[MUD-Dev] "short" Introductory Message (fwd)

clawrenc at cup.hp.com clawrenc at cup.hp.com
Wed Jun 25 12:39:16 CEST 1997


In <Pine.GSO.3.96.970620085310.13247A-100000 at dryslwyn>, on 06/20/97 
   at 07:16 PM, Martin Keegan <martin at cam.sri.com> said:

>On Thu, 19 Jun 1997 clawrenc at cup.hp.com wrote:

Re: Island

>> What are the hardware requirements?

>Well, it runs on various Unixes (Solaris, NeXT, Linux), and takes up
>about 8Mb of memory. Annoyingly, the atrociously written OxMUD code
>requires a select() call with an insanely low timeout, which can keep
>the main processes above 'top' on top without raising the load above
>.05 . If it ever comes back, the OxMUD stuff would be ripped out, as
>it's more trouble than it's worth.

I will probably be able to offer a site within the year.

Re: Quests

>> >> And were for the uninitiated, utterly superb.  <I bow in their general
>> >> direction>
>> 
>> >They were not too much fun if you were doing them for the second
>> >time.
>> 
>> This is a fault of the quest system in general as implemented in MUDs.
>> not of Island.  It is *rare* to find a quest on any MUD which isn't

>Well, the game didn't attempt to make any allowances for people who
>completed all the quests - once you were finished, that was it. You
>normally sat around as some flavour of wizard until the next quest
>upgrade. These only happened every 18 months or so, and the game
>simply wasn't designed to deal with people who played that long.

Outside of the faults of repeatability, this is a fault of goal
oriented games where there is a single primary goal.  Shades, MUD1/2,
MIST, and all their descendants more or less suffer the same problems. 
Once you've reached the top there's little to nothing left but the
attack the system itself.

cf the endless literary field detailing the bored immortal.

cf for creationists, "Why else are there so many species of beetles?"

I'd propose a system where the primary goal is not accomplishable.  It
is factually and logically impossible.  Then have the game being
approximating the goal in various flavours.  cf Legend and its
balancing of the skill tree.

>> trite once you've done it the first time.  Cf my recent description of
>> the Fortress Fract, King Mandel, and Princess Julia for a "quest"

>The various scenarios mentioned here ought to be written up as some
>sort of reference and posted every month, so that newcomers will know
>what is being discussed.

Not a bad idea in general.  But instead of making it a library of
scenarios, how about a summary of the outcomes of threads, a detailing
of the tools and scenarios used in those threads, and an outline of
the list members and their activities (ie condensed intro)?

Perhaps I should start up a meta list for this?

>I think it was Mtf who first said that Island was a great example of
>things NOT to do.

Its so much more intrigueing to do a game which exemplifies the things
*not* to do, yet which remains playable.

>> This is one of the reasons I am not a fan of democracies.  Equally I
>> don't accept the "Most people..." assertion, (this is straying into
>> philosophical areas not not meant for this list much tho I delight in
>> them).  I profess the view that discrimination and exacting selection
...
>I'm afraid that this issue has design implications. Most people don't
>like to be challenged (see Marian's similar thoughts). Once you have
>enough muds competing for players, muds can gain a competitive
>advantage by not doing things players don't like - by not challenging
>the players. 

Thus we have standards, and things that break standards.  QWERTY vs
Maltron vs Dvorak etc.  I think we are early enough in the growth
cycle that its still breakable.

>Any doubters should read Alberto Barsella's frothings in
>r.g.mad (Combat system design thread).

Alberto is a member now BTW.  (I think)  

>> have now been falsely equated with intellectual snobbery and a generic
>> denigration of all those not practicing it.  Its a cheap half-arsed
>> equation which doesn't stand up, but the media like it, and it sells
>> newspapers almost as well as the Sun's page 3, so it must be good.

>Hear, hear!

Sorry, the Sun hasn't quite perfected the Smello-tit feature.

>> >This system seems like a thought experiment but it's actually a
>> >reaction against what I call "higher order imbalance" in many muds.
>> >In some muds, powerful players can promote lowly players to high
>> >ranks, as much as they want - they have limitless power. In a mud
>> >with levels, a level 100 player could promote a level 10 player to
>> >level 80 - as many times as she wanted. Really, she ought to use up
>> >sufficient power to *drop* 70 levels.

>[mayor snipped]
> 
>>   Perhaps investment economics would make a decent model?

>There's a branch of economics called 'experimental economics',
>related to game theory, which is involved in actually doing
>simulations to verify axioms and assumptions that economists had
>previously worked out on paper. These people are vaguely interested
>in muds, and probably know just how to calculate a sane "cost" for
>creating objects.

<ponder>

Gotta go talk to some o' them people.

<<remembers: me'n'economists mix about as well as rabid cats and
dogs>>

>> How about, "The more capable the object, the more the creator is
>> personally at risk for it?"  Then a "good" creator can create as much
>> as he wants, but a "bad" creator gets negative investment feedback and
>> zeros out.

>Well, CamMUD is going to have a system where the arches penalise bad
>spelling, grammar, punctuation and general Badness.

A voice is heard thundering down from above:

  "Thou are Bad!  Learn to spell!"

God has spoken.

>> >> Descriptions, definitions, or just names?
>> 
>> >Such strong typing, Chris! :) 
>> 
>> I know.  I wear out keyboards at an alarming rate.  <hang head>

>This is from some very bad joke about strongly typed languages with
>textbook examples in bold typefaces.

Yes, and literally.  I wear out keyboards at an alarming rate.  I'm
not quite as bad at Matt Giwer who very literally wears *holes* in his
keyboards (he has two holes in his space bar where his thumbs hit) --
I just wear the whole thing out.

--
J C Lawrence                           Internet: claw at null.net
(Contractor)                           Internet: coder at ibm.net
---------------(*)               Internet: clawrenc at cup.hp.com
...Honorary Member Clan McFUD -- Teamer's Avenging Monolith...




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