Temple of The Roguelike Forums
Announcements => Other Announcements => Topic started by: guest509 on April 18, 2013, 08:08:05 AM
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This is the poll for the earlier thread,
What are the biggest possible turn off in a roguelike? [Yes I know the grammar is incorrect.]
http://forums.roguetemple.com/index.php?topic=1929.75
EDIT: You should be able to choose as many as you want. Poll edited to make choices more serious and clear.
-Jo
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I don't understand what some of these complaints are, maybe it would be better to just make it matter of fact instead of making every option into a joke.
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Ah shit really...okay...
EDIT: I took the silly jokes out. It's now a straight poll.
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Is there an option to limit the number of votes? I'd mark at least half of them, but with a limit of 3 one would have to actually select their biggest turnoffs.
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I only picked 5 myself. I think only one person here(guess who ::) ) is allowed to pick so many, if you honestly would say that more than half of those would stop you from even trying the game, or continuing to play when you hit them, then you are waaay too picky. Considering a majority of people here are developers as well as players, you should be more open to what you play, every game is a learning experience.
Note though, you forgot "No binary download(Requires compiling)" (best way to word it I can think of), I would of checked that off multiple times if I could :P Unless I am very interested in a game, I would just go look elsewhere if I have to compile it.
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if you honestly would say that more than half of those would stop you from even trying the game, or continuing to play when you hit them, then you are waaay too picky. Considering a majority of people here are developers as well as players, you should be more open to what you play, every game is a learning experience.
You're probably right. I guess I don't have enough time to play every title and look for excuses... This must improve. Anyway, all Java stuff or anything else that requires me to install something in my system is automatically excluded and this unfortunately means most of roguelike games :).
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I'm a little surprised that "sci-fi theme" is on the list and "generic fantasy theme" isn't. I've seen people complain about the ubiquity of fantasy settings much more often than about non-traditional settings like sci-fi.
Personally I think both can be great :P
Is "4 direction shooting in an 8 direction game" what Morgoth meant by "orthogonal only shooting. Doesn’t make sense."? I interpreted that as a complaint about being unable to shoot in arbitrary directions (as you can in DoomRL).
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A nice poll, just like the thread it is based on.
I understood that remark just like Quendus...
What were the jokes?
Something weird about the pool software, when 7 of 11 have voted for something, they are only 7,7%. I think it respects the total number of votes, instead of the number of voters.
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Is "4 direction shooting in an 8 direction game" what Morgoth meant by "orthogonal only shooting. Doesn’t make sense."? I interpreted that as a complaint about being unable to shoot in arbitrary directions (as you can in DoomRL).
You interpreted it correctly.
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You're probably right. I guess I don't have enough time to play every title and look for excuses... This must improve. Anyway, all Java stuff or anything else that requires me to install something in my system is automatically excluded and this unfortunately means most of roguelike games :).
Huh, I never even considered that people might consider installing Java as "something extra". Now I wonder if it would be worth my time to do the bundled .exe versions of my Java games.
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Huh, I never even considered that people might consider installing Java as "something extra".
Normally people do have Java installed and it's in their interest to keep it updated to the latest version, but under some circumstances this is not possible (e.g. you want to play at work and your boss has disabled Java updates). The less players need to do in order to launch your game, the better for the game.
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I'm in the rural US, meaning the internet is slow, spotty, drops connections, etc...it's one of the things that got me into roguelikes in the first place. They don't require the web after downloading. Even some of these small web games I might have to reload several times to get them going depending on what's happening on my line.
I think maybe people that live in areas with solid infrastructure might not realize what a pain this is. The bottom line is that if I cannot download your game once and just play then I'll not be playing your game.
I'm spoken with several gamer types and they all feel the same way. They are x-box players. Before buying a game they have to figure out what level of internet is required. None is vastly preferred. When they heard about the new X-box being online all the time they just laughed.
"Microsoft wouldn't be that stupid. If the Playstation allows offline play then it will bury the x-box."
That's the attitude around here, but if you go on forums and such the gripes seem like city kids bitching. Out here it's a make or break issue.
Which brings me back around to my favorite whipping boy. Diablo III. Trying to play that game on hardcore in order to make it actually interesting, and dying from internet lag during trivial engagements...that's just complete bullshit. Lag? In a single player game? Completely unacceptable.
On another related note. Java is one of those programs that wants to be constantly updating, taking over my connection and causing popups. I've not yet figured out how to make it stop and STAY STOPPED. So I end up deleting it. And it takes as much as an hour to get it reinstalled.
I think most people have better connections than I do, so they are more tolerant when Java auto updates even when you told it not to and it takes over your connection for 20 mins.
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so they are more tolerant when Java auto updates even when you told it not to and it takes over your connection for 20 mins.
Now that's a slow connection. At least in Win7 you can set Java not to search for updates and it seems to work. I've set up both Flash and Java that way, because I hate auto updates, other than Windows updates which are important.
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On another related note. Java is one of those programs that wants to be constantly updating, taking over my connection and causing popups. I've not yet figured out how to make it stop and STAY STOPPED. So I end up deleting it. And it takes as much as an hour to get it reinstalled.
I think most people have better connections than I do, so they are more tolerant when Java auto updates even when you told it not to and it takes over your connection for 20 mins.
I have a very good connection and still HATE all that update popups. Typically I'd choose "Later" over and over again, because it's never a right moment for my computer to suddenly slow down and start loading some stuff. And this is just one of the reasons to hate constant updates. Game developers should stay away from this update-mania.
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so they are more tolerant when Java auto updates even when you told it not to and it takes over your connection for 20 mins.
Now that's a slow connection. At least in Win7 you can set Java not to search for updates and it seems to work. I've set up both Flash and Java that way, because I hate auto updates, other than Windows updates which are important.
I don't let windows auto update either. A little symbol pops up in the tray, and when I go to lunch or something I'll let it update.
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My connection is 30 kb/s, sometimes higher. It also stalls and drops a lot.
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My connection is 30 kb/s, sometimes higher. It also stalls and drops a lot.
What connection is that, a mobile one? I hate those. I have 4G (it's 3G really) and the slowest speed is about 80kb/s. It's jamming frequently.
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I think it's dsl.
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My connection is 30 kb/s, sometimes higher. It also stalls and drops a lot.
He he, if that's in kilobits, then it's awfully close to the speed of my internet connection, if kilobytes, that's like high speed internet to me. =P
On the poll, kind of surprised that I'm the only one turned off (so far, of course) by not having an ASCII option...maybe I should give tiles more of a chance? I just love the simplicity of ASCII compared to graphics.
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My connection is 30 kb/s, sometimes higher. It also stalls and drops a lot.
He he, if that's in kilobits, then it's awfully close to the speed of my internet connection, if kilobytes, that's like high speed internet to me. =P
On the poll, kind of surprised that I'm the only one turned off (so far, of course) by not having an ASCII option...maybe I should give tiles more of a chance? I just love the simplicity of ASCII compared to graphics.
The thing is, a lot more games these days have graphics, many people avoid ASCII/character graphics now, and sure there's bad games with graphics, but there's also quite a lot of good ones. Avoiding graphics really cuts off some good games.
And sheesh, I couldn't imagine such a slow internet connection x.x I may hate being in bigger cities, but service is definitely something I enjoy having.
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The thing is, a lot more games these days have graphics, many people avoid ASCII/character graphics now, and sure there's bad games with graphics, but there's also quite a lot of good ones. Avoiding graphics really cuts off some good games.
This is true. I can't say I just dislike graphics in general, because I do in fact love well done graphical video games. I just have a preference for ASCII over tiles in roguelikes I guess. If I must, I will give a graphical game a chance. As an example, I tried DoomRL graphically at first, and it wasn't too bad. I found that when I decided to switch over to the console version, interestingly, I literally became 10x better at the game (According to my score, anyhow).
And sheesh, I couldn't imagine such a slow internet connection x.x I may hate being in bigger cities, but service is definitely something I enjoy having.
I'm actually extremely used to it, since I've lived with it since I ever knew the internet existed. I just recognize that it has a lot of frustrating limitations. I'll be moving to a city this year for university though, so I'll get to experience the wonders of high speed internet soon. :D
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Once you've had a high speed connection you can never again be satisfied with slow speed. Even checking email becomes a chore.