Fallout 2 without dying?
- American Tourister
- Vault Dweller
- Posts: 114
- Joined: Sun Aug 31, 2003 7:02 pm
- Location: Interstate 40
That's what I was thinking. Maybe if you entered the Enclave tanked to the gills on Psycho, Buffout and Mentats you could survive the turrets? Or possibly sneak by them?Stainless wrote:Both F1 and F2 MM characters. Never finished Fo2 with him though, as those defensive chaingun turrents tear holes in your leather jacket mk2.
"...Curtis Lowe was the finest picker to ever play the blues"
- Franz Schubert
- 250 Posts til Somewhere
- Posts: 2714
- Joined: Sun May 25, 2003 9:59 am
- Location: Vienna
Max would most definitely sneak if he had to.
Stealth in F1/2 is your friend, if only because it allows for the culling of idiots, irritants and other evil, evil things. All this without (generally) alerting the other denizens of an area to your noble intentions. Though my opinion is possibly solely influenced by being able to run up to someone, remove their eye with one's hand(s), and end combat quietly (i.e not causing everyone else to want to tap dance 'pon your corpse) all in one turn.
Stealth in F1/2 is your friend, if only because it allows for the culling of idiots, irritants and other evil, evil things. All this without (generally) alerting the other denizens of an area to your noble intentions. Though my opinion is possibly solely influenced by being able to run up to someone, remove their eye with one's hand(s), and end combat quietly (i.e not causing everyone else to want to tap dance 'pon your corpse) all in one turn.
- Franz Schubert
- 250 Posts til Somewhere
- Posts: 2714
- Joined: Sun May 25, 2003 9:59 am
- Location: Vienna
The problem is that you don't get xp from stealth, so that leaves you basically no choice when deciding whether or not to blow everybody away stylishly.
suppose you're thinking about a plate of shrimp. suddenly somebody will say like 'plate' or 'shrimp' or 'plate of shrimp', out of the blue, no explanation.
No. You should get the same amount of XP as you would from killing them, as you technically "defeated" them by getting by their threat. The same would be true for trapping your enemies, fooling them, disguising yourself past them, etc.
suppose you're thinking about a plate of shrimp. suddenly somebody will say like 'plate' or 'shrimp' or 'plate of shrimp', out of the blue, no explanation.
Funnily enough, awarding experience for evading enemies was something Lionheart did right (though only 50% of what you would achieve from their deaths, IIRC) ! Yes, I'm shocked too. Other than that, I agree with atoga. Regarding rewards, evasion should at the very least be comparable to killing or talking one's way past those same threats.
Of course, evasion should be made difficult for the player. Rather than clicking "sneak", holding to the nearest wall, and waiting for your character to get to their destination, you should have to carefully consider cover, making distractions, enemy line of sight and patrol routes, etc. (Think Hitman).
suppose you're thinking about a plate of shrimp. suddenly somebody will say like 'plate' or 'shrimp' or 'plate of shrimp', out of the blue, no explanation.
- Franz Schubert
- 250 Posts til Somewhere
- Posts: 2714
- Joined: Sun May 25, 2003 9:59 am
- Location: Vienna
While I agree that making success dependant upon the player's abilities rather than the character's in an RPG is a faux pas - I do believe the elements atoga mentioned which conveniently fall under 'intelligence', could be easily implemented into an RPG stealth system in a non-jarring manner. Even if simply as a bonus to remaining undetected, though not as a necessity (in some instances at least.)
Combat is a minigame where the player's abilities matter as well, why shouldn't stealth have the same depth? I'm only really suggesting a few strategy-related things - taking count of cover, making noise, guard position, lighting (though I think having to time stealth so that it's in tune with guard routes is a bad idea, because it's often quite frustrating as well as harder to implement).
Each stealth situation should make for an interesting sort of 'puzzle' however.
Each stealth situation should make for an interesting sort of 'puzzle' however.
suppose you're thinking about a plate of shrimp. suddenly somebody will say like 'plate' or 'shrimp' or 'plate of shrimp', out of the blue, no explanation.
Yes. But generally it's pretty boring, like I described above - just going behind walls and stuff and staying as far away from NPCs as possible. The terrain you have to sneak around in is generally pretty uninteresting. What I'm suggesting would merely spice it up.
suppose you're thinking about a plate of shrimp. suddenly somebody will say like 'plate' or 'shrimp' or 'plate of shrimp', out of the blue, no explanation.