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Econ-Friday Ranting (a Reference Post)

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Comments

  • JustVineJustVine Member, Alpha One, Alpha Two, Early Alpha Two
    Azherae wrote: »

    By 'not making me kneel down and cut the log myself for 20 seconds', you might feel as though you've wasted less of my Time, but really, since you haven't allowed me to create any more Value, all you did is make it so I have to compete with everyone who is perfectly managing their menus. It's Competitive Farmville or whatever the more recent "Set And Forget" mobile game is.

    And to add to this, 'being able to manage your farm in a mobile app or otherwise not be present for harvesting your plants' achieves this same issue. No Intrepid I haven't forgotten that weird line from ages ago. If you put that in the game every person who actually likes farming as a lifeskill will avoid your game given all the additional issues you've presented us with (Freehold nonsense, clunky and meaningless processing ques, etc). You might as well just not have farming in the game at all if you are going to do that.

    I like farming in mmo's because the act of planning and managing my field are fun. I don't mind harvesting my crops as they are the fruit of my labor. When done right they have some of the most planning depth in the game and have systems that hard wire the outcome to the world state in ways every other gathering and processing skill can only hope to achieve.

    When you have autoque and worker bots autoharvesting you take away all of that from us and give us something that is just a crappy afk arena. Immersion is important for a lot of lifeskills and farming is pretty high on the list of ones that can be really easily ruined by the type of design Azherae explains in the post above.

    And with all that said it's easy to bot. Even if you magically somehow detect and ban people automating it, you have to PLAY like a bot to 'be the best' at it. There are definitely some lifeskills where that is possibly acceptable and there is a player niche that 'likes turning their brain off' for these things. But they are not all players and most players appreciate a spectrum of content types so they can pick and choose their preference. Designing a core system that is all turn off brain, therefore, pulls everything to one extreme in a way that threatens the idea of 'having fun' for any one who doesn't feel like interacting with that at any point in their session. Especially if it is remotely tedious.
    I'm feeling just crate.... Carrying the weight of my entire civilization on my back is a burden but someone has to do it.
  • AzheraeAzherae Member, Alpha One, Alpha Two, Early Alpha Two
    Hopefully with the new big patch that'll end up being all I have to say in this thread specifically since I think I've finally addressed every Macro-concept that comes to mind.

    I guess my big takeaway is that I know it's hard to get retention while making systems that have enough natural friction in them to shape an Economy. I 'get it'. And Ashes absolutely doesn't seem to be aiming for that, it technically goes too far in the other direction.

    I'm fine with 'putting in work' to try to have immersive experiences because Devs 'can't afford to increase rarity of moments' or 'can't expect people to have to run around with their limited time'. I can handle some amount of working around the results of 'can't I just do everything from one menu? I only have an hour to play'.

    But I still have to more or less desperately beg Devs, particularly Econ Design Devs, to stop making systems for people who don't really want to play an MMO. We can get there in this decade, I know we can.
    "Save us, Jake Song!"
  • LudulluLudullu Member, Alpha Two
    edited October 3
    This reminds me of a situation on early days of an L2 server, and kinda what I expected with the processing stations in Ashes.

    Here's a material that's used in a ton of items. It's the highest stage of a craftable mat (but used from lvl40 to lvl80), and it can also be dropped but only from super high lvl mobs. In order to be able to craft this item, the crafter class needs its recipe. Recipe is fairly easily gotten through drop/spoil on mobs, but usually you'd need to wait a bit before crafters have this recipe on them en masse.

    Same for some of the craftable mats that are required to make this top material
    5some84eukcp.png
    m82w26ssch2b.png


    And so on the start of a server, if you're not yourself a crafter, but you need this material to craft an item - you're waiting for "processors" to come online. You were able to farm the "basic gatherables" that you can put together into higher tiers of mats, but unless there's a person with that ability - you're shit out of luck.

    And quite often people who'd go out of their way to go collect all the recipes for these kinds of mats super early on (instead of pushing lvls, for example) will get an early start on econ boosting themselves, which allows them to play the market earlier and snowball from there.

    Later on in the server's life you'd just be able to "gather" these mats yourself (as Azherae suggested as an option for Ashes), but the acquisition speed wouldn't be as fast as getting these mats through "processing" of lower tier mats.

    edit: I got no damn clue why pictures are being messed up today. Here's the link to the item https://l2j.ru/highfive/index.php?p=2&id=1890
  • nanfoodlenanfoodle Member, Founder, Kickstarter, Alpha Two, Early Alpha Two
    edited October 4
    Almost anything can sound fun in concept phase. Ashes is reminding me of Warhammer MMO. Failure to execute with solid bones of something gamers want. Steven just needs to get out of the way of his talented staff. All porblems can boil down to one thing. Inexperienced management. You can tell when an MMO is designed to keep gamers playing to just make money and not focused on a vision. Thats been the downfall of MMOs.

    Here we have a gamer running a company with a really good vision that had gamers excited for. Testing, we can see and feel that vision and that is exciting. Inexperience management that has no checks and balances is the problem here. The vision guy cant also be the guy running the business. This game needs a reality check. Most problems that come up with Ashes are handled with knee jerk reactions over a solid plan. Steven needs to find a business person who has experience with MMOs. This will cost us some of the vision but we will have none of it if Steven dose not start adjusting how he is running this business.

    I don't think Steven will like his next round of testers. Yet another knee jerk reaction that sounds like a good idea in his head but the reality of it is just another broken idea for so many reasons. I really hope Ashes finds a real footing.
  • GreatPhilisopherGreatPhilisopher Member, Alpha Two
    nanfoodle wrote: »
    Almost anything can sound fun in concept phase. Ashes is reminding me of Warhammer MMO. Failure to execute with solid bones of something gamers want. Steven just needs to get out of the way of his talented staff. All porblems can boil down to one thing. Inexperienced management. You can tell when an MMO is designed to keep gamers playing to just make money and not focused on a vision. Thats been the downfall of MMOs.

    Here we have a gamer running a company with a really good vision that had gamers excited for. Testing, we can see and feel that vision and that is exciting. Inexperience management that has no checks and balances is the problem here. The vision guy cant also be the guy running the business. This game needs a reality check. Most problems that come up with Ashes are handled with knee jerk reactions over a solid plan. Steven needs to find a business person who has experience with MMOs. This will cost us some of the vision but we will have none of it if Steven dose not start adjusting how he is running this business.

    I don't think Steven will like his next round of testers. Yet another knee jerk reaction that sounds like a good idea in his head but the reality of it is just another broken idea for so many reasons. I really hope Ashes finds a real footing.

    didnt warhammer get a private server where players fixed the whole game and made it fun and made like all or most of the classes viable...like this is so funny , might be the only way ashes get fixed if it flops by not listening to feedback and fixing the terrible execution of the systems they made
    ykwk7qwgw5os.jpg
  • LudulluLudullu Member, Alpha Two
    didnt warhammer get a private server where players fixed the whole game and made it fun and made like all or most of the classes viable...like this is so funny , might be the only way ashes get fixed if it flops by not listening to feedback and fixing the terrible execution of the systems they made
    Afaik this is the solution for a lot of mmos. Private servers simlpy have way more freedom to do what the people want, and they also can have enough variance in that approach, because there can be hundreds of them, each with different "flavoring". L2 is one of the biggest examples of that, ranging from "this is literally how the game was at the very beginning" to "this is a complete rebuild of the game, with different mechanics, classes, stories, buildings, etc etc etc".

    Several years ago I asked a question whether Ashes should keep their versions saved, so that creating a "classic" one was easier, because people will always want the "first" experience. People laughed at my request back then, but god damn I'd already prefer a P1 build to whateverthehell we have now :D
  • GreatPhilisopherGreatPhilisopher Member, Alpha Two
    Ludullu wrote: »
    didnt warhammer get a private server where players fixed the whole game and made it fun and made like all or most of the classes viable...like this is so funny , might be the only way ashes get fixed if it flops by not listening to feedback and fixing the terrible execution of the systems they made
    Afaik this is the solution for a lot of mmos. Private servers simlpy have way more freedom to do what the people want, and they also can have enough variance in that approach, because there can be hundreds of them, each with different "flavoring". L2 is one of the biggest examples of that, ranging from "this is literally how the game was at the very beginning" to "this is a complete rebuild of the game, with different mechanics, classes, stories, buildings, etc etc etc".

    Several years ago I asked a question whether Ashes should keep their versions saved, so that creating a "classic" one was easier, because people will always want the "first" experience. People laughed at my request back then, but god damn I'd already prefer a P1 build to whateverthehell we have now :D

    Alpha 1was way better in most things if it had the current combat and i guess the gathering working everyone would be playing that in a private server lol
    ykwk7qwgw5os.jpg
  • AzheraeAzherae Member, Alpha One, Alpha Two, Early Alpha Two
    nanfoodle wrote: »
    Almost anything can sound fun in concept phase. Ashes is reminding me of Warhammer MMO. Failure to execute with solid bones of something gamers want. Steven just needs to get out of the way of his talented staff. All porblems can boil down to one thing. Inexperienced management. You can tell when an MMO is designed to keep gamers playing to just make money and not focused on a vision. Thats been the downfall of MMOs.

    Here we have a gamer running a company with a really good vision that had gamers excited for. Testing, we can see and feel that vision and that is exciting. Inexperience management that has no checks and balances is the problem here. The vision guy cant also be the guy running the business. This game needs a reality check. Most problems that come up with Ashes are handled with knee jerk reactions over a solid plan. Steven needs to find a business person who has experience with MMOs. This will cost us some of the vision but we will have none of it if Steven dose not start adjusting how he is running this business.

    I don't think Steven will like his next round of testers. Yet another knee jerk reaction that sounds like a good idea in his head but the reality of it is just another broken idea for so many reasons. I really hope Ashes finds a real footing.

    Everything sounds good in Concept phase because game companies don't like/need to go into detail about incentives, and players obviously default to imagining 'incentives that appeal to them', or in the case of all those games that turn out to fail later, we at least imagine 'the forms of the incentives that make any sense'.

    But most developers don't know how to wrangle Motivation or Incentives, and usually 'shareholders' don't either. Even someone like Steven gets a lot of negative responses because he 'grew up in' game environments where he was subjected to (and caused) Perverse Incentives and somewhat Manipulative Motivations.

    When a game doesn't understand the relevant Incentives or Motivations of its potential audiences, it doesn't matter how 'good the Vision is' or how 'nice the Concepts sound'. It will either get a mismatched audience, or basically none at all.

    That's why the Private Servers mentioned in other posts are successful. Players, even if they fracture the community a bit in their efforts, obviously have to understand their own Motivations and Incentives for any game that they're willing to spend time modding or fixing.

    But yeah, since Concepts != Motivations, Open Development is only as good as the Designers' understanding of the latter.
    "Save us, Jake Song!"
  • AzheraeAzherae Member, Alpha One, Alpha Two, Early Alpha Two
    And for the sake of keeping things 'within thread intent' (you're not actually derailing, guys, continue as you wish, though I will probably keep doing what this post is about to do):

    More examples!

    Pax Dei is going to have a Sub model! It is going to be tied, however loosely, to ingame plots of land you can build on! This sounds familiar!

    But what's the Motivation a person has for playing Pax Dei? Is it to build? To Trade? To war? Which of these Motivations is the thing that decides if a person 'pays the sub fee/the part of the sub fee that allows them to have the plot'? Because the game is going to turn out incredibly different based on which subgroup has the primary Incentive to own land. And the Concept of 'owning land, building on it, and having a living world' doesn't, in itself, tell us anything about how that will turn out, not more than 'Players will be able to own their own Freeholds, with effort' did.

    Or for a more precise, directly reference-able Live, we go back to Throne and Liberty again, Housing Update:

    Aside from decorating your own House(s), one other Motivation for engaging with the system is to do those 'daily' Contracts I mentioned before. The system is even set up pretty well! If you are a high level Miner, the Gathering Contract might ask you for Rare Ores. If you are a high level Tailor, the Processing Contract might ask you for Rare Cloth.

    But there's a 'bug', where if you are a high level Furniture Crafter (the endpoint where those all converge), it will basically only ask for Furnishings that involve Wood, right now.

    And since not every player is a good enough Carpenter/Woodcutter to actually make high level Lumber, and you can't trade for it right now, this 'bug' is actually saving them in a roundabout way. Because 'people who make things out of wood' are at least the most likely group to be interested in Furnishings. There is more furniture made of mostly-wood than other stuff. The contract 'flavor text' is easier to write. 'Fixing' this bug would currently be more trouble/annoyance to those with the highest Motivation to engage fully.

    The Concept is still correct. The Incentives are still mostly correct (Social Org style things might be better, but that's just my opinion), the Motivations are currently 'optimized for' until things improve.

    But it's hard to argue that the Implementation is 'Correct'. Not even the Devs are saying that. They're saying 'hey there's a bug here'. They're saying 'hey we know this is wrong right now please be patient'. If you tell someone the Concept of 'you can go out into the world and gather materials and come back and process them and make them into things', nearly no one will have a problem with that vague Concept.

    It might 'break' at the Motivation/Incentive part of design though, not Implementation, and players often focus on the Implementation while focusing only on the failure of the Incentives to line up with their Motivations. Fixing that is the thing a 'Principal Econ Designer' is hired to do. Pulling together all the people who are Motivated in different ways.

    I'm a 'Blacksmith', or technically a 'metalworker' who 'can't' make Belts, Armor, Jewelry, or most requested Furniture. Is this because the Implementation sucks? Or because some other player type/game constraint is 'in the way' of the devs getting to give me Incentives that match my Motivation?

    That's one relatively simple system with minimal moving parts. Ashes is like 40.
    "Save us, Jake Song!"
  • LudulluLudullu Member, Alpha Two
    edited 10:18PM
    Alpha 1was way better in most things if it had the current combat and i guess the gathering working everyone would be playing that in a private server lol
    I sadly didn't have enough money to test A1, but I have definitely heard multiple people say they liked A1 more than A2. But even if we go we A2. P1 was more fun AND fucking worked on my PC, so I'd much rather have that rn :D
    Azherae wrote: »
    It might 'break' at the Motivation/Incentive part of design though, not Implementation, and players often focus on the Implementation while focusing only on the failure of the Incentives to line up with their Motivations. Fixing that is the thing a 'Principal Econ Designer' is hired to do. Pulling together all the people who are Motivated in different ways.
    That player focus has been an issue in my recent reddit thread. I posted a ironic clip of Steven from ye olden days
    https://youtube.com/clip/UgkxneKr_HA3_CID-3eOfh0Q21WHI_Uc6p6S?si=ca-y2z8xwEVgVCVM

    And a ton of people (with a ton of upvotes) just answered "well of course it's broken, it's still alpha". Even though the issue is not just with exploiters ruining the economy or recipes being broken as hell (though those are obviously issues too), but with the core design itself.
  • nanfoodlenanfoodle Member, Founder, Kickstarter, Alpha Two, Early Alpha Two
    I dont think Phase 1 was better, it just was going in a direction of feedback. Even going after things that made the game not faction for the community. Phase two, we just became ignored, even on things that was just breaking the game. 2.5 just went left and kept flip flopping from day to day, like IS was just follow the loudest group of players. phase three just just been a cumulation of the past eight months catching up to us and Ashes no longer seems to be able to go in a direction that keeps the vision or make players happy with the direction. Can we get a simple direction on having a new player experience thats rewarding, while keeping the crafting community happy? So many people have given some smart suggestions on this very topic and nothing. Just flip flops like a switch between drops and no drops is a magic % they need to find. This needs a real plan. If not crafters will walk, if every day gamers dont feel rewarded, we will lose 80% of the gamers that keep every MMO running, they are called casuals. A happy balance can be found.
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