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Everything posted by RikOz
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The oddest thing I've noticed in missions where you're put into a "disguise" or somebody else's body, is that there is a "hitch" in the model's gait. Like, ever seventh step or so, there's a little skip or hop. I've started to wonder if, maybe, the game engine is trying to animate the model's run based on your actual character's body model, which probably has different dimensions (particularly if it's of the opposite sex), and so something gets out of sync.
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Coleen Nelson gives Pstring missions and instructions.
RikOz replied to Hedgefund3's topic in Bug Reports
Came to post this exact thing, it just happened to me. Did a couple intro missions for her, expecting to get her "A Path Into Darkness" arc. Got this instead. -
Ouch! That's gotta hurt! This guy tried to fly away just as I hit him with the "killing blow", and he dropped crotch-first right onto the crotch of that tree:
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Okay, I designed The Thwartist's next five costumes. I may have gotten a bit carried away with this one.
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Lost Headman Blaster perusing a newspaper in The Hollows: Ha! Fred got picked up in Faultline on a moving violations charge! That's funny!
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I started playing WoW in 2008, when I finally got a computer (an iMac) that could run it. So I came in fairly early in the WotLK expansion. But I never got into raiding, so I was rather disappointed with Cataclysm because there wasn't a lot to do at max level if you weren't a raider (plus, I really preferred DPS classes/specs, and they were getting really heavy-handed in trying to get more people to play tanks and healers). I got frustrated with my #2 character, my fire mage, which I had absolutely loved during Wrath. They nerfed the hell out her survivability (which is why damn near every mage player switched to Frost during Cata). It was my first encounter with the WoW devs forgetting that a character isn't going to be spending all of their time in dungeons and raids with a tank and a healer, and needs a way to survive when solo leveling. By the time I got my seventh alt to level 85, I was bored stiff with WoW/Cataclysm, and wanted a new MMO, but being a Mac user, WoW was the only one available, as far as I knew. I commented on a message board somewhere that I wished there was another MMO that would run on a Mac, and somebody pointed me to CoH. So I came over to CoH in mid/late 2011, and it was instantly, "This is the game I've been waiting for my whole life!" I canceled my WoW sub and bought a CoH VIP sub (CoH had gone "free to play", but offered a paid sub option that had benefits). Got to enjoy the game for just over a year, and then they broke my heart and shut it down (still managed to roll 93 alts in that time, though). The shutdown announcement coincided with the launch of WoW's Mists of Pandaria expansion, so I went back for that and thoroughly enjoyed it. During MoP, my shadow priest became my new #2, replacing my fire mage, which still kinda sucked. Then Warlords of Draenor, which largely sucked but had its good points. The pre-Legion changes at the end of WoD revealed that, once again, the devs had forgotten that characters don't spend all of their time in dungeons/raids, and totally overhauled the way shadow priests worked and made them insanely frustrating for solo play. Then Legion, which I thought was freaking amazing; and Battle for Azeroth, which was somewhat less amazing. And then ... CoH was back! OMG, I dumped my WoW sub like a crazy girlfriend and made an account here on Homecoming. I was ecstatic! Then the pandemic hit, and I was stuck at home 24/7, and even I can only play the same game so many hours a day for so many months. And I actually burned myself out a bit because I rolled so many alts in so short a time period (both resurrecting old characters from Live, and new character ideas pouring into my brain) that I ended up running the same low-level content too many times in too short of a time frame. So I took a break and went back to WoW to catch the tail end of the Battle for Azeroth and the beginning of Shadowlands. Shadowlands officially killed WoW for me. In every previous expansion, no matter how good or bad, I had always been able to count on my favorite aspect to be good and fun: Questing. I love questing. I love following and participating in an ongoing story. And I thought the questing in Shadowlands sucked. Did. Not. Enjoy. And then I got to max level, and I swear there were immediately six (I exaggerate...slightly) different currencies I had to start farming. I gave it a couple months, and then I was out for good. I belong here.
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Then we're the same age :) My first WoW PvP experience was entering a BG (probably Warsong Gulch) on my tauren hunter, having no idea what to expect. I got dumped in, mid-battle, and immediately found myself beset by a gnome rogue who stun-locked me while racing in tight little circles around my feet. Aside from the stunlock, this was during WotLK when hunters still couldn't attack targets within five (ten?) yards, so I couldn't have hit him anyway. I also eventually found PvPers in general to be a rather toxic crowd, and I didn't like being in that environment. Not all of them, of course. I actually got murdered by a gentleman, once. I was doing the PvP daily quests on the Isle of Thunder on my human ret paladin. While I was fighting a crowd of NPCs, an orc warrior strolled up. He stood aside while I killed the NPCs, and then continued to wait while I healed myself up. Only once I'd healed up did he attack me. And to top it off he didn't camp my corpse :D When I still ran dungeons, I could always tell when the tank was a PvPer, because they always made the same mistake. Namely, forgetting that the PvP tactic of running in circles and jumping up and down utterly fails to confuse the dungeon boss's AI the way it can confuse a human opponent. So they'd have the boss spinning around in circles, which is exactly what you don't want the boss doing in a dungeon.
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The test isn't specific to CoX. I was thinking of a couple possible scenarios: A game that allows "friendly fire", and you unintentionally kill a teammate or otherwise friendly target. A game that isn't specifically a PvP game, but allows open-world, free-for-all PvP. An example would be Diablo II, which was essentially a single-player game, but had the option of playing online, and anybody could choose to attack anybody. So you might simply be playing online for the social aspect, or the ability to trade items with other players, and not be interested in PvP at all, but you could still be attacked and killed (and have some of your stuff taken). In that situation, the killed player did not "volunteer" to get killed. I "involuntarily" killed somebody once in WoW. I didn't play on a PvP server, but there were certain areas in the game that offered certain currency rewards and accepting the quests there would automatically flag the player for PvP. At the time I was doing those quests, it was "old content" and the currency rewards were small, so there weren't ever many players there. But the unspoken norm was that people were just there to get in, quickly do the quests, and get out, and players of opposite factions generally stayed out of each other's way and did not attack each other. But you still had to fight NPC enemies. So this one time, in a completely freak coincidence of timing, I was tab-targeting NPCs and hitting them with ranged attacks, when an "enemy" player came flying past on his flying mount. I never saw him coming, and he probably never saw me, but the timing was just exactly right so that, instead of my tab-target selecting the intended NPC, it selected the other player just as he appeared in my vision, and my following ranged attack one-shot killed this much lower-level player. I imagine he was all "WTF just happened?" I felt so bad about it that I noted the character's name and then rolled an opposite-faction character so that I could drop him an in-game e-mail to apologize.
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Hmm. The wording on this question is ambiguous: "The involuntarily killing of other player characters should not be part of the game." Does "involuntarily killing" refer to, "Oops, I didn't mean to kill that guy" or that the dead guy did not want to PvP?
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Bravo! Particularly for the Rush reference. My all-time favorite band since 1980. Mind if I share this on the Geddy Lee/Alex Lifeson Fan Club Facebook pages?
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Blood Brother Slammer in The Hollows: "No, she didn't say that. What makes you think she said that? Did she say something?" A "Suspicious Citizen" in First Ward. This isn't worrying at all: "You always hurt the ones you love, and I love you so, so much." (No idea who they were talking to. I didn't see the NPC, I just spotted the line in my chat box.)
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Indeed, I'm not a fan of "artificial" constraints that are only there to increase the playtime/logged-in time. I mean, really, this having to take a tram from zone to zone in a game universe where people can fly under their own power stretches credulity until you realize it's entirely because of loading screens. Taking the tram accounts for the loading screens in a way that flying to a zone border and then waiting through a loading screen doesn't. I recall reading that one thing that immediately set World of Warcraft apart from the competition was the absence of loading screens between zones. You could simply walk straight from one zone to the next with no waiting; the only loading screens were when you traveled between continents (and later, different dimensions), or entered instanced content. The only comparable travel issue in WoW was that, in the early days of using flight paths/"taxis", you could only fly one stage at a time. Take a flight from A to B, then another from B to C, and so on until you reached your destination. But they had changed that before I started playing that game, so that, now, you just have to pick your destination (or the closest flight point to it, if you haven't yet "discovered" a flight point in your destination zone) and the game will calculate the best route to take all in one go. I've had the same thoughts. Even with mission maps, there are certain rooms that almost never contain enemies or objectives. I'm also continually surprised at the utter lack of utilization of the buildings in Founders Falls. In over three years on Homecoming, and at this point having more than fifty alts of high enough level to spend time in FF, I have encountered exactly ONE mission, on one occasion, that has sent me to a building door in FF. Every mission I've obtained from a FF contact either sends me to buildings in different zones, or sends me to caves or sewers in FF. I've accepted alignment tip missions while in FF, and if the mission requires entering a building, it sends me scampering off to a different zone. Any radio missions I've accepted in FF strictly send me to caves or sewers. The only explanation I can come up with is that FF appears to be primarily a residential zone, and there are no "apartment building" maps. There aren't many "commercial" buildings at all, and certainly no warehouses.
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Directional indicators for contacts/targeted entities
RikOz replied to biostem's topic in Suggestions & Feedback
There are some bugged ranged effects--particularly noticeable when fighting Council--that come from a completely wrong direction. Like, the Council hoverbot directly in front of you fires a rocket at you and the rocket comes screaming in from somewhere off to the side. -
There are a fair number of other missions--some vigilante alignment missions for example--that have you planting bombs that you have to "find" first.
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Many blaster secondaries include two or more melee attacks, and in most cases at least one of them will be a Melee AoE.
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One of my alts, "Seahawk", was a professional football player, but his sudden mutations disqualified him from the league:
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It's because she (Sunsweet, my dual blades villain) is happiest when she's stabbing: Mission entry text popup: "The long walk to this dump has made you angry. Most folks don't like you when you're angry. Most folks don't like you when you're happy either." Also: Luddite Friar: Figure 1 shows the difference between a 'Good Protest' and a 'Bad Protest.' Luddite Friar: The Bad Protest is the one with all of the head injuries.
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Alt #121 is my second villain inspired by Nanowar of Steel's song, "Norwegian Reggaeton" Here is "Nordico Latino" (Dark Blast/Tactical Arrow blaster).
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Well, this one is nothing spectacular, but I like the look I got. I also could not get the name I wanted. There was a rather irritating argument going on in General the other night, involving math, and somebody interjected, "Friends don't let friends use crystal math." I thought "Crystal Math" sounded like a great name, but what powers? Ah! Ice Melee + Stone Armor with the Crystalline appearance! Then for the "math" part I was going to add that Matrix aura. But, as I said, the name was already taken. Sooooo ... here's "Sovite" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovite) Oh yeah! He's Alt #120 :D