Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Holiday Update From Canada

I'm out in Canada visiting family, so I don't have a huge update here, but I figured I'd plug my parody video again (which made it to WoWInsider, yay!), which you can see below.



Also, if you have an iPad, I highly suggest getting Collosatron by Halfbrick. It's another endless-style game, but you play as a giant robot snake that destroys cities, where you pick up new modules to add to your robot as the game progresses. Modules that are different colours can combine to form a new type of weapon, and modules of the same colour can combine to form bigger, more powerful and durable modules. It is honestly way more fun than it has any right to be.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Here Comes Dinosaur! (Here Comes Santa Claus/WoW Parody)

Because we're working on and hoping to beat Thok, here's a quick song I whipped up, because the juxtaposition of a giant rampaging dinosaur against the bells and joy that is "Here Comes Santa Clause" was too good to pass up.

I wrote the lyrics, I'm the (passable, not great) vocalist, and I edited the video and music. The backing track is not mine, it was arranged and performed by Aaron Campbell, nor are most of the images (a good chunk of the funny ones actually come from an earlier post by Prinnie Powah of That Was an Accident!), though the ones of the Naaru and Garrosh/Zaela I whipped up myself.

So without further ado, I present, Here Comes Dinosaur:



Here comes dinosaur,
Here comes dinosaur,
Right down dinosaur lane,
Garrosh and Zaela and all their minions
Pullin' on the reins.
Raid lead's screaming, players' bleeding,
All is bloody and wiped.
So run like crazy and say your prayers
'Cause dinosaur eats tonight.

Here comes dinosaur,
Here comes dinosaur,
Right down dinosaur lane.
He is a boss that's filled with loot
For the rogues and mages to claim.
Hear those boss mods jingle jangle,
Oh what a terrible sight.
So keep ahead or you'll be dead
'Cause dinosaur feasts tonight.

Here comes dinosaur,
Here comes dinosaur,
Right down dinosaur lane.
He doesn't care if you're heals or tank,
He'll chomp you just the same
Tha Naaru know we're Titan's children,
That makes everything right.
So fill your raid with DPS
'Cause dinosaur fights tonight.

Here comes dinosaur,
Here comes dinosaur,
Right down dinosaur lane.
He'll come around when the adds get out
And the roaring starts again.
He won't get to eat us all
If we just run from the light
So let's give thanks to the raid lead's strat
'Cause dinosaur dies tonight.


No I don't have too much time on my hands, why do you ask? :)

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

PAX: Diversity Lounges, a PR Near-Disaster

Quite recently it leaked that the Penny Arcade folks were going to have a "Roll for Diversity Hub and Lounge" at all upcoming PAX events (and since confirmed at Kotaku by Robert Khoo himself). The leak itself--which you can read more of here--specified that a space will be set aside for PAX attendees to get information on women, LGBTQ, people of colour, disabled folks, and mental health issues in gaming.

Now, that by itself sounds a little like a gay village or a ghetto, right? Everyone "diverse" sequestered off to the side. That's not all the information, however, but nobody on the Internet would ever jump to conclusions without all the data. That'd be absurd!

If you read more into the documents, they talk about how it can be a place in where community groups will have tables with info about promoting diversity in the industry and gaming, and gaming companies can use table slots to educate folks on how they promote diversity in the industry. A place where folks who can't afford Expo Hall space normally can use to educate the masses so to speak. And companies can't just use this as a way to get free Expo Hall space: if they want to promote products, it already has to have a booth elsewhere in the Expo Hall. It should be a place to learn about geek businesses that cater to diverse communities.

Of course, the first thing everyone jumped to was separate but equal, gay villages, or even calling it a zoo. Now, I'll be the first to say that Penny Arcade has some definite issues with communication and language, but at the same time Robert Khoo is a smart man. He's incredibly aware of how minority communities view them (mostly around Mike Krahulik's ignorant and often asinine comments), so I couldn't imagine him being as dumb as just segregating the minority populace and calling it a day.

Turns out that, surprise! There was more than meets the eye as far as the leaked internal document was concerned. Robert Khoo clarified to Kotaku what the lounges were about, though mostly they just reiterated what the leaked documents said, if anyone bothered to actually read them rather than jumping to conclusions. A central place does not mean that other panels, spaces, and such won't exist. A hub does not mean that it is a ghetto, and the gays and women aren't allowed out of their cage. Khoo specifies that it'll be a large room in a high traffic area, so rest assured folks won't be stuffed in a corner.

I, for one, am rather excited to see PAX take steps forward like this. It's unfortunate their message got muddied by a leak, and frankly the PA folks have never been that good at messaging things to begin with, so to see people jumping to negative conclusions isn't entirely unfair or surprising. But at the same time I love having panels around queer-gaming, ladies in games, and the like. Seeing a minority group of which I am a part of get traction and representation is fantastic, because it directly relates to my interests. So I'm interested to see how this Diversity Hub and Lounge works out, because execution here is everything, and if they can live up to their promise, perhaps we can amplify the message to the industry that we do want to be catered to, and we are a sizable buying force, and maybe, just maybe, we can cut down on the hatred in the gaming community as a whole, even just a little bit.

Perhaps I'll go to PAX East after all, if only to check this out.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

WoW: PRESS ALL THE BUTTONS! Convergent Design in Class Mechanics



In many MMOs, WoW being a very prominent one, there’s the idea that classes should be relatively unique. I mean, what’s the point of playing a Priest if the class feels like playing a Mage, but with white spell effects rather than blue, right? But at the same time, there are a lot of factors that create tension with that concept.

One is ensuring all classes have the same base toolkit so they can solo effectively. Everybody needs an interrupt, some sort of minor self-healing, a defensive cooldown, an offensive cooldown to be able to burst DPS, and so on. It still leaves a fair bit of wiggle room as far as design space is concerned, but giving all of those tools to each class definitely reduces the disparity across classes.

Another concept is the idea of convergent design. As you iterate on different designs and pull in concepts that work from other classes, and discard the ones that don’t work, you’ll approach an ideal set of mechanics if any such ideal exists. Now, ideal in this case is somewhat subjective, but at the same time, there’s a few cases where objectively you could say a mechanic just sucked.

One such example is the Retribution Paladin class from Wrath of the Lich King. When building a set of player-based mechanics, you need to introduce some kind of limiter, a resource of sorts, otherwise the player will just spam the highest damaging (or healing) ability (See: Arcane Mages). In first-person shooters, often ammunition is the limiter. For Retribution in Wrath, cooldowns were the limiter. When you use an ability, it goes on “cooldown” such that you cannot use it again for a period of time. Some abilities may go on cooldown for a few seconds, while others may be minutes.

The issue with Retribution in Wrath, however, was that there were not enough abilities to use to fill in the space between cooldowns, such that the class devolved into “First Come First Serve”: if an ability was off cooldown, hit it. Otherwise, wait. You could throw every attack you had onto a single macro and spam that button, and achieve near-max DPS. Hence the nickname “lolret”. You could pretty much literally faceroll your way to victory, which is clearly a failure in class design. That’s not engaging whatsoever. (See: http://korecsguidetoret.blogspot.com/2008/04/how-to-retribution.html for an example of just how... empty the Retribution rotation was in Wrath).

With apologies to Allie Brosh
Now, at the same time as “lolret” was occurring, Enhancement Shamans also got a makeover. Their new mechanics used a “Priority System” as the primary resource rather than mana/focus/rage, which is to say you’d often have multiple abilities off cooldown, and each ability has a priority. Higher priority abilities should be used first, and you’d need to re-evaluate what abilities are off cooldown each time you used an ability. Now, you could reduce this to a single button same as Ret, but Enhancement also had a little bit of extra sauce where multiple abilities were placed on the same cooldown, and you had to make a judgment call on which ability to use: Flame Shock vs. Earth Shock (or Frost Shock), Searing Totem vs. Magma Totem, and Lightning Bolt vs. Chain Lightning. (See:
http://wow.joystiq.com/2011/06/04/totem-talk-state-of-the-enhancement-shaman-address/ for a bit of history here).

The difference is subtle, but important. Both classes used cooldowns, but not having enough buttons made the class too simple, and having too many buttons (ye olde Feral Druid) would make the class obscure and not fun except to the most masochistic of players. There was a balance to be had there. And if you didn’t include branching in your rotation, then you could reduce the rotation to a single button, regardless of how many buttons you had.

(Simplified) Feral Druid Rotation Diagram from days of yore.

Fast forward to today, where Blizzard has learned these concepts and applied them. Funnily enough, Enhancement has changed very little since Wrath, with the exception that damage has been spread to active abilities rather than in auto-attacks and auto-procs. If anything, Enhancement has become more complex, with the addition of Unleash Elements and Lava Lash spreading your Flame Shocks to increase the amount of interplay between your abilities.

Retribution, however, is looking a lot like Enhancement Shamans these days. Retribution now has a full-out Priority System, with multiple abilities sharing cooldowns to ensure you have to make decisions on the fly. They both have a finisher-based resource system, too.
Quick note, a useful tool in Computer Science, and mechanic design in general, is abstraction. Basically, divorcing your discussion from flavor and boiling it down to the base components allows you to more easily compare your Granny Smith to your Red Delicious: in the end they’re both apples, and that’s the important part. But of course, you want to make sure your abstraction is correct for what you’re doing, and not too abstract, or you’ll lose the essence of your conversation. For example, Ret and Enhance are both Priority System classes, but all classes are Ability-Based classes. The former is a useful abstraction, whereas saying all classes use abilities is not a useful abstraction.

So let’s compare the two:


Retribution
Enhancement

Priority System
  • Multiple abilities off of cooldown simultaneously

Priority System
  • Multiple abilities off of cooldown simultaneously

Mana-Based
  • But Mana regenerates so fast as a part of your normal rotation as to only be a limiter if you’re spamming heals.

Mana-Based
  • But Mana regenerates so fast as a part of your normal rotation as to only be a limiter if you’re spamming heals.

Secondary Resource: Holy Power.
  • Gained on ability usage.
  • Funds finishers (Divine Storm, Templar’s Verdict).
  • Also can be used for Healing (Word of Glory).
  • Used for DPS maintenance (Inquisition).
  • All-or-nothing. Using partial amounts either not generally beneficial, or not possible.

Secondary Resource: Maelstrom Weapon
  • Gained on melee attacks at random. Gained on ability usage at random (Stormstrike, Lava Lash).
  • Funds finishers (Chain Lightning, Lightning Bolt).
  • Also can be used for Healing (Healing Surge, Healing Rain, Chain Heal).
  • Using partial amounts can be beneficial.

Rotation Branching
  • Templar’s Verdict vs. Divine Storm vs. Inquisition
  • Crusader Strike vs. Hammer of the Righteous
  • Seal of Truth vs. Seal of Righteousness

Rotation Branching
  • Earth Shock vs. Flame Shock (vs. Frost Shock)
  • Lightning Bolt vs. Chain Lightning
  • Magma Totem + Fire Nova vs. Searing Totem

DPS Maintenance
  • Inquisition once per minute

DPS Maintenance
  • Searing Totem/Magma Totem once per minute
Ability Interactions
  • Exorcism, Crusader Strike, Hammer of the Righteous, Judgment, Hammer of Wrath -> Holy Power
Ability Interactions
  • Searing Totem -> Searing Flames -> Lava Lash
  • Stormstrike -> +Crit for Lightning Bolt, Chain Lightning, Earth Shock
  • Unleash Elements -> +30% Fire Damage -> Flame Shock, Fire Nova
  • Lava Lash -> Flame Shock
  • Stormstrike, Lava Lash -> Maelstrom Weapon
  • Flame Shock -> Fire Nova

So looking at the two, they play quite similarly, with the exception of utility, where a lot of the flavor lives. Paladin Hands versus Shaman Totems. How the different abilities interact is also a major difference. For Retribution, it largely doesn't matter what order you use your abilities in, because they don't interact with each other. You just pick whichever one does the most damage that's not on cooldown and away you go. Enhancement, however, has an amazing amount of synergy between all of their abilities. This does make the Priority System for Enhancement a bit more rigid, however. Use the abilities in the wrong order, and you'll hurt your DPS pretty significantly, whereas Ret doesn't really care too much.

Now, there are subtle differences between Holy Power and Maelstrom Weapon. For example, Maelstrom Weapon is technically random, so if you get a particularly bad streak of procs, you may be stuck waiting for your Lightning Bolt (or heal), whereas Holy Power is like clockwork. Holy Power also allows you to perform finishers nearly back-to-back, with only a single GCD in between, whereas Maelstrom Weapon is technically not needed for Enhancement’s finishers. It just makes them cost no mana and cast instantly, and even a partial stack helps that out.

In the end, though, they feel pretty similar when you’re in the thick of things, but overall it just feels like Retribution is a poor man's Enhancement. The skill threshold to get the most out of Ret seems to be way lower than Enhancement's (which may be why I like Enhancement so much more).

If I knew more about Rogues, or Feral Druids, I bet I’d be able to see a similar comparison. But it does feel like these Priority Systems with Branching are the natural evolution of MMO rotations, and we are seeing convergent design in action here.

Blizzard has been talking about paring down the number of buttons on people’s action bars, and I’ll be interested to see how they manage this without destroying rotations in such a way that we’re back to the “lolret” design. Removing too many buttons means you now have a “First Come First Serve” rotation, and can just make a macro with all your abilities, and removing branches also has a similar effect, though I suppose one could make the argument that branches have the greater effect here, but not enough buttons means you have big gaps in your rotation, and that can often feel “clunky” in the Ghostcrawler sense, because not hitting buttons for 5 seconds is really, really not fun, though having the occasional 1.5 second gap allows you to throw in utility or off-healing.