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DarthCycle

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  1. The balance between realism, simplicity and fun is hard to achieve. When you model too few elements, it's often too simple hence not very fun. When you model too many elements, it gets complicated (the opposite of simple) and is also not always fun. It's a tough compromise. The fog of war is designed into a binary model: I see you or I don't. It's not elegant but it's simple. It works in the sense that it adds some tactical challenges hence also increase the fun factor. But there is a limit to the increase of the fun factor when you incorporate complexity in the gameplay. It's a downward curve: starts high, but drops low really fast. There might be a correlation between age, short spawn attention, concentration of caffeine and sugar in bloodstream, sex drive and the complexity in games. But I haven't figured out the formula yet ;D
  2. Just to add my 2 cents, To argue that fog of war shouldn't be in the game because of the timeline and technology available, I would offer this simple question/answer: if computers and sensors are so powerfull, why are weapons platform manned by personnel on capital ships and why are fighters manned by pilots? Isn't there available technology to do this? At least, you could manned all this by droids? From a gameplay perspective, fog of war adds an tactical element to the game.
  3. Vasuba, You're absolutely right. A massive fleet of bomber is powerfull. However, extremelly vulnerable too. A balanced fleet with good anti-fighter elements will eat your bomber fleet very easily. This brings the single element of what makes a good game: it's all about interesting choices. You, as the player, have the choice of making a specialized fleet or a balanced fleet? It's a big gamble, it can pay off but it can also end in utter failure and make you lose the war.
  4. Noian, your scrolling text is .... hum, let's try to be diplomatic here .... annoying?
  5. Beowulf, Actually, if you want a game like Homeworld but in the star wars universe, go get the sw mod for it. Homeworld is a complex 3D space RTS. Personnaly, too complex for me. I prefer the simplicity offered by SWEAW so far. Simple but with a few elements to offer tactical opportunity and flexibility. I like the design they used for fighters and capital ships. Fighter are faster, fragile but still carry some punch (especially the bombers). Capital ships are big, slow and powerfull.
  6. About the demo, First of all, I'm not a huge fan of RTS. I played a few along the years but I'm not a hardcore RTS player. Two notable games I played: Total annihilation and Warhammer 40k: dawn of war. Those game rocks IMO, and they had a lot of character. The game universe are rich and compelling. By the way, I wasn't a big fan of games like C&C, Empire Earth or AoE. I'm a huge fan of the star wars universe, and I feel it was properly integrated into the game/demo, based on what I've seen. Space battles in the demo were cool. They offer a much simplier system than the one in Homeworld, which is definitively a plus, and it's so satisfying to finally have a game were you can control the coolest spaceship of all: the imperial star destroyers (even if in the demo, you can only control a smaller variant of it). Love it. I played SW Rebellion countless hours. The game was simple and effective. However, the tactical space battle were so-so. Still, it was nice and is still on my HD after all these years. So from a space battle perspective, the demo deliver a great game experience. However, the ground battle leave a lot to be desired IMO. In short, I didn't like them at all. The feel for the graphics and the environment brought me back memories of C&C and their countless clones. That wasn't a good thing for me. The system where you cannot build new units during a battle is interesting, but it only reinforce a simple fact: the side with the biggest army will win if played smartly. Most human player will be able to achieve that: playing smartly. However, I wonder how aggresive the AI will be and how effective it will be at playing offensively: attacking your planets. Like most games, it will achieve this by doing a simple thing: cheating. The AI will probably know what planets are poorly defended and it will conduct invasion against them, leaving you, the human player, very frustrated. I could be wrong of course, but I doubt it. What I also fear with this system is the sheer repetitiveness of it through a game. In the galactic conquest mode, how many planets will I have to invade? With the same units over and over. And fighting against similar foes over and over. Repeating a similar land battle over 30 times in a game is not what I have in mind. Space battle offer more tactical flexibility. They offer the classical rock-paper-scissor unit design approach but with a twist: you have capital ship and fighters. And not to repeat myself, but controlling big capital ship is just cool. Controlling a squad of tank units or rocket infantry is not. To me at least. The demo doesn't give us a clear indication about the gameplay difference for the 2 factions. They mention it a few times, but I would prefered to experience it more. They do show us one of them: the rebel can steal money from empire controlled planet using smuggler/heroes. The empire can defend against this using bounty hunter. Wow! I'm soooo impressed (being cynical here). I just hope there's more of this and not just 1 or 2 features like this. If you ask me, if there's one feature they could implement/add/modify that would make me buy this game is this: allow me to skip tactical battle on planet. I press a button and I get the result. This way, I could focus on space battle only, which I liked a lot in the demo, and controlling my faction through the galactic view giving me a strategic experience. Conclusion: I'm not sure yet. Will wait and see before buying the game.
  7. Depends, if you mix that stuff with vodka, kaboum in your head and bye-bye productivity !!!
  8. you from Quebec? How do you know about Poutine?
  9. I agree. Numerical superiority provides strategic flexibility. Definitively more my style too. Where did you see that??? This is completly ahistorical, based on the SW universe
  10. Good luck with your interviews! Another good fellow that crosses the path to the other side of the gaming world.
  11. Actually, it would be interesting to see the correlation between the avatar you use and the side you will play first. Everybody with an empire avatar (vader, emperor, SSD, etc...) seems to be playing Empire first. Same goes for rebels.
  12. ??? Sorry to pull you back on earth in the real world and tell you this, but all game company are in this business for one thing: money. Sure, they might be fans and gamers too, but money is still the number one priority. And there's nothing wrong with that. The reason the gaming industry has exploded in the last 10 years is because everybody seemed to realize there was money to be made. Never before has there been so many games developped on so many different platforms. You can thank money for that. And us gamers, benefit tremendously from this. There's a lot of quality games available in so many different genre (RTS,FPS,Sim,MMORPG,Sports,wargame,etc...). I can't even try all of them due to the sheer number available.
  13. Imperial all the way!!! Why? Because evil is fun (in games). We will crush the rebellion in one mighty stroke!!! Hehe.
  14. An interesting topic. For us gamers, it's so easy to build a wish list of all the things we would like to see in a game. We just have to think about it a little, formulate it and voila, our job is done. For the developpers, they have to make it happend. They have to go from brainstorm, design, concept, model, implement, debug, balance and ultimately release. So much more work. And each step takes time. Time cost money. Remember, the game is an investment in time and money, and in the end (at release time) the game has to sell. If not, the project is a failure. For the gamers because the game s*cks. For the developpers because they spend 2-3 years of their career time on a game that will be remembered as a failure (not good for their resume). For the producers, because they invested money and got nothing in return (or less than they had invested in the project). I highly recommend reading the excellent feature on iterative development techniques at gamasutra http://www.gamasutra.com/features/20050720/gold_01.shtml They basically define the 3 kind of features a game has: core, required and desired. Each feature has to go through a QA (quality assurance) cycle of null, base, nominal and optimal. It's a nice read and makes you appreciate the hard work making a game really is.
  15. That's an unusual question to say the least. For my part, it all depends on the result. If they make a great game, I'll keep track on the other games they make. If it's a big let down, I'll move on. Remember Quicksilver? Of course not, they're the one who destroyed the MoO franchise. We will never see another MoO game after the disastrous result MoO3 was. That name is burned forever. My 2 cents

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