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Are detailed formulas still 'in'?

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  • Are detailed formulas still 'in'?

    Alan promised a long time ago, that very detailed formulas about every aspect of the game would be included in the online encyclopedia. I hope there will be no more guessing and begging about what actions have what effects. For example, no one ever did find out what factors drove the spying game in MOO2.

  • #2
    Well he provided that stuff in the guide for Moo1.

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    • #3
      Um, I don't think there are "exact" formulas in the game, manual, or the encyclopedia.

      I'm sure a strategy guide will document it, and I'm sure that the relevant excerpts will make their way online.

      Of course, such information is probably less than 100% accurate by the time of release, and wouldn't be accurate beyond the first patch, either.

      So, I guess you can put me in the camp of people who wish that at least some such formulae were documented in-game.
      Xentax@nc.rr.com

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      • #4
        I think knowing exact formulas is a bad idea. If things like spying were a science then the CIA would have statistically calculated how to get sufficiently accurate information about the entire world. Life just isn't like that.
        To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
        H.Poincaré

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        • #5
          Well, in most cases for MOO3, even the exact formula WOULD be ok, because there's one or more "rolls of the dice" in most if not every formula.

          So, even though the formula is exact, what you'll get on any given use of it won't be known, only the range of possible outcomes given the current values and modifiers.
          Xentax@nc.rr.com

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          • #6
            Grumbold wrote: "Life just isn't like that."

            I'm not looking at MOO3 as a simulation of life. It's a game and I DO want to know the variables affecting a particular choice I might make. For example, in Civ3 everyone hated cultural flips, but after people learned the formula involved people could plan for it intelligently. I don't care much for games where these kinds of formulae are kept like "trade secrets" of the producer.

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            • #7
              I'm not averse to knowing that if I send 10 spies then at least one ought to get through. What I hate is games that tell you "attempting X with Y has a 47% chance of success and if you add 1 more you have a 49% chance of success". Being told your chance is very poor, poor, average, above average or good would be as far as I'd want it to go.
              To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
              H.Poincaré

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              • #8
                I do not want the game to tell of my chances of sucess, just tell me how things are calculated so I can make a decision. Simple things like combat is resolved by inititive going first or attacker going first or def, what ever it is and then a rough idea of the means of determination (att - def x abc yields y chance of a hit and if hit z damage or what ever they use.

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                • #9
                  This really is a question of gamer mentality. I find myself eager to read up on formulas, but prone to disregard them entirely in the name of enjoyment. On the balance, I'd rather have them.
                  "The number of political murders was a little under one million (800,000 - 900,000)." - chegitz guevara on the history of the USSR.
                  "I think the real figures probably are about a million or less." - David Irving on the number of Holocaust victims.

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                  • #10
                    Grumbold, if the game provides you with a formula, you are free to ignore it anyway and enjoy the game the way you like.
                    If the game doesn't provide it, those who instead like to know the maths behind will have no chance to enjoy the game the way they like.

                    Even in the race creation, each attribute has its cost, and you'd like to know exactly how many point it costs to bring your growth from 0 to +1 or from +2 to +3.
                    Or would you prefer there that the interface tells you
                    "you still have lotsa points to allot"
                    "you're almost there"
                    "you gotta give up on something"
                    "this would make it too easy!"

                    huh?
                    I thik it's the same concept...
                    I don't exactly know what I mean by that, but I mean it (Holden Caulfield)

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                    • #11
                      You can't ignore a deterministic formula because knowing them will be crucial to victory (like the civ3 culture flip, where a miscalculation of 1 unit can see an entire army lost instantly when a city you have just captrured rebels.) If the odds always retain a healthy random factor and you're not precisely sure what the % chance was in the first place then I find it easier to actually immerse myself in the game rather than just number crunch. The same would apply to race creation, should MOO3 have custom point buy race picks, i.e growth of 'strong,normal,poor' not '5%,4%,3%'.

                      Strictly imo, your milage may vary. This is why I'd rather play Close Combat than, say, Diplomacy.
                      To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
                      H.Poincaré

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                      • #12
                        I'm not sure I understand you. If the formula is provided you say you can't ignore it because it's crucial to victory. OTOH, if it's NOT provided, you'll enjoy the game more? Wouldn't it still be crucial to know it? The only reason for not providing the formula is 1) to handicap the human player to make up for a weak AI and 2) to prevent scenario makers from making really great scenarios.

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                        • #13
                          If a formula is deterministic (do x and it will always work) then you can play to absolute efficiency by following those rules. If all you know is that X has a better chance than Y, but Y may still succeed, it is more fun because you have to gamble and take risks. In MOO1/2 you pretty much always knew Ship A would beat Ship B if it did it once. A planet with 10 population and a bank always produced 100 gold because its economy was utterly static with no variables. In Close Combat all the smart money would be on a Tiger knocking out a T-34 but you could never afford to get blase about it. Is that better?
                          To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
                          H.Poincaré

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                          • #14
                            Good points all around. I'll have to line up in Marione's column. I like to be able to analyze the game on a deep level, so having the formulae available somewhere is wonderful. However I do agree with Grumbold that the use of complex formulae and random elements makes the game come alive much more, and in fact for me enhances the experience by shading my calculations and forcing me to hedge my bets. I prefer wargames to chess for this exact reason.
                            He's got the Midas touch.
                            But he touched it too much!
                            Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!

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                            • #15
                              Grumbold,

                              You're just talking about random variables in the formulae. If you knew the (possibly complex) formula or algorithm that determined a Tiger or T-34 winning a battle, that would not make the battle deterministic, since the algorithm would have random variables in it.

                              Generally speaking, I abhor games that force uninformed decisions such as: Build a bank to increase money, or build a lab to increase research. Which is better to build? How many? Is either one useful? Who knows.

                              However, if it says a bank increases tax revenue by 25%, or gives you 5% interest per turn, that gives the player a deterministic formula... and makes the game better. I have seen games that did not provide this information, and they are... bad.

                              Your stated problem seems to be with deterministic formulae, and I just demonstrated how they are essential. However, you also implied that you dislike knowing any %chance of success. This is not deterministic, since its outcome cannot be predicted unless the percentage is 0 or 100. These formulae are also essential in many cases. For example, in MOO1, there was a ground combat formula, where each soldier rolled a number (rand()%100)+bonuses. The numbers were compared and the lower soldier was killed.

                              As such, if you had +100 bonuses compared to the other person, you would only need to send 1 troop; and if you had -100 bonuses, no number of troops could succeed. And if you had -20 bonuses, you would know how many troops to send to have a good chance of victory. Without the formula... what good is a +10 to troop power? Who knows. Either way you gamble and take risks, but without the formula, you're playing blindly, and might invade with a 0% or 1% chance of victory. And a game that encourages players to do stupid things is bad. You might as well send random numbers over and over until you succeed... at which point you might as well be a monkey mashing the keypad for infinite time, or until you discover the formula through brute force.

                              Even things like laser weapon damage are formulae. A laser did 1-4 damage. In other words, 1+rand()%4. But if this was taken away... you would just choose "Laser", "Phasor", "Megabolt Cannon". And which is better? Well, of course the one that sounds coolest. Or maybe the cheapest. But again, without formulae, the cost and space of the weapons should not be revealed, either... they would just be "kinda big" or "pretty expensive".

                              At any rate - MOO1 and MOO2 had published formulae in the game, integrally part of the decision-making process. Removing them would be crazy, and would singlehandedly make the game bad.

                              -Cherry
                              Last edited by Saber Cherry; November 1, 2002, 18:44.
                              -Cherry

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