Blaugust Returns, Day 1


I originally started this blog on the first day of Blaugust last year, so I suppose it's somewhat fitting that I return to it on the first day of Blaugust.  I'm not really certain why, but I just haven't felt much inspiration to write in recent months.  Time for a fresh start though, and to see if I can keep things going this time around.  We shall see.

What are you hoping to get out of Blaugust this year?
 Belghast posted that question as a writing prompt for the first day of Blaugust, and it seems like a good question for me to answer.  What am I hoping to get out of this?  I'm certainly not it for the phat stacks of blog cash.  I have a day job that works just fine for me; this will only ever be a hobby.  I think I mostly want to blog as a way to think about my ideas and get them out into a more concrete form.

That's why I blog (when I do), but why Blaugust in particular?  I've found that I tend to work best with concrete goals.  That's one of the reasons that I'm a big fan of in-game achievements; they provide me suggested goals to work towards which give me sufficient structure that I'm not just flailing around wondering what to do.  Blaugust serves a similar purpose, setting a goal of one blog per day for a month.  I've done it once, but this time I'd also like to try and use that month to come up with some ongoing structure to keep me going.  One of my friends had a few suggestions for ongoing features I could write each of which could run for a year or more if done on a weekly basis.  I may try to do one or more of those and see how that goes.

In any case, Blaugust has come and the challenge has begun.  Let's do this.

Blaugust Day 2: Never Make the Same Mistake Twice

One of the things that continually impresses me about Final Fantasy XIV is that the developers are very good at learning from their mistakes. Sometimes systems don’t work quite how they were intended to at first, but improvements get made and the game develops over time. One good example of this is cutscenes.

The storyline in FFXIV includes a lot of cutscenes throughout, many of which can be fairly long. All well and good, but at first those cutscenes would often be in the middle of dungeons. If not everyone in the dungeon wants to watch the cutscene, then you end up with some members of a group either having to wait for the others to finish, or running on ahead and starting fights without the person who was watching the cutscene. The very worst offenders were the final two 8 person trials in the initial story, Castrum Meridianum and The Praetorium. It is entirely possible for a player to watch the cutscene triggered before a boss in one of those trials and find that by the time the cutscene is over the rest of the group has already defeated the boss and moved on without them.

In the content that was added in later patches however, mid-dungeon cutscenes are noticably rare. When they do exist they are usually very short. Cutscenes at the beginning of dungeons are usually quite short as well, with the long ones almost always placed at the end of dungeons where watching them won’t hold the rest of your group up. The lesson was learned and adjustments were made to avoid repeating the mistake.

I’ve been working on my crafting jobs recently, and I’ve noticed the same sort of thing there, where choices appear to have been made to address weaknesses in the crafting system or to fix elements that don’t have the expected effect.

Crafting in FFXIV is a mini-game that involves using various abilities to fill a progress bar while also trying to increase a quality bar as much as possible to improve your chance of producing a high quality verison of the item you’re making. For final products a high quality item is noticeably better than the normal version, having higher stats across the board. You have a limited number of actions to do this with as well as a limited amount of crafting points to spend on your abilities. To complicate things even further, your craft has a material condition which can vary over the course of the craft, adding an element of randomness to the process.

In theory, one needs to pay attention to material condition and react differently depending on the current condition since it heavily affects the amount of quality added by abilities. In practice, at most points in the process changing which ability you use would result in wasting the effects of previously used abilities or using too many crafting points and running out too soon. Thus, condition ends up just being something you don’t pay much attention to that occasionally greatly helps you or screws you over.

In Heavensward, all the crafting jobs get a new ability at level 53, Precise Touch, which increases item quality. This ability is identical to the very first quality increase ability you receive, Basic Touch, with two differences. Precise Touch can only be used when material condition is Good or Excellent, and it adds a level of Inner Quiet to your Stack. Inner Quiet is a status you can stack that increases the effectiveness of all you quality increase abilities.

That’s useful in and of itself, of course, but more importantly that stack can then be spent to fuel the ability Byregot’s Blessing, which increases quality by an amount dependent on the size of the Inner Quiet stack.

What this means is that any time you would normally use Basic Touch, it is better to use Precise Touch if possible. Now you need to pay attention to material condition so you can use the better ability. It’s not a huge change, but a small step to slightly more complex crafting. Of course, whether you think that’s a good thing or not will depend on whether you view it as interesting complexity or not. I’m still not entirely sure on that point, but it’s at least an attempt.

Blaugust Returns, Day 1

I originally started this blog on the first day of Blaugust last year, so I suppose it’s somewhat fitting that I return to it on the first day of Blaugust. I’m not really certain why, but I just haven’t felt much inspiration to write in recent months. Time for a fresh start though, and to see if I can keep things going this time around. We shall see.

What are you hoping to get out of Blaugust this year?

Belghast posted that question as a writing prompt for the first day of Blaugust, and it seems like a good question for me to answer. What am I hoping to get out of this? I’m certainly not it for the phat stacks of blog cash. I have a day job that works just fine for me; this will only ever be a hobby. I think I mostly want to blog as a way to think about my ideas and get them out into a more concrete form.

That’s why I blog (when I do), but why Blaugust in particular? I’ve found that I tend to work best with concrete goals. That’s one of the reasons that I’m a big fan of in-game achievements; they provide me suggested goals to work towards which give me sufficient structure that I’m not just flailing around wondering what to do. Blaugust serves a similar purpose, setting a goal of one blog per day for a month. I’ve done it once, but this time I’d also like to try and use that month to come up with some ongoing structure to keep me going. One of my friends had a few suggestions for ongoing features I could write each of which could run for a year or more if done on a weekly basis. I may try to do one or more of those and see how that goes.

In any case, Blaugust has come and the challenge has begun. Let’s do this.

AggroChat #67 – The Astebreed Show

Astebreed 2015-07-25 12-08-56-63

This week we record yet another AggroChat Game Club game featuring the game Astebreed, which is an interesting mix of strange Anime Storytelling and Bullet Hell shooter. What makes the game very unique is that you are a mech… with a sword as well as your laser weapons. As far as the story goes, I think several of us were equally confused so we rely on Tam to decode it all for us… because he apparently was able to follow it the entire way. We have a lot of conversation about the tone of the game, the boss fights, the controls that may or may not have worked… and the total package.

Since adding Grace and Thalen to the podcast they were not in the initial rotation of AggroChat picks, so we did the most gamer thing ever… and rolled some dice before the show to graft them into the rotation. That means for the month of August Grace got to pick a title and we will be playing the bird dating sim… Hatoful Boyfriend… and Kodra was happier than I have ever heard him be. He loves this game, and drove us slightly mad with it when he was playing it. Now we are going to get to experience this madness for ourselves, and I am willing to bet that Game Club Seven is going to be one of the more interesting episodes of AggroChat in our history.