered together by the sole objective of having your skin .

    This does not sound fun to me this sounds very annoying. You aren't building suspense, if this is a pvp situation and can not talk you are even more inclined to flag up and not bother with discussion.

    This is what i mean bad rp trying to influence gameplay for 0 actual reason. Effectively because you can't talk you are actually reducing RP elements in the game since those players can't talk to one another. The solution will be more scaled towards pure pvp than rp, discussions, politics, etc. Things will be taken off the game even more so and discord used as well.

    This is what i mean and my reasoning on why it is bad.
  • "I disliked this feature in WoW. It disrupted the usual banter between the factions. I hated not being able to communicate with the opposite faction during world pvp. The world pvp wasn't the best anyway and the language barrier made it worse."

    ^YUP!
  • HeljyHeljy Member
    I think I misunderstood. Obviously the default language that any character would speak would be the "common language". only there would be an option to change language temporarily.
    Finally, the impact would be very slight in my opinion. In any case, I understand your points of view.
  • BalinBalin Member, Alpha One, Adventurer

    Hm, I kind of like the idea. On the one hand this could be intesting. Maybe you could have professioncy in language too? And somehow train to learn new languages by some quest or what not? Ofc common language as a base. But I agree it could be cool and increase immersion. At base threshold of a language you get some gibberish text. Hear enough of that language gives you experience. At a certain threshold the text could get hints of english here and there. Simple word could be in plain or close to english. And so on, better and better at later thresholds.. One could imagine this would be a reason to go to a town with many dwarfs (if you are an elf race)for example. And while there you could do a quest like "Studying the language" which would give a buff to increase the exp in that language. It would be a skill that could give you intel when people try to be secretive. And the ones that would try to be secretive would maybe not suspect you understand. Could lead to intresting situations. Could be something to spend time on once you've maxed out your level.
    As the game is suppossed to be player driven, this could be good.

    On the otherhand I guess if you play with people you know/"in guild" and use discord this wont really matter anyway. Because of that this might be a low prio to develop anyways.

    But..... at least fun to dwell a little on the idea.
  • AsgerrAsgerr Member
    I would only have it as an option. Meaning, in chat you can select whether to speak Common, Elven, Dwarvish etc.
    Every race starts knowing Common and their racial language, then you can learn others in some ways.

    This could impact recipes and schematics used for crafting, requiring the services of a translator for gold sink and managing the economy. Of course a player who already learned that language, wouldn't need to pay for those services (already spent many hours learning that language).

    But to completely block people from speaking to their friends in game because each picked a different race? Hello no.
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  • SolvrynSolvryn Member, Alpha One, Adventurer
    Players are going to create their own factions and sometimes the best way to support it is not give it any tools at all.

  • Heljy wrote: »
    I think I misunderstood. Obviously the default language that any character would speak would be the "common language". only there would be an option to change language temporarily.
    Finally, the impact would be very slight in my opinion. In any case, I understand your points of view.

    I like the idea, @Heljy ... but as already pointed out in the thread it should be an optional toggle for those that want it.

    Also, it's probably something best saved for after the game releases (DLC feature or something).
  • VaknarVaknar Moderator, Member, Staff
    Certainly some good thought-starters for RP features!

    As some have suggested, in what ways would you implement this feature, or languages, in which it is an optional, RP-focused feature?
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  • NoaaniNoaani Member, Intrepid Pack
    Vaknar wrote: »
    Certainly some good thought-starters for RP features!

    As some have suggested, in what ways would you implement this feature, or languages, in which it is an optional, RP-focused feature?

    Different fonts for different languages

    9q6dfgzvou1m.png

    This is a Barbarian speaking the Halasian language to a player that does not understand it. To a player that does understand it, it comes across as just regular text. If a player were to take the time, they could look up the font file of the language in question and "translate" it.

    What this allows developers to do is to essentially give "personality" to different languages. The Barbarian culture was one of the more ancient cultures in EQ/EQ2, and the language font used reflects that, looking as if it is perhaps inspired by Sumarian text.

    From there, you can add language fonts that suit the culture of the various races, adding to the cultural identity of player races, as well as any other races or cultures added to the game.

    As long as the default is a common language, and all characters speak common, there is no need for any communication issues between players.

    Two additional things that the EQ2 developers did with this that were interesting and enjoyable was that they tied a small number of quests to knowing a given language, and each language was able to be learned by player characters (EQ2 had 45 or so languages). Basically, they made languages and quests for those languages an integral part of the quest game.

    The other thing they did was they used these language fonts in the games landscape. An engraving on a wall, or writing on a tapestry etc. This made things just look more interesting and intriguing to the average player, but gave those with the predisposition to be bothered to translate it something fun to do.

    Often times, these endeavors lead players to clues about the games lore.
  • In the context of wow's version it was pretty lame that you couldnt talk across factions to each other, but other than that the alternative languages were just there for fun really. I like the idea that you can start speaking in your racial language and some people might not know what you are saying. This is not the same as the faction v faction language barrier in wow, as its all voluntary how you speak instead of being forced to only speak with your faction members.
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    Commissioned at https://fiverr.com/ravenjuu
  • HeljyHeljy Member
    Sathrago wrote: »
    In the context of wow's version it was pretty lame that you couldnt talk across factions to each other, but other than that the alternative languages were just there for fun really. I like the idea that you can start speaking in your racial language and some people might not know what you are saying. This is not the same as the faction v faction language barrier in wow, as its all voluntary how you speak instead of being forced to only speak with your faction members.

    I agree with you. The "frank" language barrier poses a problem of interraction, and offers almost only the conflict as an outcome of a meeting between players. That said, I have great memories as a dwarf or troll team in WoW, playing on the language option to create original moments of play.
    Noaani wrote: »
    Vaknar wrote: »
    Certainly some good thought-starters for RP features!

    As some have suggested, in what ways would you implement this feature, or languages, in which it is an optional, RP-focused feature?

    Different fonts for different languages

    9q6dfgzvou1m.png

    This is a Barbarian speaking the Halasian language to a player that does not understand it. To a player that does understand it, it comes across as just regular text. If a player were to take the time, they could look up the font file of the language in question and "translate" it.

    What this allows developers to do is to essentially give "personality" to different languages. The Barbarian culture was one of the more ancient cultures in EQ/EQ2, and the language font used reflects that, looking as if it is perhaps inspired by Sumarian text.

    From there, you can add language fonts that suit the culture of the various races, adding to the cultural identity of player races, as well as any other races or cultures added to the game.

    As long as the default is a common language, and all characters speak common, there is no need for any communication issues between players.

    Two additional things that the EQ2 developers did with this that were interesting and enjoyable was that they tied a small number of quests to knowing a given language, and each language was able to be learned by player characters (EQ2 had 45 or so languages). Basically, they made languages and quests for those languages an integral part of the quest game.

    The other thing they did was they used these language fonts in the games landscape. An engraving on a wall, or writing on a tapestry etc. This made things just look more interesting and intriguing to the average player, but gave those with the predisposition to be bothered to translate it something fun to do.

    Often times, these endeavors lead players to clues about the games lore.

    I really like the idea of being able to learn another language of node or race. I think it’s a great customization factor for our avatar.

    As for using original characters outside the human alphabet, it’s definitely a big implementation job, but it can really bring credibility to racial cultures.
  • NoaaniNoaani Member, Intrepid Pack
    Heljy wrote: »
    As for using original characters outside the human alphabet, it’s definitely a big implementation job, but it can really bring credibility to racial cultures.

    It isn't really that big. Each language needs 26 characters made for it, and then it's literally done.

    ┞ A
    ━ B
    ┍ C
    ┐ D
    ┤ E
    └ F
    ┙ G
    ┃ H
    ┱ I
    ┻ J
    ╂ K
    ═ L
    ╡ M
    ╪ N
    ╭ O
    ╮ P
    ╯ Q
    ╰ R
    ╱ S
    ╲ T
    ╳ U
    ▁ V
    ┄ W
    ◇ X
    □ Y
    ○ Z

    Now, I would expect better quality from a professional product, obviously. Though to be fair I didn't actually create that, it was all just taken from the Character Map - but it still only took me about 3 minutes to throw that list together.

    Point is, it really shouldn't take all that long.
  • KilionKilion Member
    I think it might make sense for players to gradually be able to develop a different language over time rather than being able to speak racial languages. At least I would think of that as more aligned with the lore of Ashes. All the divine races were together in Sanctus, bound by the same catastrophe and sent back to the world to reconquer it after the Apocalypse - all of this being generally a team effort known to come to pass in the future, I would imagine that the divine races trapped in Sanctus might have slowly reduced hurdles to that common goal, including languages. The exception obviously are the Tulnar who could indeed start out with a unique language.

    So how could different languages be introduced to the game at a later stage? I'd say:
    By region. The more you contribute to the development of Nodes in for example regions the Aelan Humans have inhabited before, the greater your "affinity" with their history. Venturing into ruins of Aelan civilization and looting in these areas has a chance of finding records of the past which let you learn the ancient Aelan language. This makes "traitors" or enemies in the region more dangerous, as they can basically "spy" on your communication on the battlefield.

    Mechanically I would say the increasing skill level would lead to more and more words in a chat message being exchanged with words from the selected language. This could also be a feature in some questlines where communicating with an ancient entity in a certain area requires a certain level of proficiency in their language to actually take their quests. And for example not being able to understand them could trigger a quest to consult a scholar on how to learn about this language.
    The answer is probably >>> HERE <<<
  • NoaaniNoaani Member, Intrepid Pack
    Kilion wrote: »
    I think it might make sense for players to gradually be able to develop a different language over time rather than being able to speak racial languages. At least I would think of that as more aligned with the lore of Ashes. All the divine races were together in Sanctus, bound by the same catastrophe and sent back to the world to reconquer it after the Apocalypse - all of this being generally a team effort known to come to pass in the future, I would imagine that the divine races trapped in Sanctus might have slowly reduced hurdles to that common goal, including languages. The exception obviously are the Tulnar who could indeed start out with a unique language.
    So, my take on this.

    While the races may have all lived in Sanctus, since the original intent was for each gate to be race specific (changed due to gameplay reasons, not lore reasons), my take on that is that the races in Sanctus lived at least somewhat segregated. The fact that they have vastly differing architecture and clothing styles suggest this to also be the case. I wouldn't want to assume details past that.

    Based on this, it seems logical to me that there would be a common language, but that reach race would maintain it's own language.

    To me, the notion of a common language as well as race specific language seems to perfectly fit what we know of Sanctus.

    That isn't to say a node specific language couldn't develop.
  • SathragoSathrago Member
    edited May 2023
    If they could really go through the effort to make different languages there would be so much potential there for players to delve into as well. Probably not something they could do on a whim, but something like what @Noaani suggested with it being a simple alphabet/symbol swap might happen.

    One of the coolest things I saw in recent months was this song from dwarf fortress where they have created their own dwarven language, and now someone was able to write and sing a song for their tavern events in the game.
    The song I refer to starts at 1:05 and this is just an example of how awesome having different languages for us to play with could be. (also this song slaps :sunglasses: )
    5000x1000px_Sathrago_Commission_RavenJuu.jpg?ex=661327bf&is=6600b2bf&hm=e6652ad4fec65a6fe03abd2e8111482acb29206799f1a336b09f703d4ff33c8b&
    Commissioned at https://fiverr.com/ravenjuu
  • ZahieZahie Member
    I really like the racial language idea.
    I used to play Ever Quest with my dad when I was a kid (like 12 years old) and they had this feature.
    As I remember it, correct me if I'm wrong, each race could at least speak their own racial language and common language. It was skill-based and both racial and common was max level from start. You could change what language you wanted to speak in the chat, like a filter that changed everything you typed to gibberish, like this "sdrle aksbsje kals jdkele", for those who didn't have any knowledge in that particular language.

    You could also learn new languages and if I'm not remebering it totally wrong it was just simply by being spoked with that language to and then try to use it. The more you use it the more you learn. So the skill level you have in the particular language will affect the amount of gibberish you will see when others is typing with that language and also what others will see when you type, even if they are fluent/max level in that language.

    Common language was just like the normal chat as default and would look normal for everyone.
  • MarcetMarcet Member
    I always liked this, in metin you could buy "Language books" to be able to understand people from other continents, they rarely dropped but you could buy them from other players making it a nice trade and a good side progression.
  • I guess if it was done the same as Star Wars Galaxies I wouldn't mind it that much. It would just be annoying having a toggle to tune into the correct language for certain people. Not learning the language means you can't speak to people who like to speak in it. Would this really add anything to the game though. Not really.

    I think we should hold off on all RP features for when the game has the more important core features done. Then if you aren't rushing the game out the door you can add them later as more refined ideas.
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    U.S. East
  • HeljyHeljy Member
    Yuyukoyay wrote: »
    I guess if it was done the same as Star Wars Galaxies I wouldn't mind it that much. It would just be annoying having a toggle to tune into the correct language for certain people. Not learning the language means you can't speak to people who like to speak in it. Would this really add anything to the game though. Not really.

    I think we should hold off on all RP features for when the game has the more important core features done. Then if you aren't rushing the game out the door you can add them later as more refined ideas.

    In the topic we agreed on the fact that we would need a comune language that everyone speaks by default. The alternative languages would be activated at the envy of the players, so that everyone could interact without real concern.
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