Difference between revisions of "Valley 2:Beta Release Notes"
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* The "Repeat Offender" perks at level 5, 8, and 16 have been replaced with "Muse" perks. | * The "Repeat Offender" perks at level 5, 8, and 16 have been replaced with "Muse" perks. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Added a new "Concentration" system. | ||
+ | ** When you are at full health, and an enemy dies in the chunk you are in (you don't have to be the one to kill it in multiplayer), then a concentration bonus meter appears. | ||
+ | ** The meter tells you how many more monsters have to be killed before you can go up to the next concentration tier. | ||
+ | *** On the lowest two difficulties this is only 1 per, on the middle three difficulties it is 2 per, on master hero it is 3 per, and on the chosen one it is 4 per. | ||
+ | *** Killing bosses (or causing them to retreat) counts as three enemies rather than 1. | ||
+ | ** Normally you can only get up to three tiers of concentration. However, the new Muse perks each add 1 to your max concentration, for a total maximum of 6 if you go all-out. | ||
+ | ** For each tier of concentration you have achieved, you get an extra 25% damage on all your attacks, and an extra 10% to the caliber of all your spells. | ||
+ | ** Every time you take any damage, you lose one tier of concentration, however. If you die, you lose all your tiers. | ||
+ | *** Note that it is quite likely to be at less than full health with still having some concentration remaining, if you had more than one tier of concentration and then took a hit. | ||
+ | **** In those cases you can't start building back up your concentration at all until you get back to full health, but you won't suffer any futher loss of your concentration tiers that you already have until you take another hit. | ||
+ | ** The idea behind this whole mechanic is to create an interesting subsystem for advanced players to reward not taking hits from enemies. | ||
+ | ** Thanks to Professor Paul1290, madcow, and Pepisolo for suggesting. | ||
== Beta .721 == | == Beta .721 == |
Revision as of 16:31, 29 January 2013
Contents
- 1 Beta .722
- 2 Beta .721
- 3 Beta .720 Treasure Swap
- 4 Beta .719 To One Who'll Stand And Fight
- 5 Beta .718 Sightlines
- 6 Beta .717 Strategory 64
- 7 Beta .716 Control Freak
- 8 Beta .715 Gimme Shelter... From Monsters
- 9 Beta .714 Monstercopia
- 10 Beta .713 Scatter And Gather
- 11 Beta .712 Chipping Away Everything That Doesn't Look Like An Elephant
- 12 Beta .711 Trimming The Fat
- 13 Beta .710 More Monsters At Last
- 14 Beta .709 Water And Wind
- 15 Beta .708 Aggressive Angles
- 16 Beta .707
- 17 Beta .706
- 18 Previous Release Notes
Beta .722
(Not yet released; we're still working on it!)
- The non-placeholder graphics for Demonaica have now been added to the game.
- Fixed numerous more issues with wall crawlers not really handling certain things right, getting stuck, etc.
- Found a slice that didn't have enough room at the top for the player to continue on. Fixed
- Thanks to nas1m for the report.
- Fixed a terrain generation issue that could put two angled grounds (top and bottom) on top of one another creating a point. This was problematic for physics of the player and enemies in general, for monsters not walking off of edges, and for wall crawlers being able to crawl over the edge.
- Completely redid the overlord keep area ground graphics, to make them a lot more attractive.
- The design for new world maps has been updated so that there are another 50 tiles around the periphery of the 680ish tiles that were already in place. All of these 50 tiles are construction-site type tiles, including abandoned town city blocks, desert towns, ocean shallows buildings, and ice age buildings. You can find caches of them out at the farthest reaches of any world, and these thus provide some extra options in the late game (though these are never on the main path to anything else, so these are really just about capturing building sites as-needed).
- The actual art for the henchman vorgga is now in place.
- Several buildings have had their art updated.
- The thawing plains backdrops have been updated.
- In what is truly a miracle for the ages, wall crawlers finally seem to be fully correct in their behaviors in all the possible scenarios we could throw at them. This includes walking on angled ceilings properly and so forth.
- There are some cases where they will hop from one close surface to another, but this looks fine and only happens when there is an angled overhang within one tile of a vertical climb. Beyond this one thing, which we're declaring to be acceptable behavior, we're not aware of anything else.
- This has been an extremely arduous process, involving around 50ish hours of work between Keith and myself (at minimum) get these stupid wall crawlers crawling correctly. To say that it is a relief to have these done -- knock on huge amounts of wood -- is quite an understatement.
- Fixed a bug from recent versions where your health would still show 0.1 even after you had died.
- Thanks to Pepisolo and zespri for reporting.
- Moved the size and location of the "invincible" and "perished" text on the HUD to make room for some new additions.
- A revised menu panel background has been added to the game.
Goodbye Combos, Hello Concentration
- The old "simple combo system" that almost nobody really knew was in place (and seemed like a bug rather than a feature to those who noticed it in practice) has been removed.
- To compensate for the old combo system being removed, the attack power of all the player spells has been reduced to 75% of their former values.
- If an enemy took 1 hit to kill with a specific spell in the prior system, this is actually a 25% nerf.
- If an enemy took 2 hits to kill with a specific spell in the prior system, this does not change the balance at all.
- If an enemy took 3 or more hits to kill with a specific spell in the prior system, this is a buff that increases the more shots it took, gradually approaching a 50% buff (but never quite reaching it, just getting asymptotically smaller).
- Updated the help text to no longer reference mercenaries or the "simple combo system."
- The "Repeat Offender" perks at level 5, 8, and 16 have been replaced with "Muse" perks.
- Added a new "Concentration" system.
- When you are at full health, and an enemy dies in the chunk you are in (you don't have to be the one to kill it in multiplayer), then a concentration bonus meter appears.
- The meter tells you how many more monsters have to be killed before you can go up to the next concentration tier.
- On the lowest two difficulties this is only 1 per, on the middle three difficulties it is 2 per, on master hero it is 3 per, and on the chosen one it is 4 per.
- Killing bosses (or causing them to retreat) counts as three enemies rather than 1.
- Normally you can only get up to three tiers of concentration. However, the new Muse perks each add 1 to your max concentration, for a total maximum of 6 if you go all-out.
- For each tier of concentration you have achieved, you get an extra 25% damage on all your attacks, and an extra 10% to the caliber of all your spells.
- Every time you take any damage, you lose one tier of concentration, however. If you die, you lose all your tiers.
- Note that it is quite likely to be at less than full health with still having some concentration remaining, if you had more than one tier of concentration and then took a hit.
- In those cases you can't start building back up your concentration at all until you get back to full health, but you won't suffer any futher loss of your concentration tiers that you already have until you take another hit.
- Note that it is quite likely to be at less than full health with still having some concentration remaining, if you had more than one tier of concentration and then took a hit.
- The idea behind this whole mechanic is to create an interesting subsystem for advanced players to reward not taking hits from enemies.
- Thanks to Professor Paul1290, madcow, and Pepisolo for suggesting.
Beta .721
(Released January 25th, 2013)
- Fixed a bug in the prior version where crates could not be destroyed.
- Thanks to timebomb, Jab2565, madcow, and Pepisolo for reporting.
Beta .720 Treasure Swap
(Released January 25th, 2013)
- 29 slices added.
- Thanks again to c4sc4, zebramatt and Coppermants for these.
- Previously, selecting the water dash feat was disabling double or triple jump. Fixed.
- Thanks to ShaggyMoose for reporting.
- Fixed a couple bugged slices.
- Thanks to pepisolo and madcow for reporting these.
- The missile post energy spray now passes through walls and grounds, so it works just as well in cramped quarters as it does out in the open.
- The abandoned town tiles with homes or city blocks could be just ridiculous in terms of their length with how many buildings they had. This has been toned down substantially.
- Fixed an issue with monsters still attacking crates they were standing on when they should not have been.
- Fixed an issue where sometimes the boss would start on the wrong end of a boss room when you entered it.
- Thanks to madcow, Aquohn, and Misery for reporting.
- Made it so that monsters won't melee crates if they aren't chasing someone or firing at someone.
- Previously, when wall crawlers reached the edge of a ground level chunk, they would just hang out in the edge there and shoot at you rather than turning around like other monsters. Fixed.
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- Fixed an issue with wall crocs being unable to fit through spaces thanks to their collision box being erroneously large.
- Thanks to madcow for reporting.
- Vastly increased the acceleration for all wall crawlers -- having that be low for some of them caused all sorts of issues with them floating in the air a little bit or a lot, etc.
- The top speed of the wall croc has thus been reduced from 400 to 150 since its acceleration is so much higher now, and the wall probe has gone down from 150 to 125. All the other wall crawlers remain at 100 top speed.
- Fixed a bug from the last couple of versions where wall crawlers were unable to properly climb over crates.
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- Fixed a number of issues with wall crawlers properly navigating very narrow spaces; we seem to have gotten them all now, but let us know if you still see something (a save file would be ideal).
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- The gradient fonts have been toned down substantially, to allow for easier reading. We had several reports of headaches with the font the way it previously was.
- Fixed a bug from the prior release that was causing players to fall jerkily through top-solid platforms when they were pressing down.
- Fixed an issue where often wall crawlers don't load back from disk well and then seem to be stuck.
- Redid some of the internals of the animation frame lookups; hopefully this didn't introduce any glitches, but if you see characters or monsters looking funny, let us know!
- Integrated the revised art for Marty and Tiyi, previously the two worst-looking characters.
Farewell Mercenaries, Hello More Treasure Chests
- Mercenaries and mercenary coins have been removed from the game, as have mercenary hotlines.
- You may still find a few coins in old chunks in existing worlds, but you won't be able to pick them up. You may also find some mercenary hotlines in old chunks of existing worlds, but again those will be non-interactive now.
- In new chunks in new and existing worlds, where you would previously find a mercenary coin you will now find a treasure chest with equipment instead. Where you would find a mercenary hotline, you'll now find either a treasure chest room or the building will just be smaller than it previously was (yay on either count).
Broadly speaking, the reasons for this change are mainly that: a) Mercenaries were kind of extraneous to the game; b) They weren't all that fun; c) They were rather glitchy in their current incarnation. Working on improving them would just be diverting attention from other parts of the game that weren't extraneous and un-fun. Rather than doing that, we opted simply to cut them; this also solves another problem of equipment being far too rare to really work as intended.
There are presently still some achievements that reference mercenary coin collection, but we'll have to rework those sometime prior to 1.0 (we have some larger priorities in the meantime, but it will get done).
- The special "treasure chest rooms" that you occasionally encounter now have a plethora of treasure chests densely packed together: five within easy space of one another. Each player can only take one at a time of course, but this lets them choose what they want out of a random pool.
Farewell Arbitrary Blockades, Hello Predictable Ones
- The arbitrary blockages that sometimes required you to get a specific feat, but showed up rarely, have been removed. Additionally, the arbitrary blockages relating to a feat that would show up after you had the feat have been removed.
- That said, non-arbitrary always-there blockages have been retained or added as follows:
- Water Dash: Ocean Shallows Buildings tiles, Swamp Pagodas, Swamp Hovels
- Double Jump: Ice Age Forests and Thawing Forests
- Triple Jump: Stratospheric Citadels and later parts of the Overlord Keep.
- Miniaturize is not required in order to traverse any main-path sections, however it is useful for taking many shortcuts or easier routes through main sections, and for getting to various side bits of treasure.
- Thanks to Dash275 for inspiring these changes.
- That said, non-arbitrary always-there blockages have been retained or added as follows:
- The various world map tiles that have specific blockades in them now include that information in their descriptions.
- The miniaturize feat now includes a description of what it is useful for in the feats window.
Beta .719 To One Who'll Stand And Fight
(Released January 24th, 2013)
- 63 more slices added.
- These are from Coppermantis, zebramatt, and c4sc4.
- Fixed three bugged slices.
- Thanks to kaydiv and MouldyK for reporting two of these.
- Wall crawlers are now all immune to lava, so when they crawl into lava they no longer die.
- Non-boss monsters are no longer blocked by the invisible barriers that keep the bosses into their prescribed parts of their boss rooms.
- Fixed a bug with some wall crawlers (every other wall crawler, to be exact) not being able to climb up vertical walls properly from on top of a slope in particular.
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- Previously if you happened to get really low on health -- less than 0.1 hearts remaining -- but not quite all the way down to zero, it would show 0 hearts on the interface despite your not being dead. Now it will show 0.1 in those cases to avoid confusion.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for reporting.
- The powerslide feat was removed in a prior version, but older worlds still have it and it could lead to bugs if it was on. This has now been marked as deprecated, and changed so that it does nothing now.
- Thanks to ShaggyMoose for reporting.
- There is no longer a health bar shown for the overlord when you can't actually hurt him (such as at the start of the game).
- A signpost in the first tutorial room was mistakenly reading "You cannot fire at an angle, so you'll want to take care to position yourself well when fighting enemies to make up for this."
- This was out of date, and has been replaced by the following:
- To aim at an angle, simply hold both directions and then fire a spell. Doing this while on the ground will lock you into place until you let go of one of the buttons for easier barrages.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for reporting the confusion this was causing new players.
- Fixed a bug where the music was being interrupted by the onset of windstorms when you get near to a windstorm generator.
- Thanks to ShaggyMoose for reporting.
- When you are outside during the day, the lighting model now pretty much cuts off so that you're not getting over-saturation of colors where you can't see.
- The distance you have to go down away from sunlight before the darkness kicks in has been increased, so that you aren't tripping into the lighting model in every shallow puddle you go into.
- Slug fiends are too large to comfortably be able to ascend slopes, and so are now barred from doing so.
- Note that in old chunks you might see some of them stuck on slopes temporarily.
- The starting mage classes available to you when you first start the game was supposed to be a random selection, but it turned out that forgician was always in there no matter what, while the rest were truly random. Now they are all properly random.
- Completely reworked the internal layering of secondary objects (not players and monsters and spells, but basically everything else) so that it's a lot better organized for the specific setup of this game (as opposed to Valley 1). As part of this, the issue with signposts going up into trees should be fixed, as should a number of similar issues that might have cropped up.
- Thanks to AmatsuDF, LaughingThesaurus, MouldyK, LayZboy, and zeussalmighty for reporting the issue with the signs.
Soundtrack Complete: New Vocal Title Track
- The final music track of the game is now complete and integrated, and it's an incredible one: a new title track with full vocals sung by our composer Pablo Vega and his wife Hunter Vega.
Commentary from Pablo Vega, the composer:
Here's the long awaited new theme. I'm SO excited about this track, and it took a long long time to create it. There is a full choir of voices that sing in it. Luckily, I got the vocal parts back after having not heard them for 2 weeks, added some more vocals lines of my own, and BAM, we have a kick-butt warrior man chorus. There are 12 different voices in the man chorus (basically me dubbed over again and again).
The middle section has actual lyrics. I'm singing the melody faintly (and off towards the left speaker), but what it really needed was a female voice for the solo. So, my wife Hunter is singing the main melody. The thought I had for this was to have an almost haunting voice that is split in two with a higher and lower end. Sort of like when Galadriel freaks out over the ring and starts speaking in multiple voices -- that kind of feel. I wanted the song to have a lot of hope, and it worked out well. The main idea is that the world was once beautiful, then darkness crept over, and now there's someone who will fight for the world to be how it used to be. Here are the lyrics to the verses in the center of the song:
- Long ago, when skies would brightly show
- The stars that glow above a blue horizon
- I'd stand below them, and though the wind would blow,
- I'd wave hello, and always fix my eyes on
- Those lights that grow, with moon up high and sun down low,
- No rush to go, the dawn would always rise on.
- But darkness grows, and light now flickers low,
- And shadows roam, and hope has passed
- To one who'll stand and fight.
That last line "stand and fight" is then the main chorus, and the melody lays on top of the repeat of the warrior man chorus. I'm so excited to have worked with multiple live tracks, I think it sounds pretty awesome!
Balance Changes
- Embershot was buffed a bit too much last time, so it's been dropped a bit.
- The mines and bombs that the player have now have vastly larger explosion radii, thus making them a lot more useful.
- Potionshot has been buffed. Both it's damage and caliber have been increased.
- Balance shifts for higher difficulties:
- The way that monster shot speeds increase on difficulties higher than the default has been nerfed somewhat.
- The way that monster cooltown times decrease on difficulties higher than the default has been nerfed enormously.
- Hopefully these help to make the higher difficulties actually feasible if you have the appropriate skill, but do let us know how things are feeling! Also, if the lowest difficulties don't decrease things enough for you if you prefer to play there, do let us know that also!
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- WaterPunch has had it's caliber increased by 60. It's supposed to be more defensive than offensive, and now it's caliber reflects that.
- It's power was boosted a bit too.
- Entropy Burst has has it's caliber dropped some, due to it being the same as Entropy Mass.
- To compensate, it's damage has been increased slightly.
- Entropic Touch now has a slightly larger caliber.
- Explosive Crescent's caliber is now a tad lower.
- The following ammo-based spells now have a caliber that is 1000 higher than it previously was (letting these block almost everything:
- Flameout
- All three reckless spells.
- Water Ring
- All five magnetic spells.
- Energy Spray
- Blinding Flash, Splashback, Updaft, Upthrust, and Thicket Flash.
- All six explosion spells.
- All five cross spells.
- Ocean spray.
- All five debris field spells.
- Meteor Storm
- This makes the ammo spells far more useful for blocking, now.
- Urban Tackle Droids now hit for a lot less.
Completely Redesigned Henchman Boss Fights
- The henchman boss rooms are now completely redesigned. They contain other monsters as well as traps and so forth, as well as long stretches where there is not the henchman you are actually fighting.
- They are now more of a gauntlet, in some respects, making them more interesting and varied; in other words, the boss fight doesn't JUST consist of you and the henchman anymore.
- The henchman sections themselves come in two sections on Featherweight, three sections on Apprentice through Skilled, four on Hero and Master Hero, and five on The Chosen One.
- Each section where there is a henchman fight in a boss room is PART of the fight. You fight the henchman for a brief bit, then after you've wounded them enough they retreat to the next section and have completely different behaviors and spells there. Once you defeat them at each section, you've won the boss fight and they go away like they always have.
- The game DOES remember what section the henchman was last at if you die or leave and later come back to the room, so you don't have to complete the entire fight all in one go in quite the same manner that you used to.
- The henchmen and the overlord were still getting randomized stats for extra health and attack power, which was really throwing their balance out the window. This was basically old logic from Valley 1 that we had pared down, but then didn't reevaluate properly until now. It's been removed.
- Boss fight frequency reductions:
- Previously, there was a 20% chance of meeting a boss somewhere in a cavern. That chance has now been reduced to 5%.
- Previously, if there was a mercenary hotline or similar in a building (of which there is generally a 3% chance), then there would be a henchman guarding it 100% of the time. That chance has now been reduced to 20% chance of a henchman.
- In Deep Mausoleums, Salvage Yards, and Grounded Ships, there was previously a 20% chance of a boss. That has been reduced to 3%.
- In Skelebot Watchtowers, there was previously a 20% chance of a boss. That has been reduced to 2%.
- In Collapsed Skyscrapers, Lava Towers, and Thawing Towers, there was previously a 100% chance for a boss. That has been reduced to 5%.
- Skelebot Research Facilities previously had a 100% chance of a boss room, and now they have a 0% chance.
- Note that level up towers, evil outposts, and the overlord keep still have boss fights 100% of the time. But this makes it so that they are far less common and less likely to get tiring. It's more fun if they are rarer and thus more special and interesting, rather than being something that slows you up at every turn. That's actually what we had intended from the start, but we were a little too free with our random percentages!
- Thanks to misery especially for inspiring this change.
- The henchmen now put off more light than before.
- Elder can still fly (and does so all the time), but none of the other henchmen can jump or fly/float at all, now. Lilith no longer moves around at all, but simply stands there -- she's THAT good, thematically, and she gets some other abilities to differentiate herself now.
- Elder and Lilith now have complete knockback immunity.
- Now only Elder emits the fiery exhaust that all of the henchmen previously had. The others will be using different things.
- The range on a lot of the henchman spells have been increased so that they are always at least equal to any spells you have, and thus there should never be a case where you can just sit out of range and snipe them, ever. If you run into any cases like this, do please let us know!
- The henchmen no longer pursue you constantly; rather, they'll move around and attack you as you get near to them, letting you take the initiative a lot of the time. This makes it so that you can't lead them into traps or predictable easy corners, and have to actually go fully into their arena to engage them.
- Elder now has 1.5x as much health as the other henchmen, all of whom appear more frequently and have lower equivalent health than in past versions of the game.
- The art for Lilith is now finalized and looks really awesome; additionally, she now has a smaller form-factor than the other henchmen, making her a bit harder to hit despite the fact that she does not move.
- Lilith now has a dangerous counterattack that she uses whenever you land hits on her, which causes an eruption of leafy attacks in a circle around her.
Strategic Refinements, Round 5
- The overlord now has 5 new overland spells to pick from (at various degrees of overlord spell power, which is mostly based on how many turns have elapsed). Each of these 5 applies a debuff to a cluster of tiles. The 5 debuffs are:
- Snowstorm: Makes region cost 2 moves to enter for resistance members and deals 1 damage to any resistance member in the area of effect at the time of casting or at the end of each turn. Lasts 4 turns.
- Meteor Shower: Deals 2 damage to any resistance member in the area of effect at the time of casting or at the end of each turn. Lasts 4 turns.
- Firestorm: Makes it impossible for a resistance member to work in the tile (can't attack stuff, rescue survivor, build stuff, or work/scavenge) and deals 1 damage to any resistance member in the area of effect at the time of casting or at the end of each turn. Lasts 4 turns.
- Lightning Storm: Makes cover rolls far more difficult and deals 1 damage to any resistance member in the area of effect at the time of casting or at the end of each turn. Lasts 4 turns.
- Glacier: Completely prevents resistance members (other than you) from entering or passing through the tile and deals 1 damage to any resistance member in the area of effect at the time of casting or at the end of each turn. Lasts 2 turns.
- Note that none of the damage from these can cause the wounded state.
- If the overlord has more spell power than necessary to cast a spell, its area of effect increases in proportion to the extra. So late in the game the overlord might cast a relatively small glacier or an enormous snowstorm, etc.
- Fixed a bug where a wounded NPC failing a cover roll would be treated like it had been freshly wounded again (causing morale loss and showing up in the end-turn-report as newly wounded, etc).
- Fixed a bug where the overlord and summoned world map monsters would not try to move around each other and thus waste moves if another enemy piece was directly in the shortest path to their target.
- Working a clinic now has a 100% chance (rather than simply a very high one) to remove the wounded state from a wounded resistance member, if there are any at the time the check is made.
- The overlord and summoned world map monsters no longer leave farms/factories/etc alone until they've been "worked"; once it's purified it's considered fair game.
- Thanks to Misery for bringing to our attention that said recently-added rule led to significant confusion.
- The region details pane (shown when interacting with a region) now:
- If afflicted by an overlord spell, shows the debuff icon, name, and description.
- If there's a resistance member there, includes class and current/max power in that section.
- Thanks to Billick for pointing out that the game hadn't really made that info clear at all.
- The region details pane is now shown on the right side of the screen while you're in the process of giving a resistance member a movement order.
- Thanks to lavacamorada for the suggestion.
- Fixed an obsolete comment in the turn-5 text interjection where it still talked about the overlord's movement rate increasing as more of the world was purified.
- Thanks to MouldyK for the report.
Interface For Changing The Difficulty During Existing Game
- The difficulty level of the game can now be changed mid-game, as with the first game. You can now do this off the world map at any time from the "interact with region" menu.
- As is noted in the instructional text on the change difficulty interface, the game keeps track of the lowest difficulty levels that have been used during any given playthrough; any difficulty-related achievements are granted based on that. So you can't play through on a very low difficulty and then bump it up at the end for cheesing achievements, for instance.
- This is something that a number of players expressed a desire to see, based in particular on the difficulty of finding the perfect difficulty to play on via trial and error -- it's annoying to have to restart your world just because you suspect your current world is too easy or too hard. Now you can adjust as needed and find your ideal difficulty without that sort of hassle.
Beta .718 Sightlines
(Released January 23rd, 2013)
- Fixed several slices that were blocking passage.
- Thanks to zeussalmighty and theqmann for reporting these.
- 12 new slices added.
- Thanks to c4sc4 for these.
- Previously, holding the down button while jumping would cause you to jump lower -- these "low jumps" from the first game were actually a feature, but given the way aiming works now that's no longer a desirable one. Plus, it's plenty possible in this game to do low jumps simply by tapping the jump button less, given the revised physics here compared to the first game. Fixed.
- Thanks to Professor Paul1290, madcow, isil, and Pepisolo for reporting.
- Previously, there was a curious bug where holding the down key while jumping, and then letting go of the jump key and pressing it again before you hit the apex of your jump, could let you jump again and gain a little extra height. Fixed.
- Thanks to khadgar for reporting.
- Fixed an issue where the urban tackle droid could sometimes jump or fall right through the terrain if it hit an angled slope just right.
- This may also have affected some other enemies, but it should be fixed for all of them.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for reporting.
- Fixed an issue where mercenary coins underwater in caves would be showing with the water not filled in properly.
- Tuned the caverns so that their monster density is now about 3/4 of what they previously were, to compensate for the fact that quarters are tight and you're fighting in the dark.
- The fact that monsters don't fall off platforms right and left also helps to even out the difficulty here in the vertical shafts in particular.
- Fixed an issue where you would not always lock into place when you were trying to hold down and to the side while firing on an angled slope.
- Thanks to Smiling Spectre for reporting.
- Cold dispersal and heat dispersal towers no longer have to be surrounded by purified tiles (which could be impossible at worst, and was annoying at best). Now they are purified as soon as you get other tiles purified next to them, like caves and such.
- The big reason for this is that you can't directly purify these regions without dying of cold or heat in order to do it!
- Thanks to theqmann, kaydiv, Dash275, and madcow for reporting.
- Fixed a bug where the names of the henchmen and overlord were not showing properly in dialogue, instead being things like "OverlordDemonaicaGameIntroPassive."
- Fixed an issue where Entropic Touch was throwing sound errors when used.
- Thanks to Aklyon and Pepisolo for reporting.
- Fixed an issue where the rockets, ricochets, and a few other groups of spells were coming out of the character 64px higher than they should have been.
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- Fixed some bad overlapping of the help tooltips that could happen on the escape menu when you are in the starting screen of the game or the armory.
- Thanks to zespri for reporting.
- Finally fixed the way-too-slow falling-in-water-or-lava in freefall rooms bug that we originally thought was fixed in 0.713.
- Thanks to theqmann for the savegame that helped us fix this.
Generalized Improvements Applying To All Enemies
- Fixed a longstanding bug that could sometimes lead to enemies flipping around like crazy in terms of which direction they are facing. Now they won't change facings more frequently than once every 0.4 seconds even if they find themselves trapped and thus are looking frantically for a way to escape that isn't available to them.
- Fixed a bug where monsters were really reluctant to melee certain obstacles, like crates, that were in their way and clearly needed to be attacked.
- Made it so that wall crawlers will never melee crates at all, since they just crawl along them instead.
- Non-boss enemies, and non-"sentient shot" enemies, now must have line of sight on the player in order to start chasing them.
- Additionally, if they don't have line of sight on the player for five seconds, then they'll stop chasing them.
- Line of sight consists of being able to trace a line between the center of the monster and the center of the character without passing through any solid ground/wall tiles. Mobile cover and crates are NOT considered to block line of sight, and enemies will continue to plow through these to get at you.
- Line of sight is also now required for monsters to fire at targets; this actually makes them much more effective, as they hold their fire until they can actually hit you!
- Completely redid the logic for how enemies avoid falling off ledges and into water or lava.
- All of this is now precalculated when the chunk is loaded, rather than being calculated in realtime, and this makes for much easier behavior as they simply treat these as solid barriers now. This was always the intent for how we'd have things work with Valley 2, but it was simply a matter of it using the older Valley 1 logic until now.
- One thing that bears noting is that when you are using knockback on regular walking enemies, you can't knock them off of ledges or into lava anymore with this. This is a minor side effect, but something that actually helps a lot of fights from becoming too trivial if you can just knock the enemy out of the way and keep going on.
- Fixed a number of issues with certain walking enemies not really being able to ascend slopes properly!
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- Fixed numerous issues with wall crawlers still acting a bit bonkers and not climbing on certain walls right -- mainly getting stuck over angles, but also a variety of other things.
- At this point we're not observing any more problems with them at all, but as usual if you see anything else please do let us know!
- Thanks to Itchykobu, isil, Misery, Pepisolo, and Smiling Spectre for reporting.
Beta .717 Strategory 64
(Released January 22nd, 2013)
- Fixed a few impassible slices
- Thanks to pepisolo, ipkins, theqmann and others for this.
- Fixed two slices with the connector hint in the wrong spot.
- Thanks to theqmann for reporting these.
- Fixed two slices that were throwing errors.
- Thanks to theqmann and Nanashi for reporting these.
- 90 slices added to the game
- Thanks to c4sc4 and Coppermantis for these.
- Robot Piranha is now spelled correctly in-game
- Thanks to lavacamorada for reporting this.
- Small grammatical error fixed in one of the death text interjections.
- Thanks to Siegfoult for reporting.
- Fixed a slice that would block you only if it appeared in a lava area.
- Thanks to theqmann for reporting.
- Fixed a bug where steam achievements were not being logged until your next login after achieving them.
- Thanks to mrhanman for reporting.
- The amount of time that the BLOCKED! text hangs around before disappearing is now much shorter.
- Fixed an issue where the "death shrapnel" from various enemies was not scaling up in toughness appropriately with the rest of the enemy's attacks.
- Fixed a bug with the ricochet spells that was causing their first stage to not damage enemies that it bounced off of (this applied to monsters shooting players and players shooting monsters).
- Fixed some issues with monsters sometimes doing too much damage to you because they had a series of shots that were under the threshold for applying the flashing invincibility period. Thus fusillades from monsters could sometimes be fatal if you absorbed the whole thing. This has been fixed to no longer have that happen.
- Fixed a bug where area of effect shots that were overkilling monsters could cause "infinity" damage to be displayed, rather than it stopping sending a bunch of abilities and just reporting what actually killed the monster.
- Thanks to Gemzo, Oralordos, madcow, and Lthesaurus for reporting.
Balance Changes
- Clockwork Avian, Miasma Bat, Urban Sniper, and Scout Drones have all been nerfed. They have all had their health dropped significantly.
- Also, their speeds were adjusted a bit just to add some variety. Please let us know if they are too fast or too slow.
- Nobody wants to be having to hit these 8+ times to kill them.
- Clockwork Man, Urban Droid, Skelebot Gunner are all a bit easier to kill now.
- The WallCroc has had it's health dropped, but it's still one of the hardest "Wall-Crawlers" to kill.
- All of the "clinging" spells have had their attacks dropped by about 20%. Their calibers have also been reduced.
- All of the Charge shots have been buffed, with the exception of the first level. We'd really be interested in what players think of this change.
- The ricochet spells for both players and monsters have been fairly heavily redone; they now can ricochet twice rather than once, and they no longer slide along walls but rather ricochet or disappear immediately on hitting a wall.
- The cooldown time of the UrbanSniper and the Steam Flyer has been increased.
- Thanks to Nanashi for pointing out it was too hard to dodge some flying enemies.
- Light Flare now creates a LOT more light.
- Thanks to Smiling Spectre for reporting this.
Improved Support For Multiple Gamepads
- Updated the "axis handling" for the game to now treat up to three gamepads separately, versus allowing input from any of them to overlap each other. Thus if two gamepads are plugged in and one has some sort of drift or other interference, that should no longer interfere with setting the other gamepad up properly.
Twelve New Monsters
- Added new "large flying" enemy type: Sericipterus
- This cousin of the Dorygnathus flies around after you, breathing slow-moving fireballs and coming in for collisions. Considerably less explosive than its cousin.
- Added a new "large walking" enemy type: Urban Mech.
- These fire a pair of lasers that have very slight homing as they come after you in very broad loops and swirls.
- Added a new "large swimming" monster type: Clockwork Submarine.
- Lets off periodic bursts of green lasers that are very mildly homing but swerve in large loops after you out of the water.
- Added a new "small swimming" monster type: Crag Spitter
- These are found in the craggy highlands, and are a recolor of the Fire Spitters from the lava flats. They chuck shattered mesa attacks at you that are fast-moving in their initial particle, and then slow-moving in their spawned particles, which makes for a pretty interesting pattern to dodge.
- Added a new "crazy/leaping" monster type: C4 Flier.
- As the name implies, this monster actually flies rather than leaping or running at you, but it still fits the mold of "crazy/suicidal" monsters.
- This monster uses a new mechanic whereby it is only vulnerable to attacks when it is moving at a certain fairly-fast speed. It has a very low acceleration but quite a high speed, and it wheels around when it passes you. You have to hit it while it's charging right at you, and then dodge its explosion, if you want to destroy it (otherwise you can just dodge it).
- Added a new "large flying" monster type: Urban Predator.
- This large robotic flier accelerates towards you fairly slowly, but gaining in speed, and wheels around as it passes you. It shoots fusillades of water rebound shots, which in turn are affected by the speed of the predator itself -- when it's moving faster, so do its shots.
- Added a new "large swimming" monster type: Swordfish
- This is a simple melee enemy, but it is another enemy with very slow acceleration but an even higher top speed. That makes it pretty much a pushover in tight corners, but quite dangerous in more open waters -- where it is often found.
- Added a new "small flying" monster type: Scout Drone.
- This tiny plane flies at you at a rapid pace, but with slow turning ability, making it come after you in big loop-the-loops in a lot of cases.
- Added a new "stationary flying" monster type: Air Superiority Platform.
- This one uses some graphics from AI War tied into this universe in a new way and animated in a different way.
- It has heavy armor plating on its sides, and uses plasma fan attacks against you as well as being explosive on death.
- Added a new "large walking" monster type: Armored Golem.
- The AI War favorite makes a crossover appearance in Valley 2! It's found in the far-future robot apocalypse of Environ...
- It's also animated for the first time, moving along the ground in its shell. It has a cool new mechanic whereby your shots can't directly penetrate its shell -- but perhaps you can use its own firepower against it somehow...
- Added a new "crazy/leaping" monster type: Mirror Cube.
- This monster actually goes in the "ceiling clinger" spot, but it is properly designed for the size and shape and general positioning of those sort of spots; it's another example of changing things up a bit in the monster mix in certain areas of the game.
- The mirror cubes are a robotic artifact that again take graphical pieces from AI War (this is a common theme in the far-future part of Valley 2, you'll notice; we've had fun tying the universes together at least a bit).
- These are physically weak, and just bounce along and melee you... but they are also really hard to hit because of the repulsion field that they exert on any projectiles that are sent their way. You can kill them with something like Ember Shot, but it's far easier to tackle these foes with things like Explosive Crescent, which the repulsive field doesn't have a chance to impact.
- Added a new "small walking" monster type: Perimeter Guard.
- This is another robot from AI War, although here it's been given animated robot-spider legs to carry it around.
- In a lot of respects, this is the opposite of the Mirror Cube -- rather than repulsing shots away from itself, it pulls all nearby shots strongly toward itself. This makes it one of the easiest enemies in the game to hit, but it's got an above-average bit of health to compensate for that. The tricky thing is that it makes it hard for you to hit _other_ enemies while it's still alive; you'll have to use non-projectile spells like Explosive Crescent to hit them, or make sure that they stay between you and the Perimeter Guard so that your shots hit them while trying to hit the guard.
Strategic Refinements, Round 4
- Each resistance member now has a "power" level, basically health, so we can have some more granular mechanics for them getting hurt by stuff and so on. Pre-existing things that wounded/killed npcs now simply do damage (overlord contact is still instakill). For a more in-depth description, here's the new "tips" entry for it (it refers to classes and world-map-monsters, which are described further down in these notes) :
- Each member of the resistance has a level of "power" shown as the number next to their world map icon. This shows how strong each member is against enemy attack. Remember:
- Each member's starting level of power is determined by his or her class.
- Each member gains 1 power at the end of each turn, up to a max determined by class.
- This power-gain does not happen if the member is in the "wounded" state or was damaged by infighting or failing a cover roll during the end of the turn.
- Infighting and failed cover rolls can cause damage to a member. Damage is deducted from the member's power level.
- If a member lands on a tile with a world-map-monster or such a monster lands on the member's tile, then the member will take damage equal to the monster's power and the monster will take damage equal to the member's power.
- Note that Demonaica has effectively infinite power and thus cannot be damaged and will kill any resistance member (regardless of power level).
- If a member (or world-map-monster) is reduced below 1 power, it dies and is removed from the game.
- If a member takes any damage, he or she also enters the "wounded" state which prevents movement or action until healed by someone else working a clinic (if the member is on a clinic tile, they have a chance of healing themselves at the end of the turn). Members with the Soldier class do not become wounded by 1-damage attacks, but do still lose the point of power.
- Each member of the resistance has a level of "power" shown as the number next to their world map icon. This shows how strong each member is against enemy attack. Remember:
- Each resistance member (and potential resistance member) now has a "class" so we can have some distinctions (but not unwieldy ones) between members. For a more in-depth description, here's the new "tips" entry for it:
- Each member of the resistance has one of three "classes": Scout, Skirmisher, or Soldier, reflected by their world map icon. Each class has advantages and disadvantages compared to the others. Specifically:
- The Scout can move fastest (12 tiles per turn) but has the lowest max power (4).
- The Soldier moves slowest (6 tiles per turn) but has the highest max power (9) and can "shrug off" an attack that does only 1 point of damage (still losing 1 point of power from the attack, but not getting the "wounded" state that prevents further movement or action until healed by a clinic).
- The Skirmisher has a moderate speed (8 tiles per turn) and a moderate max power (7).
- Each member of the resistance has one of three "classes": Scout, Skirmisher, or Soldier, reflected by their world map icon. Each class has advantages and disadvantages compared to the others. Specifically:
- The overlord now has overland spells; right now only summoning is implemented but we have a few more planned. For a more in-depth description, here's the new strategic overview entry for it:
- After Demonaica moves, he may summon monsters that attack resistance members and tiles useful to the resistance on the world map. Remember:
- The frequency of this varies with strategic difficulty, it's every fourth turn on default.
- The number of monsters summoned depends on the size of the monster, how late in the game it is, and the strategic difficulty.
- The summoned monsters can move further each turn than Demonaica's 3 tiles per tun (more on this below).
- But the summoned monsters are not invincible: you can't attack them directly, but resistance members can attack them by entering the same time.
- Whenever a summoned monster winds up on the same tile as a resistance member, the member takes damage equal to the monster's power and the monster takes damage equal to the member's power. This means that at least one of them will die, and the survivor (if any) will be weakened.
- Smaller monsters consume the remainder of their turn's movement when they destroy a tile, but larger monsters can keep moving and potentially destroy more than one tile per turn.
- After Demonaica moves, he may summon monsters that attack resistance members and tiles useful to the resistance on the world map. Remember:
- Overlord movement speed has been dramatically reduced: he can now only move 3 tiles, period.
- Previously he could move more tiles based on how much land area you'd purified, and what the strategic difficulty was. This made him basically an "unstoppable steamroller" that was only so interesting to interact with.
- Now he's more of a "two stage rocket" for anything that isn't close by to him -- paired with the overland spells described above, in particular the monster summons, he's now able to project force around the continent without moving there personally.
- Most importantly of all, these other monsters are mortal: in other words, as described above, you can use your resistance members to actively block and destroy monsters; this is something that was never possible (and still isn't possible) with the overlord directly. This adds a lot more nuance into the strategy game, and actually lets you defend your territory rather than having things get destroyed with nothing you can do about it.
- Oh, side note: the overlord is able to move AND cast a spell on the same turn, but he's got a cooldown on spells so that he can only do one spell every so many turns (as described above, again).
Beta .716 Control Freak
(Released January 16th, 2013)
- 93 various slices added.
- Thanks to c4sc4 and zebramatt for these!
- Updated the world map generation logic pretty heftily to move a lot of the level up towers away from the center of the world and out to the further reaches.
- With the world maps having gotten so much smaller a few releases back, the logic of where the level up towers were seeded really needed another looking at; as players were pointing out, it was possible to have tier 2 or 3 spells before Demonaica even emerged. Now that is exceedingly unlikely.
- Thanks to Misery for reporting.
- Fixed a bug where danger-to-npc values of tiles was not being computed properly on multiplayer clients (the server still had the right numbers, but it was showing wrong on the clients).
- Thanks to Gemzo for the report.
- Fixed a bug where it was possible to make moves during the tutorial that were incompatible with what the tutorial was telling you to do, resulting in getting stuck.
- Thanks to madcow for the report.
- Fixed a bug where it was possible to move to a tile and build a structure on it on the same turn (NPCs are supposed to be able to either move or act on a given turn). This was making it possible to get stuck in the tutorial.
- Thanks to Misery for the report.
Gamepad And Aiming Improvements
- Previously, the maximum noise canceling on an axis was 75% (which, it turns out, was internally 65%). Now it goes all the way up to 95% for greater flexibility.
- Previously, the default noise canceling indexes for all axes was 50% (really internally 40%). Now for the up and down keys, the default is 95%; and for left and right the default is 85%.
- This seems to work out extremely well for this sort of game; the old axis canceling defaults were actually more for things like precise aiming with a second stick in a dual-stick shooter. But what we're really wanting is more the classic D-pad experience, and that is what this level of axis canceling seems to provide on at least our test gamepads; let us know how it does on yours!
- The game now only locks your character into place for angled firing when you are actually holding down one of the angled-firing buttons OR the walk button.
- This keeps people on gamepads from "inexplicably" stopping moving if their axis noise canceling is not quite right or they are using an analog stick and have a drifting thumb, but it retains the functionality of these folks being able to lock into place to shoot at an angle when actually firing (and then they can actually see what has happened, if they're a new player, because not only does their character stop, but the shots are going in that direction, so it just immediately should make sense rather than being "why does my character keep stopping moving!?"
- However, the ability to lock yourself into place while NOT actively firing is actually useful. At least, I certainly think it is. This is where the walk button comes in; when holding that and an angle, it works like it used to, letting you lock yourself into place in preparation for firing rather than actually firing. I think this is definitely the minority case of needed functionality, so it makes good sense to me to make this the thing that requires an extra button press.
- Thanks to Billick for suggesting that players only stop when they are actively moving.
Beta .715 Gimme Shelter... From Monsters
(Released January 15th, 2013)
- Mouse support has been added for all the menus in the game, and the mouse cursor is now visible whenever any menu is open.
- A huge number of improvements have been made to the wall crawler logic, including making the wall crawlers now handle slopes properly (ground slopes, anyhow; ceilings ones don't matter for running into).
- Fixed a longstanding bug where the last shot to kill an enemy would not do a damage popup.
- Made it so that on the last shot to kill a non-boss enemy, it now pops up the name of the enemy as well as the damage; that way players can actually learn the names of enemies, and it's a bit of a minor visual reward for the kill as well.
- The graphics for being a Deinonychus are now fully in place. Rather than looking like a Utahraptor from the first game (that was placeholder art), you now look awesome -- like a feathery modern version of this particular raptor.
- The swamp backdrop has been finalized.
- Pretty close to all 33 interior wall backgrounds have been updated, many finalized.
- When the player is transformed into a Deinonychus, they can now exit doors properly without getting stuck!
- Thanks to khadgar for reporting.
- Swamp gas has been turned into the "large flying" category instead of "large walking."
- This makes room in the large walking category in the swamp for a different monster (we had to do some shifting because we wound up with some extra cool art that we wanted to use), and it also changes the behavior of the swamp gas so that it now does indeed fly.
- The falling miasma graphics are now a lot more attractive, and the particles of miasma are also a lot smaller and more discrete (rather than being a waterfall-like thing, it's more like pellets now).
- The physics of the shots from the Missile Posts have been adjusted so that they are actually now a threat indoors (and more interesting even out of doors, too).
Twenty New Monsters
- Added a new "small walking" enemy type to the game: Urban Droid.
- These cheeky little robots are capable of putting on quite a fireworks show. And if you shoot them in their large eye, they tend not to take that too kindly, either.
- Added a new "crazy/leaping" enemy type to the game: Urban Tackle Droid.
- These spidery robots are really tiny but really fragile. They hide in place and then come running and leaping at you when you get close.
- Added a new "crazy/leaping" enemy type to the game: Clockwork Tumbler.
- These crablike automatons go bounding around like crazy, making them quite hard to hit, although somewhat easier to dodge as they blow past you and then try to turn around. Try to get them when they're slowed by turning.
- Added a new "large flying" enemy type: Dorygnathus.
- This flying dino is actually seeded in the slot for the "stationary ground" enemy type of the lava flats, but that's one of those things that helps to make the various areas feel more unique; sometimes they mix things around like this, meaning that slices created for one purpose then serve another. But the monsters are always designed with the way that the slices are designed in mind.
- At any rate, Dorygnathus is fast, mean, and... uh, explosive. Don't let them close.
- Added a new "ceiling clinger" enemy type: Earth Flinger.
- Earth bombs! First time enemies are using bombs like you get.
- Added a new "ceiling clinger" enemy type: Earth Elemental.
- Looks just like the Earth Flinger, so there is some uncertainty as to which you have just encountered when you near them. These have a completely different attack and generally show up in different areas (aside from the level up towers and overlord keep, where all monsters mingle).
- Added a new "crazy/leaping" monster type to the game: Deinonychus
- Yes, these are deadly. Proceed with caution in the lava flats and bring something to mow them down quick -- they are extremely fast.
- These work very much like the Utahraptors from the first game, except with a bit of altered physics and more speed.
- As a general note, not all monsters are meant to be created equal; some areas are meant to be harder than others (like The Deep and the Lava Flats), and even the monsters within an area are meant to vary in terms of which are most threatening (the stationary flying are extremely threatening in many of the areas, but not so in the lava flats, for instance; the crazy/leaping are less threatening most areas, but are a hotspot in the lava flats).
- Added a new "ceiling clinger" enemy type: Snow Elemental.
- This is actually just a recolor of the Earth Elemental, but it's such a cool graphic anyhow. These snow variants show up in completely different areas and use a snow sine attack, though, so facing them is a very distinct proposition.
- Added a new "wall crawler" enemy type: Mechanical Spider.
- These use a lightning rebound attack with different timings and distances from the other monster rebounds.
- Added a new "wall crawler" enemy type: Wall Probe.
- These use a lightning ricochet attack with different timings and distances from the other monster ricochets.
- Added a new "small flying" enemy type: Owl.
- Everybody's favorite concept sketch ("he looks so unimpressed by the world," etc) makes his debut. He may be unimpressed, but he's a zippy little fellow with an interesting insect fusillade attack that gets more challenging on higher difficulties (of course).
- Added a new "large walking" monster type: Swamp Thing.
- This one has a pretty crazy cool pattern-based attack that it uses on you as it scoots quickly across the ground and then pauses.
- Added a new "large walking" monster type: Forest Elemental.
- These freaky, massive, tree-like creatures use their clubs to create an earthquake shockwave that strikes any players near them who are standing on the ground at the time of their attack.
- A new "small swimming" monster has been added: Icefish.
- This fish inhabits the ice age areas of the game, and works rather like a cross between a robot piranha and an ice bat; it lobs snowballs at you like the bat, but otherwise works like the robot piranha.
- Added a new "small flying" monster type: Miasma Bat.
- These are like regular bats except a bit more hardy, and they also act as something of a mobile miasma dangerfall as they fly around.
- A new "small flying" enemy type has been added: Flying Eyeball.
- These fly past dropping barrages of miasma bombs at you, then eventually wheel around and make another pass for you.
- Added a new "stationary ground" enemy type: Clockwork Blockade.
- Normally this is completely passive, but if you touch it or shoot it, it will create a cross of "clockwork seekers" that come after you.
- Added a new "small flying" enemy type to the game: Mosquito.
- These are definitely the smallest, weakest, but also fastest enemies in the game, by far. They zip around like crazy, and won't harm you directly; but they let off slow-moving fire embers from unexpected places. They're hard to hit with straight shots, but other weapons can work quite well against them. They live up to their name of creating distraction and so forth, but they do really very little damage even if they do get you.
- Added a new "small swimming" monster type: Fire Spitter.
- This little amphibian swims around rather like a carp, but lobs slow-moving embers at you periodically.
- Added a new "small swimming" enemy type: Water Fairy.
- Yes, these are very much like the fairy minibosses from AVWW1 -- the much-hated, overly-familiar red and green fairies. But we are not insane! The inclusion of the water fairies, which are blue, is actually cathartic. These are very ordinary enemies, in Valley 2, not minibosses; and they are rather pushovers here. They do produce some interesting threat and tactical scenarios as well, so it's not just a gimme either way, but we didn't put these here just to torture people who loved the first game but grew to hate the fairies.
Strategic Refinements, Round 3
- There can now only ever be one resistance member on a given tile. We have some other mechanics coming soon that will still give you a reason to keep each one in "mutual support range" of a few others, but for now this vastly helps us make the interface smoother.
- Food income from farming has been roughly doubled since you can't turbocrop a single farm with a bunch of dudes anymore, we would increase it more but some other changes are planned to handle the rest of this.
- Any situation which would otherwise cause multiple resistance members on the same tile (loading an old world with a multi-NPC stack, or rescuing a survivor) causes the others to be displaced to a nearby tile that is no closer to the overlord (or origin, if overlord isn't out yet) than the original tile. In the rescue-survivor case, the new resistance member is always the displaced one.
- You now no longer move resistance members through "Rally Survivors" but by:
- 1) Move to the tile of the resistance member you want to move.
- 2) Press enter to open the region-interaction menu.
- 3) Press enter again to select the "Move" option (it's always on top if there's a resistance member present, and thus quick to select).
- 4) The interaction window will close and the world map HUD will reflect that you're giving a move order; walk to the target square you want the resistance member to move to (you won't be able to walk into any tiles that are out of range or corrupted).
- 5) Press enter again to make the move happen (cancel can be used to cancel out of the order).
- This is much faster and more intuitive than the previous system, at least in our experience. We hope you agree :)
- Resistance members can no longer use warp points, since it's already pretty easy for them to get away from the overlord and it's harder to present a reasonable interface with them using the warp points.
- Now that there's only one resistance member max per tile, the world map icon for the resistance member is:
- If the player is currently in the process of giving that NPC a move order, it is a blue-ish version of the normal icon.
- Otherwise, if the NPC is wounded, it is a red-ish version of the normal icon.
- Otherwise, if the NPC has already acted that turn, it is a semi-transparent version of the normal icon. (would have done orange and made the normal icon green, but that wouldn't work for red/green colorblindness)
- Otherwise, it is the normal orange-ish icon.
- The dispatch-mission button on the region-interaction menu now simply says "Build Structure", because that's the only dispatch mission that's given that way anymore (all the others are still in the game, they're just attempted on a resistance member's own initiative based on where they are, or they're the rally-survivors mission that was rolled into the new movement system).
- Further, since there's only ever at most one resistance member on the tile where you can build the structure, it no longer asks you who you're sending to do it when you pick the building to build, it just goes ahead and tells that one NPC to build the building.
- But the region-interaction menu now shows the NPC's portrait next to their name, in case you might miss looking at their handsome mugs with the npc-selection screen no longer in the loop.
- Since you can't have two NPCs on the same tile anymore, the rule that you only have a 75% chance to succeed in building construction with only one NPC has been removed.
- Further, since there's only ever at most one resistance member on the tile where you can build the structure, it no longer asks you who you're sending to do it when you pick the building to build, it just goes ahead and tells that one NPC to build the building.
- The region-interaction menu now displays a "work schedule" of what an NPC would do there, in what order, including the time consumed by moving there (unless an NPC is already there and hasn't acted that turn; then it lists the first thing that will be done as the first item).
- We hope this will resolve some of the information-opacity issues that the move to "NPCs act based on where they are" logic initially involved.
- The end-turn check for “free healing” (not requiring a clinic) of a wounded resistance member is now only done on the lower 2 strategic difficulty levels.
- But a wounded NPC actually on a clinic tile has a very good chance (depending on strategic difficulty level) of being automatically healed.
- Clinics now only function (and get their heal roll) when a resistance member (who is not wounded, and has not already acted that turn) is on the clinic tile at the end of the turn.
- But each clinic roll now has a much better chance to heal someone and is not so adversely affected by low morale.
- The housing “population cap” mechanic is now gone as it felt very weak in practice and didn’t make a lot of sense.
- In its place we have implemented a “shelter” mechanic where each resistance member is in danger at the end of every turn, which danger can be increased or mitigated by the tiles around them.
- Housing tiles are the best shelter, along with the more special positive tiles (chateau, amp towers, etc).
- More mundane positive tiles (farms, factories) are also good shelter, but not as good.
- Multipurpose tiles that haven’t been built into anything are mediocre shelter.
- Rubble of any kind is poor shelter, but it doesn’t add to the threat either.
- Wilderness areas are low-level threats; caverns are actually somewhat positive, forests are slightly negative, open areas are moderately negative.
- Evil outposts and impasse tiles are very negative.
- Each tile impacts all tiles within 3 distance, with the impact halving at each step. Accordingly being in the middle of an abandoned town area (that the overlord hasn’t rubble-ized) is generally pretty safe, but being in the middle of a bunch of evil outposts is exceedingly dangerous.
- If the NPC fails its “shelter roll” at the end of the turn, it will be wounded. If it was already wounded, it will die.
- The strategic difficulty substantially impacts how hard this roll is.
- Having one or two other (non-wounded) resistance members within 2 tiles improves the NPC’s chances of not being hit. Having more than 2 other resistance members in the area does not provide further benefit.
- Already wounded NPCs get a further bonus on this roll that varies substantially by strategic difficulty level. Generally speaking they’re much less likely to die than they were to get wounded in the first place, unless they’re in a really bad place.
- The game displays the chance of an NPC failing the roll (assuming no support from other NPCs) as “Danger To NPCs”; this can be seen in a number of ways on the interface, including a new world-map-overlay that can be activated from the region-interaction menu.
- In its place we have implemented a “shelter” mechanic where each resistance member is in danger at the end of every turn, which danger can be increased or mitigated by the tiles around them.
- The end-turn check for an NPC naturally dying of wounds no longer happens. So now wounded NPCs are now simply out of commission and will wait for healing, unless the overlord catches them.
- There is no longer a morale penalty when the overlord destroys a useful building.
- Instead of losing 1 morale per turn automatically, you gain 1.
- The overlord’s number of moves per turn has been scaled down (the world is generally smaller now than it was some patches ago, and the shelter mechanic adds a lot of threat).
- The overlord now comes out one turn later than before (otherwise on the highest difficulty he was going to kill the wounded survivor before the clinic could heal them).
Boss Updates
- The boss rooms have been adjusted so that not only do they no longer have water, they also generally won't have the little traps areas in them.
- This keeps the boss fights more focused, and avoids some of the particular pitfalls they were common to.
- The physics of the henchmen in how they jump and fall after you, and when they generate magma exhaust, has been altered fairly substantially. They now pose a much more interesting challenge.
Beta .714 Monstercopia
(Released January 11th, 2013)
- The sprite graphics for Elder are now in place, although there is still some work to be done on them.
- The Warehouse interior wall graphics are now in place.
- The eels now use a "moderate static discharge" instead of the "major" one they were previously using.
- Fixed a number of bugs for wall crawlers that were all relating to the fact that they could not decelerate fast enough to make certain turns, and so would go sliding into walls or open space or other things.
Eleven New Monsters
- A new "wall crawler" type of enemy has been added to the game: Elephant Snail.
- These have an occasional ranged attack, and are only vulnerable to your attacks at certain times, too.
- Added a new "small walking" type of monster: Firewalker.
- These are pretty different, for sure. Fairly easy to kill, but dangerous even in death, even at a distance.
- A new "large walking" enemy type has been added: Swamp Gas.
- We'll just see what folks make of it, we won't say anything here.
- Added a new "ceiling clinger" monster type: Medieval Ceiling Trap.
- Watch out for the streams of darts!
- Added a new "stationary floor" enemy type: Medieval Flag Trap.
- Again, watch the darts!
- Added a new "small flying" enemy type: Archaeopteryx
- Don't worry about finding these -- they'll find you. ;)
- A new "stationary floor" enemy type has been added: missile post.
- Careful attacking these!
- A new "ceiling clinger" type of monster has been added to the game: Ceiling Asp.
- Given these are desert creatures... watch out for fire!
- A new "large flying" monster type has been added to the game: Dark Imp.
- Lurking in the highlands with their eerie dark forms and whips of fire... yeah, you'll want to be killing these as quick as you can when you see them.
- A new "wall crawler" enemy type has been added: Clockwork Pigeon.
- These mechanical birds crawl along the walls, flinging bursts of feathers at you that shattered into multiple bursts after a while or on contact with the ground.
- Added a new "wall crawlers" enemy type: Wall Croc.
- These are speedy little guys, for being so pudgy!
Beta .713 Scatter And Gather
(Released January 10th, 2013)
- The "individual specials" on characters have been removed.
- This was something that mostly messed with the feeling of balance in invisible ways, or more particularly messed with the feeling of the controls (usually not for the better).
- The perks are all still there of course, but those are things that the player gets to decide on and experiment with AFTER starting the game, and change at will. Generally we like to avoid making players have to make crucial decision about their character before they even start playing, but that's what the individual specials were doing.
- These were a holdover from Valley 1, where it wasn't a big deal because your characters die all the time and you get new ones, anyway. But here your characters are permanent, and the physics of movement are a lot more fine-tuned anyhow.
- Thanks to Professor Paul1290 for suggesting.
- The characters in the pick new character menu now show their actual attack animations rather than just standing still in their first frame of their attack animation.
- In the first room with Demonaica at the start of the game, the game controls now show up even during the conversation you are having with him, rather than waiting until after that conversation is done.
- Thanks to madcow for suggesting.
- Fixed an error in a chunk slice that would throw up exceptions when loading it.
- Thanks to isil for reporting this.
- The game no longer pauses for the local player when they are in a text interjection; that led to all sorts of bad behaviors, like animations being a bit stuck and odd, and in general just feeling rather jarring.
- Instead, what now happens is that the invincibility lightning turns on for the player whenever they are somewhere where there are monsters, and this thus signals that they are safe (which was why we had it pausing before).
- Overall this leads to a smoother experience while still making it clear the player is safe (which they are).
- Fixed a bug that was preventing the last page of multi-page text interjections from showing.
- After the oblivion crystals have been smashed, Demonaica retreats to his keep. On the overworld, Elder takes his place in harassing you, since Elder is the one henchman who does not need an oblivion crystal to remain immortal.
- This was always the plan, however since we don't have the Elder graphics finalized yet we couldn't really implement this properly. However, this was leading to some confusion evidently, so we've used the "Dark Avatar" graphics that are currently a stand-in for all the Henchmen, so that it's clear that something has changed on the overworld after the oblivion crystals are gone.
- Inside freefall rooms, your falling rate is no longer slowed when you are in water or lava; that was making them untenably slow.
- Thanks to jruderman and theqmann for reporting.
More Angled Aiming Refinements And Controls Updates
- You can now fire downwards at an angle while standing on the ground and by holding down and forward or backward. Normally when you hold down and no direction and fire, you do low-shots, which are still possible as long as you don't hold forward or backward.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for suggesting.
- When you have locked your character into place and then fire behind yourself at an angle, it now turns your character around to face that direction so that things look more sensible graphically.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for suggesting.
- The contextual aiming on slopes that was added a couple of releases ago has now been removed since the manual "deployed aiming" has come back and does a better job at this sort of thing.
- More to the point, the contextual aiming was interfering with a couple of different kinds of other aiming (the ability to fire over the edge of a slope from cover, and the ability to do low-shots horizontally while on a slope), so removing this retains all the flexibility of the manual controls without ever making the game do something you didn't intend in an automatic contextual fashion.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for suggesting.
- The "Open Menu" and "Cancel" functions have been split out into separate keybindings so that there is more flexibility with how you map them on gamepads. So have the Confirm and Interact functions.
- Thanks to Nypyren for suggesting.
- The "Interact" and "Confirm" keys now default to E instead of S, making them consistent between Valley 1 and Valley 2 again.
- The only reason we had changed this was so that Q and E could be used for the aim up/down in this game, but since those have been phased out we can now go to something that makes for less of a jarring difference between the basics of the two games.
- The "Use Secondary Ability" default keybind has moved from W to S, again for the sake of simplicity. The keys thus all line up as ASDF rather than AWDF for the spells.
- The gamepad button and gamepad axis settings section in the input bindings windows have been combined into one to prevent confusion.
- Now it checks for either a button or an axis input when you click the gamepad button panel, and then it switches to showing the axis and the axis noise canceling options only when you choose an axis.
- This should prevent all the confusion people were having with sometimes "not being able to map" certain buttons that were actually axes, etc.
- Thanks to Itchykobu, isil, and zaaq for suggesting these changes.
Cheats! Plus An Easy Way To Test The Strategic Game Only
- Added new admin command: cmd:set_cheats_enabled (followed by a 0 for false, or a 1 for true)
- When this is active, you can use a new "Cheat: Purify" button on the interact-with-region menu to purify from the world map.
- If this has ever been active in a world, achievements cannot be earned in it.
- Thanks to madcow for the suggestion.
Strategic Refinements, Round 2
- There is no longer a limit to the number of dispatch missions that can be launched each turn. However, each NPC can still only act once.
- The idea here is that this reduces the incentive for blobbing your NPCs together all in one group, and -- when paired with some other changes to be detailed below -- encourages a very different style of play where more NPCs are deployed more distinct places, but you're not HAVING to move them all each turn.
- Obviously one big concern with a mechanic like this is if players wind up getting very grindy in later turns with giving orders to dozens of NPCs -- how tedious. That was something the previous dispatch mission limit was intended to solve. However, we've found a more organic way to solve the same issue, which you'll read about below.
- The concept of individual survivors having different skill levels has been removed, for a variety of reasons.
- This was one of those things that sounded good on paper, but in practice it hasn't been too useful to the game mechanics; it adds the bad kind of complexity and encourages players to "optimize" their play in un-fun ways such as sending key survivors on long treks all over the place rather than using everyone more equally.
- Also, because the change to letting the player give each one an order each turn is increasing the complexity of play a fair bit, and the value added by the skill mechanic was somewhat dubious to us in the past.
- The "convert region to (whatever)" success chance is now 75% if you send 1 resistance member, or 100% if you send two (or more, but there wouldn't be a lot of point in that).
- The rest of the mission types have a 100% chance of success now, given the lack of skill levels.
- We may dial the complexity back up some here in a future version (we have some ideas on this front), but honestly we're going for depth of mechanics rather than breadth. With this new release the strategy for winning the game is actually a lot more complex and interesting despite the streamlining that we've done, which is something we're really proud of. There are more interesting choices with less obvious answers.
- The rest of the mission types have a 100% chance of success now, given the lack of skill levels.
- Now, only Rally and "Convert Region To (whatever)" missions can be given directly through the dispatch interface; all the others are still possible but are done by moving a resistance member to the target square and giving them time to get it done.
- The first turn after the move they won't do anything (their action that turn was moving) but at the end of the following turn they will check for doing the following:
- If there is an attackable enemy structure in the region itself, attack it.
- Otherwise, if there is a recruitable survivor in the region, rescue it.
- Otherwise, if there are any eligible adjacent targets for the attack-adjacent-enemy-structures mission, do that.
- Otherwise, if the region can be worked (farm, scrap factory, etc), work it.
- Otherwise, scavenge for food and scrap.
- So if there's a tile where you want to do more than one of the above, either send multiple resistance members, or just let the one member stay there enough turns to get it all done.
- The idea here is to automate things a little bit more, certainly, and not make it so that you have to hand-hold your NPCs each turn so much. The idea is to let you express your will as quickly as possible and then just get on with the game, so that you can manage more NPCs doing more things without that bogging down the game in an un-fun way.
- The first turn after the move they won't do anything (their action that turn was moving) but at the end of the following turn they will check for doing the following:
- The end-turn report now shows:
- One line for the amount of mana spent attacking buildings.
- One line for the number of buildings that could not be attacked due to lack of mana.
- There is now a text interjection for the first time an NPC could not attack a building due to lack of mana.
- Map tiles no longer ever produce food, scrap, or mana on their own -- in other words, just passively by your holding them. They now all have to be worked by resistance members.
- Desert Pyramids and Magic Focal Towers can now be worked in this way (to produce mana), though as with the other production missions you won't actually give that order directly. Just move them there and they'll get to it.
- This is the lynchpin in the revised strategic design:
- Having to deploy NPCs around the world to gain resources means that they are now a lot more useful than just for rebuilding structures (which they used to do, but cannot do anymore), building structures, or going on dangerous missions. This greatly increases the complexity of the resource management simulation by the late game in particular, particularly on higher difficulties.
- It's also the reason why you could have dozens of NPCs without it being a hassle to manage all of them every turn. It's actually to your advantage to leave most of them where they are most turns, since most of them are working for you. And then your decisions come in as to when to move them where, and when to capture what buildings for use.
- Convert Tile to (whatever) missions now can only be performed by resistance members actually on the tile.
- So now missions either move a resistance member, or have them do something, but never both at once.
- The initial "tutorial" logic that affects the first 2 turns has been updated to reflect the above changes:
- On the first turn, you must first move a single resistance member to an abandoned town city block tile (potential clinic site) and then move a single resistance member to a grassland farm tile.
- On the second turn, you must first build that clinic, and then you're free to do as you please.
- Also, the instructions you get on the third turn are now updated to reflect the above changes.
- The overlord will now not target or destroy buildings that have never helped the resistance. A building is considered to have helped the resistance if:
- It provides a passive benefit (housing, clinic, city hall, etc).
- It was built (converted from a multi-purpose tile) by the resistance.
- It has ever been worked by a resistance member to produce food, scrap, or mana (scavenging doesn't count, but the resistance never scavenges in a square that can be worked).
Strategic Interface Improvements
- When sending survivors on dispatch missions, it now properly sorts them so that the ones who can't participate (for whatever reason out of the many possible reasons) are at the bottom of the list.
- NPCs that have already acted this turn now show up in the strategic interface, but with the explanation that they have already acted that turn (versus just being invisible like they previously were).
- In the dispatch interface for specific survivors, it now doesn't allow keyboard selection for those who are unable to act the current turn; this saves you a lot of skipping around manually for people you can't interact with anyhow.
- In the "interact with region" menu on the world map, the "Dispatch Survivors On Mission" line item is now the topmost item, as it is the thing that you'll be selecting most frequently.
- In the "interact with region" menu on the world map, the "Dispatch Survivors On Mission" line changes to "Rally Resistance" if that's the only type of dispatch mission that is available at the region in question (which is what happens quite a lot of the time). This is basically a convenience to save you an extra click.
- "Rally Resistance" has been renamed "Move Survivors Here" so that it's more immediately clear what it means without any extra explanations.
- When a mission that you are sending NPCs on has a 100% chance of success, it no longer asks you for confirmation that you wish to send them on this mission.
- That was an extra two keypresses that were superfluous for movement orders in particular.
- After a move survivors mission, previously it was showing an emoty results window. Now it just skips that, saving you yet another button press.
- The text interjections have been moved down 40px on the screen so that you can actually see your resource bar on the main menu while the text interjections are playing past.
Upgrades To Several Spell Groups
- The "Magnetic" spells have gone from being pretty lame to being some of Chris's very favorite spells in the game now. We think you'll agree.
- They no longer die when they collide with the ground, for one thing, which makes them much longer-lived.
- But they also now mirror your movement sort of like a drone, while at the same time seeking back toward you. The overall effect is much more like what we were going for at the start with these -- a mobile wrecking ball that you swing around yourself, smashing through enemies in an extremely satisfying fashion.
- The Tridents all now have 2.5x as long attack lengths. This makes them much more useful for hitting things above or below you without having to get too close to them.
- The striking distance of the whips have all been reduced by a fair bit, but they have given a powerful new ability that lets them cut right through enemy shields as if they were not there.
- This makes whips really useful in close combat, but of course close combat is riskier than just firing at weakspots from range.
Three New Monsters
- A new "stationary flying" monster has been added to the game: Steamship.
- This is another steampunk enemy that is heavily armored in interesting ways.
- A new swimming monster has been added to the game: Eels.
- These are mainly a melee monster, but if you get too close to them they have big bursts of electrical current that can also strike you.
- A new "stationary flying" monster has been added to the game: Floating Bone Mass.
- This is definitely the easiest enemy in the game to kill... and at the same time, one of the more dangerous ones. It certainly adds some spice to the lava flats areas, heh.
Beta .712 Chipping Away Everything That Doesn't Look Like An Elephant
(Released January 9th, 2013)
The Welcome Return Of Angled Aiming
- Angled aiming by holding two arrow keys has been added back in.
- However, the problematic "lock in at a fixed upward angle" and "lock in at a fixed downward angle" will not be coming back, as there was just too much negative feedback on those. We're trying to find better and simpler ways to solve those same goals, such as the (so far well-received) control additions in the last release.
- When you are standing on the ground and holding up or down plus forward or back, it now stops you from moving and lets you fire shots in either direction.
- This makes it easy to do precise unloading of a barrage into a target without needing special keys like we used to have.
- This also allows you to aim up and behind you without turning around, actually, which was not something that was ever possible before.
- Thanks to Professor Paul1290 for suggestions that led to this.
So, when you combine this with the changes from the prior release, what you've got is the complete return of angled aiming -- as many have been clamoring for -- minus the fiddly bits that were requiring finger ballet -- which many were complaining loudly and often about before we removed the angled aiming. The new system is a lot more contextual, and it also really gives a different feel when you are in the air versus on the ground, which is also interesting. When you are jumping, you have complete freedom of movement and can aim in any of the 8 directions with ease. On the ground you lock into position when you aim at an up-angle or down-angle, which means you have less mobility (obviously) during that period, but a greater ability to deliver concentrated barrages into specific locations. I think that this duality is pretty useful, because it lets us do away with a couple of keybinds in favor of basically "deployed" and "mobile" modes of operation.
- Thanks to Misery, among others, for helping us to reconsider this and come up with more creative solutions.
A Tale Of Morale: The New Death Penalty
- In the prior version, the scaling of monster strength had not been adjusted for the fact that there are now fewer levels between mage classes, and thus fewer turns overall. That is now fixed, making the monsters ramp up difficulty more like they used to.
- As of a few releases ago, a death penalty was imposed where every time you died the monster aggression would go up some.
- As players rightly pointed out, this just led to more stalemate sorts of situations rather than actually causing you to lose.
- The suggestion from several quarters was to instead have a hit to morale, which makes thematic sense as well as causing the appropriate damage to your prospects.
- Now on Adept through Hero, there is a morale hit of 1 every time a player dies; on master hero there is a morale hit of 2; and on the chosen one there is a morale hit of 3.
- Thanks to madcow, LaughingThesaurus, and Misery for suggesting.
- The game has had the concept of "monster aggression" as distinct from "game turn" removed. That was only added so that the old death penalty could increase aggression without increasing the game turn. Now it's back to just being based on the game turn like it had been prior to that release.
- Additionally, the monster scaling no longer includes an extra 3 turns' worth of extra space in the scaling algorithm for player deaths; that was making it harder if you died a lot, of course, and easier if you didn't die much at all.
Farewell Powerslide
- The Powerslide feat has been removed from the game.
- This was another thing that was kind of just for show, and really very useless. All it really provided was something for players to get themselves into trouble with.
- There was lots of complaining about this feat from all quarters, most people viewed it as serving no point, and most people left it off. We really don't want to have stuff like that in the game, and part of the purpose of a beta period is to identify things like that and either excise them or improve them. It varies which approach we take, depending on how central the mechanic is and if it really adds anything. With powerslide, it doesn't really serve a gameplay purpose and so was an obvious candidate for excising.
- Previously, the feats list was: Powerslide, Double Jump, Water Dash, Miniature, Triple Jump.
- Now the feats go: Water Dash, Miniature, Double Jump, Triple Jump.
- If you pile on the jump height increases, it's possible that you might be able to win the game without Triple Jump (just having Double Jump), which is pretty interesting.
- New world maps now only have 4 skelebot research facilities rather than 5, since there are now 4 feats rather than 5.
- This seems particularly fitting because it makes the skelebot facilities a little more rare than they were, and thus not something as repetitive. Now you definitely have to complete three, possibly/probably have to complete four, to win the game.
- This also shrinks the baseline world size from 695 to 688.
Beta .711 Trimming The Fat
(Released January 8th, 2013)
- The character Limon has now been integrated, complete with his new art.
- Fixed a pair of rounding issues that were likely causing a number of inconsistencies in multiplayer.
- One that was definitely being caused was that Auroch Warrior shots were all right on top of one another rather than spaced out like they should have been.
- The graphics for the ocean shallows ship background wall have been added to the game.
Limited Context-Based Auto-Angled Shots
- Limited context-based angled shots have been added back into the game.
- If you stand on a slope facing into the slope, and fire your spell straight forward, it will angle up instead (firing directly forward would accomplish nothing, after all).
- If you stand on that same slope facing away from the slope, any shots you fire go forward like normal. However, if you duck, then your shots will go down the slope at an angle instead of doing your normal low-shot.
Strategic Refinements, Round 1
- Desert Buildings, Ocean Shallows Buildings, and Abandoned Town City Blocks can no longer be destroyed by the overlord.
- Same with cold dispersal, heat dispersal, and ivory towers.
- Now when the overlord destroys tiles it's permanent, no more rebuilding the stuff to kite him around infinitely by rebuilding stuff just outside his reach but nearer than anything else, etc.
- But now the cold, heat, and light towers are indestructible, since they're needed to access certain areas in side-view.
- The second turn's mandatory dispatch objective has been changed from "rebuild destroyed farmland" to "work farmland", since rebuilding it would now be impossible.
- New worlds will now seed intact farmland instead of destroyed farmland for that, and old worlds will automatically purify a path to a farmland tile if none is currently purified.
- The overlord can now move through corrupted tiles normally.
- But he won't destroy anything on a corrupted tile since it isn't helping you (yet).
- It is no longer possible to select the world size.
- We were finding this impossible to balance around, as the world size really means something different here than in a standard RTS or similar. Normally in an RTS the world size means how far you have to travel to meet your enemy, but here you start at the same place as your enemy. So really world size was just affecting tedium and the ability to kite the overlord over long distances, etc.
- Now everyone plays on the same size world -- same as you get the same size board in Chess or Triple Town or Tetris or whatever -- and we find this should be a lot more straightforward to balance, and to provide a consistently fun experience for everyone.
- The baseline size of worlds has shrunk from 1300 to 695, so it's basically slightly more than half the size of what a Normal map used to be.
- Going along with this, the actual composition of the worlds has changed quite a bit. There's a lot less empty wilderness space, and a lot more density of the things that matter. The idea is to keep things moving without there being stretches of downtime, which has always been a goal for us with this game.
- Additionally, there are now far fewer warp points -- only 5-7 on average, rather than a couple of dozen. This makes it substantially more difficulty for the overlord and your survivors to just jet around the whole world.
- There are also five fewer level-up towers; the maximum level is now 16 rather than 21, which again is in the interest of somewhat shorter games that do not overstay their welcome and encourage replay.
- The points at which you can invade the overlord's keep now come at levels 3, 6, 9, and 12 rather than levels 4, 8, 12, and 16, given the new level cap of 16 instead of 21.
- Again, this is going for faster, more vicious games.
- The assignment of the perks in relation to what level you find them at has been massively altered.
- In general, there are now 10 fewer perk tokens to find since there are 5 fewer levels. And in all, there are 20 fewer perks.
- Most of the perks removed were the critical hit chance increases, which have been completely removed as perk options.
- There is also one fewer heart (100 health) available to you, but the chances to select hearts/health to add to your character now come earlier and more frequently.
- In general, there are now 10 fewer perk tokens to find since there are 5 fewer levels. And in all, there are 20 fewer perks.
- Pre-existing worlds will upgrade into the new version fine (though let us know if you find any problems), with the following caveats:
- If your level was higher than 16, it will be dropped to 16.
- The perks you had assigned may be wildly out of joint compared to what they were, since everything moved around. You may need to reassign those upon upgrading.
- The balance of the game might be a little bit easier or harder than intended given your larger or smaller map with more warp points than are now expected. But this shouldn't be vastly off in most cases.
- That's about it.
The Rationale Behind The Strategic Changes
While we do feel that we have a solid strategic game here, we do think that it can also be better. More engaging, more challenging (on higher difficulties), more streamlined (in terms of how easy it is to express your will), and more thought-provoking (in terms of how many things you must consider at an advanced or semi-advanced level of play when deciding what actions to take).
Additionally, we're really trying to streamline the game itself a little bit more -- it was already extremely streamlined in the main, especially compared to the first game, but this is trimming off some of the last of the fat. The last thing we want is for any particular game element to overstay its welcome; we'd rather you were hungry for more and play a second game of it. All in all this is leading to a game that is a bit shorter than it previously was, but also one that is going to be substantially more intense given many of the overlord's actions are now not possible to undo (you can't just rebuild what he knocks down).
There are more changes planned -- or rather, we have a variety of ideas that we think might work well to continue to bring this from being a good strategy game to a great one. These will be something we experiment with throughout the course of January before settling on final mechanics by February. The game isn't far off, and it's just a matter of getting all of the existing pieces we have to fit together in the most ideal way possible at this point. Right now we're just taking the first steps with the strategic game, and then reassessing from here (thus to better inform our further changes).
Beta .710 More Monsters At Last
(Released January 7th, 2013)
- Fixed a slice that had an invalid character in it.
- Thanks to Smiling Spectre for hunting that one down.
- New background wall graphics for the elizabethan rural interiors, pyramid interiors, swamp hovel interiors, time of magic building interiors, the deep general interiors, and the deep mausoleum interiors.
- Fixed a number of bugs where players would sometimes continue moving in their current direction (or continue moving through the arc of a jump) while paused/pausing in multiplayer with another player in the chunk. This could result in the player becoming stuck in the terrain due to the suppressed collision rules during the paused state and the local client's authority over the local player's movement.
- Thanks to isil and Gemzo for the reports leading to finding this.
- Rather than just writing an empty lock.dat file to prevent multiple openings of the same world at one time, the game now generates a unique GUID for each process run, and writes that into the lock.dat file. This way it can never accidentally lock itself out of a world file, it will only lock other copies of the valley process out of it.
- Thanks to Tyr for reporting a strange issue on OSX that this hopefully will solve.
- All of the player rocket spells (there are 7 of them) are now more dangerous: the actual explosive shrapnel that happens when the rocket hits a wall or an enemy is damaging to everyone -- players, enemies, allies, etc. The rocket itself, which doesn't last long, won't hit players or allies; just watch out for that blast.
- This helps to differentiate rockets more from other spells that can be used at close range; these really do have to be used at some range from yourself, and helps prevent them from being overpowered.
- Thanks to madcow for inspiring this change.
Five New Monsters
- A new "small flying" enemy has been added to the game: Urban Sniper.
- This one is a re-imagining of the monster of the same name from the first game. In other words, it's sort of inspired from the first game, but a whole new monster in other respects.
- A new "large walking" enemy has been added to the game: Auroch Warrior.
- This monster walks along slowly, dragging its shield and trying to keep behind it. Very little of it is exposed, and it shoots deadly fusillades at you periodically (fortunately, these have a very low caliber, but it's still an interesting fight because of how they get angled).
- A new "large walking" enemy has been added to the game: Slug Fiend.
- This monster crawls slowly along the ground, rearing up when you are in range and firing masses of insects at you in curving arcs. These have exceptionally high caliber, so you have to dodge them.
- A new "small swimming" enemy has been added to the game: Robot Piranha.
- This robotic fish works a lot like the carp, except that it moves slower and hits harder. But, more notably, it also has a ranged fusillade sort of attack that it can use at you -- so for the first time you now face threats from in the water when you are out of the water. Expect to see more of that, based on the enemies that we've designed but not yet implemented.
- A new "large flying" enemy has been added to the game: Rocket Sentinel.
- This floating orb-like machine haunts some of the more technological areas, and fires very slow-moving miasma rockets at you. If you attack it, it responds with a volley of more rockets.
Beta .709 Water And Wind
(Released January 4th, 2013)
- The "What's New" button on the front menu used to point to the alpha change log. Fixed.
- Thanks to zespri for the report.
- Fixed a few slices that were causing issues where players couldn't actually travel up.
- Thanks to Khadgar for finding/reporting that one.
- Fixed a few more boss rooms to give players more room to fight.
- Added 26 slices.
- c4sc4 and zebramatt were largely responsible for those.
- Added a bit of graceful error handling in response to some recent strange serialization behavior (chunks writing with a lone minus sign where it should have just written 0 or something like that).
- Thanks to isil for the report and save that helped us find what we've found thus far.
- On the world map, when you walk up next to a tile that is an impasse type (that has to be destroyed), it now says "Impasse" in red text.
- No more talk of angled shots in the help section.
- Thanks to zespri for reporting that one.
- The background wall of the evil overlord's keep has now been finalized, as has the background wall of the ice age interior wall.
- Fixed a slice that would only let you pass through in one direction. Fixed.
- Thanks to jruderman for reporting that, and for the save.
- Fixed a slices that was causing fish to spawn in little water pockets above ground.
- Thanks to zespri for providing the save that finally let us find this one.
- The way that the windstorms and windstorm generators are handled are now completely different. As you approach the windstorm generator in a given chunk, then clouds start to roll in (covering the moon and sun, even, which is cool). Rain or sandstorms or snowstorms or whatever pick up, and the wind starts howling. When you destroy the windstorm generator, the storm visibly abates.
- Thanks to Pepisolo for suggesting something pretty close along these lines, and then pushing us to actually think of something interesting here. It turned out to be one of the more visually stunning bits with the sky, I think.
- Fixed an issue with certain overlord keep rooms causing the player to have to swim through lava in an impossible way.
- Thanks to lavacamorada for reporting.
- Storm dash is now completely deprecated, and does nothing even if you already have it.
- Additionally, in new worlds that are generated, there will now only be five skelebot research facilities in existence rather than six.
- Why the removal? Well, it didn't really add anything except balance problems and control issues in this game, to be frank. It was a remnant from the first game that just doesn't apply here.
- Thanks to Itchykobu for inspiring this change.
- Water Dash now works completely differently, and allows you to jump infinite times while you are in water rather than giving you any speed movement abilities.
- Previously, in Tiny maps you would wind up with two fewer skelebot research facilities on the map than you actually needed in order to get triple jump and win the game. Mea culpa! We've fixed that now.
- Thanks to Oralordos for reporting.
- Fixed a bug from the prior version where several kinds of underground caverns led back to the world map instead of where they really should have led -- affecting grounded ships in the ocean shallows, as well as mausoleums in the deep, and a couple of others.
- This fix won't fix existing chunks that are messed up, but it will prevent future chunks from being messed up even in the same world.
- Thanks to jruderman and Cinth for reporting.
Balance changes
- Light Snake and Entropy mass have had their damage cut.
- Sea Slider is now a smaller caliber spell.
Beta .708 Aggressive Angles
(Released January 3rd, 2013)
- Fixed a slice that was causing players to get stuck in the ceiling.
- Thanks to madcow and isil for reporting this one.
- Fixed a slice that was causing an issue where players couldn't actually travel up.
- Thanks to Khadgar for finding/reporting that one.
- Fixed a "Triple Jump" slice that was actually a "Double Jump" slice.
- Thanks to Oralordos for the save/report.
- Fixed several slices that required mini, but were actually completely blocking the player's path.
- Thanks to Lauro for this one.
- Fixed a couple slices that could cause you to get stuck in water without warning.
- Thanks to zespri for the save that led to this.
- 54 new various slices added to the game.
- Thanks to Coppermantis, c4sc4, gemzo and zebramatt for these!
- Fixed a couple Windstorm Generator slices that had some funky land placement that made them look odd. As well as a couple Water Blockage slices that weren't exactly blocking. :)
- Thanks to lavacamorada for reporting this.
- Fixed the game to no longer try to initialize steamworks when it's running in server mode.
- This may or may not help with an OSX issue reported by Tyr, but here's hoping!
- One of the Ice Age buildings didn't have a door! Fixed!
- Thanks to LayZboy for reporting this.
- Evil outposts are now properly automatically purified when they are next to an adjacent un-purifed tile. Basically, like caves and city halls and such, and anything else without a windstorm generator in it.
- Thanks to Vatticson for reporting.
- For some freefall nodes -- but not all kinds -- the viewport offsets were still being improperly applied even after the .707 update.
- Thanks to Vatticson for reporting.
- Previously, the logging of player death was not happening properly, which meant that the death-related achievements were not being logged properly. Fixed.
- Fixed a bug in the mercenary coin pickup achievement checking that was checking the wrong stats and thus never logging the related achievements (though it was counting merc coin pickups properly internally).
- The rate at which the date changes is now a bit different. Every other turn is still day vs night, but now it also jumps the date forward at around 20x the rate it previously did.
- The net effect here is for the game to actually progress through the stated seasons in a reasonable amount of time in one game, versus not really having time to.
- At the bottom of caverns, rather than having a tunnel that leads back to the bottom of the surface tunnels (some of which can't be climbed out of without double or triple jump anyway), it now takes you all the way back to the world map. This solves the need for suicide pills after going for perk tokens, as well as saving some time.
- Thanks to tauposaurus, among others for inspiring this one.
- Fixed an design decision that was causing the "which corrupt tiles can I enter?" logic to be needlessly confusing. It wasn't a bug per se, but some older logic that we'd put in that sounded good on paper really led to some confusing cases in practice.
- Thanks to ShaggyMoose, LaughingThesaurus, and zespri for reporting.
- Previously there was a bug where various entities would serialize to disk and then come back to life even if they had already been slated for destruction.
- This was only really apparent in perk tokens and merc coins, since those don't lose their health when they are consumed; with enemies or objects, their health would still be at zero after being consumed, and thus they would get discarded as soon as they were deserialized back from disk. But the tokens and coins would just pop back into existence.
- This was something that would happen as long as you left the chunk (or exited the game) within 30 seconds after picking up the item in question. If you took more than 30 seconds, it was just gone even under the last version.
- Thanks to madcow, Gemzo, and Itchykobu for reporting.
- Previously, when you bumped into an impasse on the world map it would only tell you the first time, period.
- Now it tells you the first time during each play session, helping to avoid confusion about what's an impasse and what is not without being annoying with every little bump into them.
- Previously, when you hit certain levels it would stop letting you blow up windstorm generators until you went and took some other action.
- For the case of the mage class tiers this was just mildly annoying, and really it was warning the players about this late because they could have gone into the castle a level earlier to get the cache if they wanted.
- For the level 21 situation, it actually could be game-halting. If you got to level 21 without destroying both stratospheric citadels, you'd just be stuck and that was that.
- Now the progression of letting you blow up windstorm generators is never halted no matter what (aside from when the trial expires), but instead the following happens:
- When you can get the mage class tiers 2, 3, 4, and 5 it starts telling you that every 5 turns (resetting itself when you log out and back in).
- Same for when you have mage classes of tier 5, but have not yet gotten both citadels.
- Same for when you've gotten the citadels but not yet the oblivion crystal, and when you've got that but not Demonaica.
- Thanks to MouldyK, khadgar, Lauro, and Boonshniggle for reporting.
Balance changes
- Updated many of the boss rooms to give players more head room to fight in.
- Thanks to Charlotte Mays for the save which showed how much trouble not being able to dodge could cause.
- Previously, the sturdiness of equipment would be random ranging from 1 to 11, but with 1-5 far more likely than the higher ones.
- As players pointed out, this made the equipment far too brittle to be used for very long in most cases. Now the equipment will always is random ranging from 5 to 16, with 5-11 being far more likely than the higher ones.
- Four achievements related to equipment sturdiness have been removed, and 5 have been added, to reflect the new equipment sturdiness ranges.
- Hytelist changes:
- Reckless Ocean has become more powerful, as well as costing less ammo now. It also has a higher caliber. Yeah, this spell was kinda weak...
- SeaMass now hits for less, and has a slightly smaller caliber.
- SeaBurst has a significantly smaller caliber.
- Thanks to Gemzo for inspiring these.
- Forgician changes
- Embershot's damage has been more than doubled.
- To compensate, Explosive Crescent and Flameout have both gotten just a bit weaker.
- Thanks to Charlotte Mays for pointing out that this class just didn't have the strength to hit anything at range very hard, most notably, bosses.
- Please let us know if this class needs further tweaking.
Monster Aggression On Death
- A penalty for dying has now been introduced, since it was rightly pointed out that there was literally none before now.
- Rather than having monster aggression be inextricably bound up in the specific turn you are on, these are now tracked separately. So on the world map it now shows both the current turn and the current "monster aggression."
- On Adept difficulty and up (the default combat difficulty), there is now a monster aggression increase of 1 (on the default world size; it's larger of a penalty on smaller maps, and less of one on larger maps) whenever a player dies.
- When this happens, one of your survivors from the resistance now chides you about dying and mentions that monster aggression was just increased via a one-liner text interjection.
- However, the scaling for monster aggression based on turns has also now been relaxed by the equivalent of about three deaths per level.
- The idea is for death to be something of a penalty when it happens, but actually a reward when you don't die.
- If you don't die at all, the game is now actually easier by about 50%.
- If you die an average of three times per level-up, the game is exactly the same as it was before this change.
- If you die more than three times per level-up, the game will get progressively nastier to you.
- More fundamentally, the idea here is not simply to make the game harder. Really, it's not to make the game harder at all. However, it is to make sure that players aren't being careless with their character's life, and to make it so that you can't play on a difficulty that is much too hard for you and just grind away at it with tons of deaths and no consequences.
- Thanks to Bluddy for suggesting the turn penalty, which morphed into this.
Retirement Of Angled Shots
The "Vastly Helpful New Control Option" in the prior release turned out to really just underscore some of the more fundamental issues with angled shooting: namely, that it's really difficult and fiddly to do, no matter how you cut it. I (Chris Park, lead developer) remember feeling the same way when I played Super Metroid, honestly; despite the presence of those shoulder buttons to aim at an angle, this was something I rarely did in that game. Too much "finger ballet," while at the same time it really wasn't needed in order to play well.
We've had enough players here in Valley 2 that didn't know about the angled-shooting options, and have still been able to play just fine. To me that says that the entire angled-shooting mechanic is superfluous, and that any enemies that require angled shots (none of which I'm aware at the moment) need to be redesigned. I might point out that the great Metroidvania title "Cave Story" does just this -- there are no angled shots in that game, either, and now I fully appreciate why. And why there have been so many complaints about the angled controls during the beta for Valley 2.
It boils down as follows:
- 1. On the one hand, if a game has functions for all sorts of complicated aiming, but you find those functions difficult or fiddly to use, those are "bad controls." It seems like the game expects you to do some finger ballet that you are not capable of doing. This is how some people have been feeling about the controls in Valley 2 because of the complexities that angled aiming brings into play.
- 2. On the other hand, if a game has limited functions for aiming, and that makes hitting enemies difficult unless you find ideal positions for yourself, then that's part of the gameplay. "Hitting enemies is hard" is not a bad thing inherently -- if hitting enemies is trivial, then in order for enemies to be a challenge it has to be a matter of your pumping shots into them like crazy. Boring. But if hitting enemies is hard, then lining up fewer skillshots to take them out can be quite satisfying.
All in all I think it's the difference between something that is simple and designed well, and something that is complex and feels fiddly to play.
Anyhow, the bottom line is that we've removed the ability to shoot at angles at all, except for for the shots that inherently move at angles (like the sines).
Related: A Reminder Of Why The Game Does Not Have Mouse Aiming
That whole mouse+keyboard thing in AVWW1 was really a bad idea, as some players pointed out to us. That sort of freedom of aiming really kills the classic Metroidvania style of a game like this, and makes it so that keyboard-only players and gamepad-only players are at a huge disadvantage. This is why we've moved down to two streamlined control schemes that are equivalent with one another: keyboard-based and gamepad-based. And yes, the tab-targeting from the first game is gone since that basically acted like a cheat at this point without free-aiming of the mouse.
Please note! We're not just taking away control options for kicks, or because we think people were "doing it wrong." But the fact remains that generally a game is built around its controls, especially as an action game. We're trying to maintain as much flexibility in the controls as we can while not making it so that people are playing fundamentally different games that we can't make universally fun. Placing wooden platforms was trivial with the mouse, and so is killing a bat. But it's incredibly frustrating with any other sort of input. When you get right down to it, what we're trying to make is a Metroidvania game, and I don't personally know of any of them that use a mouse-style of control. Hence we're going a bit more standardized with that.
The same thing applies with not having angled shots in general -- when you're trying to kill a bat, you need to first align yourself on its horizontal axis, and then fire a shot or shots into it. That's where the skill comes in. Bats (and enemies in general in this game) move far slower than they did in the first game, largely so that you have time for this sort of maneuvering. Whereas before you might have just quickly aimed your mouse cursor at a bat and pressed the "you die now" button, I don't think that this is particularly rewarding gameplay. For this kind of genre, anyhow.
Losing the mouse controls and the angled shots both have an enormous impact on balance (same with not having the shield spells that were so popular in the first game). You could argue that these things are a matter of taste and customization, and I'd have to agree -- that's why they are in the first game, and why they remain there. But these were one of the biggest ongoing challenges to balance in the first game for me, and they are things that really put large segments of the player populace at a disadvantage if they don't use them.
Here again, it comes to getting back to the roots of what we were trying to do. Yes, Terraria uses the mouse controls -- so do numerous other PC action-adventure games with a 2D sidescroller view. So do a lot of MMOs and RPGs.
In the first game we were really enticed by the allure of all those things, and so we let our design drift and become unfocused. In other words, the design tried to become all things to all people, and Environ became a world that you could come and do whatever you wanted in. That's pretty fun! But it's very difficult to make a truly compelling game that way. What we needed to do with this sequel was really focus, and make the original game we set out to do.
In terms of Mario Bros. games, what if Mario had a rocket launcher he could aim in any direction? What if he had a force field he could toggle on and off periodically at will? That might be entertaining for a bit, but that would fundamentally make a different game, I think. And I don't think a better game -- for Mario, all the enemies are designed around him not having abilities like that. So to give him those abilities means the levels would be crazy easy and hollow.
On the flip side, the game Intrusion 2 uses mechanics like aim-anywhere firing, and it's a brilliant game. All the enemies are designed around the powers that your avatar has, and so everything fits together just right. But of course the character there doesn't have the movement abilities that Mario does -- if the character there had that kind of speed and jumping ability, then I suspect its mechanics would really start to break down -- in the same way Mario would if you gave the wrong weapons to him.
What I'm saying is, games are additive in nature -- you can't just throw any old thing in there and expect it to be the same game. If you add a single new piece to Chess, you've dramatically changed that game. It doesn't matter what the piece even does.
In the case of AVWW1, we had the movement speed of Mario 3 or so, and the aim-anywhere nature of Intrusion 2. We also had control schemes that did not support aim-anywhere, and that made it so that players were playing two different games. And that meant that enemies really couldn't be balanced around either, since in some cases could aim super-precisely and in others they could not aim remotely that well. What a mess.
Again, I still think that really worked out pretty well in the main, but it's definitely a more niche experience and a bit rougher around the edges because of that. By focusing on specifically the kind of game we're actually trying to make, and not dragging in stuff from other unrelated genres if it doesn't really complement it well, we have something that's a lot tighter and more fun. It's not about taking options away from players; it's about creating one game at a time rather than a whole soup of games.
Beta .707
(Released December 21st, 2012)
- More slices
- c4sc4 and zebramatt are again responsible.
- Fixed bug where dispatch mission interface couldn't be successfully used to work with more NPCs than fit on a single page.
- Thanks to khadgar for the report.
- Fixed a bug where loading a world could result in it purifying a path to a destroyed farmland and/or abandoned town block tile. This logic was intended for loading earlier worlds but there was no version check; now there is.
- Thanks to Nanashi for the report.
- Fixed a bug where the game would display the larger of the two distances (just walking, and walking+warping) instead of the smaller when showing the range-to-mission-region for an NPC who could not reach the mission region by either method.
- Thanks to khadgar for the report.
- Fixed a bug where multiple copies of a mercenary could wind up in a particular chunk, and generally would all trail the player in a superstack of doom.
- Thanks to khadgar for the report.
- Fixed a bug that was causing equipment effectiveness to apply to all ongoing conditions on a player, which meant that their perks and inherent bonuses and anything affecting them from a general environment (freefall room, etc) were all getting messed with horribly.
- Thanks to Ipkins for the report that helped us find this.
- Fixed an issue with freefall rooms where if you had too many fall speed reductions you could actually wind up flying upwards uncontrollably when you jumped!
- Thanks to Ipkins for reporting this!
- Fixed a bug where the Rocket spells were still hitting monsters with multiple pieces of shrapnel, because they were spawned on death of the original projectile and weren't really linked to it (since it was already gone).
- Thanks to madcow for the report.
- Fixed a bug where achievements were not being properly logged to Steam.
- Put in some error checking code to hopefully fix the bug where perk tokens and mercenary coins would sometimes respawn after you had collected them and then left or died. Please do let us know if you see it again, though!
- Thanks to madcow, Gemzo, and nekobaron for reporting.
- Fixed several keyboard-navigation bugs/inconveniences with the perk selection window.
- Thanks to khadgar for reporting.
- Fixed an issue where monsters killed by certain kinds of "shrapnel" (such as from rockets) would not drop anything (health, ammo) for players to pick up.
- This was basically because of the "has this enemy been damaged by a player" logic check, that was really more appropriate in the first game. Now enemies don't take damage from any source ASIDE from players, so there's no reason to even check that anymore.
- Thanks to madcow and khadgar for reporting.
- The freefall sections no longer adjust the camera so that you're up near the top; that was untenable on a lot of screen resolutions.
- Thanks to khadgar for reporting.
- The text in conversations popups is no longer so visually spaced out; the line spacing is now 20% smaller than it was before, leading to more natural reading.
- Fixed a bug in the previous versions where the fireballs from mines was instead showing up like the blue ammo explosions. Oops!
- Monsters now do a damage popup when they are killed in one blow, or on the blow that killed them out of a multi-blow series (this was not previously the case).
- Thanks to khadgar for reporting.
- The "where are you going?" message was mistakenly being applied to some kinds of evil outpost, though not all of them. Fixed.
- Thanks to MouldyK for reporting.
Major Infusion Of Updated Music
- All of the music tracks except for the main title theme have now been finalized.
- A second Lava music track has been added to the game to provide yet more variety in the lava areas.
Vastly Helpful New Control Option
- Along with the existing control options, the following new behavior has been added:
- If you are standing still on the X axis (you _can_ be jumping or falling, in other words), then all you have to to is hold or tap upwards, then release, and you will fire in an upwards 45 degree angle until you next move on the X axis.
- If you are standing still on the X axis, and are not ducking (so you _must_ be jumping or falling, in other words), then all you have to to is hold or tap downwards, then release, and you will fire in a downwards 45 degree angle until you next move on the X axis. Even after you land.
- The idea is that this is a quick way to do angled shots while stationary without having to use the angled-shots button. Positioning yourself where you want to be, then just tapping the up key and then laying loose with a barrage of shots at an upward arc is really really easy. We didn't do it quite the same way with the downward shots (you have to be jumping/falling for this to apply) because that would have eliminated low-shots.
- This isn't an option to toggle on and off simply because it's so unobtrusive the way that it's been implemented. But if that later seems needed, we can certainly add a toggle.
- Thanks to Chemuel, zaaq, and khadgar for suggesting.
- Added in explanation of the new controls option in the "first crates" room in the start of the game.
Beta .706
(Released December 20th, 2012)
- Fixed a bug in the generation logic that could allow certain rooms in the overlord keep to become horizontally-flipped and thus impassible when you need to get the next mage class in order to proceed (thus preventing any further progress in the game at that point). Sorry about that!
- 70 more slices added.
- Thanks to Zebramatt and c4sc4 for these.
- Fixed a pretty bad bug in the previous version that was causing all vertically-oriented chunks to behave rather wrongly, and in all cases give TellTheDeveloper messages among other oddities. A piece of testing code had been left turned on by mistake.
Previous Release Notes