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Please do not stack encounters and test your quest end to end after publishing

izatarizatar Member, NW M9 Playtest Posts: 1,161 Arc User
edited July 2013 in The Foundry
Today I have been busy trying to complete my foundry achievements, so have been trying to get a lot of foundry quests completed. I am planning on giving 500 astral diamonds to each half-way decent one I complete so I can get a foundry achievement.

Sadly I have been forced to abandon more than half of the quests I have taken! Now remember, if a quest is not completed, you do not get any feedback from the player. Thus, many of the quests are not getting as many ratings or reviews as people attempting to play them because the players cannot finish them.

The biggest culprit is that people are stacking mob encounters (making the player fight more than one encounter at a time). Sadly, the difficulty of the game is changing every patch, and it changes with level, and it changes with class. A stacked encounter which you can do easily on your level 10 rogue is probably very difficult for a level 60 rogue, and near impossible for a high level healer.

For example, the last quest I just did stacked 2 standard spider encounters. My cleric died, and then respawned with no campfire, so I used a kit. I try again. The spiders zerg me down. Now I have an injury an no way to heal it, and am facing combat I couldn't complete uninjured. So, I was forced to exit the quest.

No review, no plays, and no astral diamonds from me for that quest today! How many people who haven't been playing as long as I have had to abandon it too? We'll never know!

Another issue is untriggerable objects because they are out of line of sight; mobs that are unkillable because they are inside a wall, and things of that sort. You must play your quest after you publish it to ensure that that the story line can be completed! Published quests have different pathing AI from the foundry, and you might be surprised to find out how different things behave on the live server.

Test! Or, no reviews, no plays, and no astral diamonds for you!
Post edited by Unknown User on
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Comments

  • zagemoggazagemogga Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    With a Guardian Fighter I can handle one Death-Witch (which respawn minions and heal them while damaging you) by interrupting it with my attack every time it tries to do that until it is dead, but I had quests with 2-3 of those as one encounter. This is:

    2-3xDeath-Witch
    ~12xMinions (respawned and healed by each witch)
    ~4-5xRandom mage or somthing in the group

    The quest was/is advertised as with level 40+ you probably need two players to complete. I did it with level 25 and died 3 times without a campfire or anything. The monsters followed me up to the entrance, so I couldn't even run away.
    Tried cleric and wolf companions, cost me ~20 heal potions etc.

    No fun...
  • hercooles130uscghercooles130uscg Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    THIS is why we need a way to soft publish a quest, mark it as unlisted in the Foundry browser so we can play it in a Live Server setting, without others having to accidentally get stuck with it.

    In the mean time, If you wish to test your quest on the live servers, make sure the quest description clearly states:

    *THIS QUEST IS PUBLISHED ONLY FOR TESTING PURPOSES*
    AI pathing elements are different on the live server, so this quest is published only to allow testing of the pathing. DO NOT PLAY this quest or rate/review. Thank You.

    If your testing a quest that is already published, create a duplicate, and rename it to include the TEST identifier. that alone will scare away most players, and since it is a separate quest from the one that is published, it's ratings will not affect your published quest.
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  • tilt42tilt42 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    This comes from a typical behavior whenever people make quests for anything at all, really. The natural instinct is to think that your quest needs to be challenging, but the author rarely thinks about why this is or what it will accomplish. The author also doesn't have a realistic image in his mind of how this will work in practice.

    There are certain tell-tale signs that you are about to enter a mediocre to poor quest. One of them is stacked encounters. They can be used well, but in my experience rarely are.
  • gerricktriergerricktrier Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 1
    edited May 2013
    tilt42 wrote: »
    This comes from a typical behavior whenever people make quests for anything at all, really. The natural instinct is to think that your quest needs to be challenging, but the author rarely thinks about why this is or what it will accomplish. The author also doesn't have a realistic image in his mind of how this will work in practice.

    There are certain tell-tale signs that you are about to enter a mediocre to poor quest. One of them is stacked encounters. They can be used well, but in my experience rarely are.

    Actually, that's interesting information to note. Personally, I've been doing quests on characters I have - which right now is a 26 cleric, 25 guardian fighter, and a 15 control wizard. I had started using mutliple mob encounters simply because with those characters at the time, anything less felt very trivial - 2 standard pulls on a level 26 cleric isn't something I sweat.

    I'll have to rethink this and down-tune my quest a bit I think. It's worth nothing that given the foundry tools, the buggy author character with poor gear and no companion, it's not uprising there are some very difficult encounters. Things like The Draconis Pub are very popular because they spawn rooms full of silvers.

    I did however play test my quest immediately after I published it and proved that I could solo it, and that it was working, for what that's worth :)
  • viktormonsamaviktormonsama Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 42
    edited May 2013
    Working on my first Foundry Quest, and this is good notes to remember, I constantly worry that the encounters will be too easy and/or boring.

    What would be the best leveled character to test the combat with, though? It'd be nice to have one go-to test level.

    Also, soft launch, or be able to share a beta version with people in your friendslist or something, would be incredibly helpful
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  • izatarizatar Member, NW M9 Playtest Posts: 1,161 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    A level 60 healing cleric is the best to test difficulty with. Their DPS is really low, so hard encounters that heal themselves are quite difficult.

    Also, as far as quests like the Pub go, remember that the Founders got souped-up gear and perks that make them much more powerful especially at lower levels. Most of the plays so far are from founders. New players are going to have a harder time, and need to do them in a group. I still expect those types of quests to be popular simply because guilds can use them to powerlevel 5 toons at a time; however that doesn't mean they will play your hard quest, since they already have their own.
  • thunderspankerthunderspanker Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users, Silverstars Posts: 713 Bounty Hunter
    edited May 2013
    so do Himmelville, and the next three quests in the campaign. all count, all count for the daily, and the only stacked encounter is for effect, and in no way difficult.. its right by a campfire. lol. and then you actually have to trigger it. Otherwise, just bring a bag of popcorn, and dont play it in the dark if you scare easy.. :)
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  • evakaneevakane Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    To those who are complaining about difficulty, there are two aspects to consider on this.

    1.) The author has very limited control over the difficulty scaling of their quests, at least right now.

    2.) Many authors create adventures that are simply not intended for solo play.

    So basically, if the adventure is meant to be solo'd you won't find too much encounter stacking, if it's intended for small or full groups you will. Personally, I always include in the description what I recommend to enjoy the adventure. I would recommend everyone do likewise, but recommendations for completion is not its own required field (though I feel it should be).

    So may I humbly suggest that instead of trying to persuade people to alter their adventures to make them an easy solo for everyone, perhaps request that the authors give a recommendation for completion, and go even a step further and ask Cryptic to put in a recommendation field that will also be searchable.
    izatar wrote: »
    A level 60 healing cleric is the best to test difficulty with. Their DPS is really low, so hard encounters that heal themselves are quite difficult.

    This just won't work. First, why would anyone run a healing build, with healing abilities to solo? Play to your strengths, if you're a healing cleric who goes into a dungeon with no one to heal, well, even the most dedicated <font color="orange">HAMSTER</font> probably wouldn't tolerate the slowness of that scenario for long.

    So lets say that I tune my adventure for a healing cleric. Then everything else will roll it with no sense of challenge at all. Even a cleric, who wisely arranged themselves to put out at least moderate damage will steam roll the place.

    I don't discount the possibility I might make a solo adventure that you will enjoy (or not enjoy, whichever.. lol), but when I have a vision of a quest that I want to build and play that's what I make. I won't compromise that particular quest by trying in vain to make it solo friendly while still trying to maintain some level of challenge for multiple characters, it can't happen with the things we currently have to work with. If we could make ground markers spawn or not based on who or better yet how many are in the group, then perhaps we could do more to accommodate different size groups, but at present I can't think of a good way to do that.
  • tilt42tilt42 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    evakane, your post reveals that your expectations for this game are not in line with the developers. Why would anyone run a healing build with healing abilities to solo at level 60? Because Neverwinter is primarily a solo MMO, that's why. It might not be your playstyle, but that doesn't make your playstyle right or wrong.

    I have played many Foundry quests that were specifically built for solo play (I don't play group quests. It's just not my thing), and many of them stacked encounters routinely, as in just about every encounter. Also, a Foundry quest with no warning about it being a group quest in the description is assumed to be a solo quest and should be judged as such.

    This discussion is about solo content. For group content all bets are off, and if that's what you want to discuss as regards to stacking, I don't think you're in the right thread.
  • kamaliiciouskamaliicious Member, NW M9 Playtest Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    izatar wrote: »
    The biggest culprit is that people are stacking mob encounters (making the player fight more than one encounter at a time). Sadly, the difficulty of the game is changing every patch, and it changes with level, and it changes with class. A stacked encounter which you can do easily on your level 10 rogue is probably very difficult for a level 60 rogue, and near impossible for a high level healer.
    Someone sent me a link to a vid of a group doing content that was exactly that as an xp farm. 50 solo ogres. They gain about a level a run of the map and since the penalty for dying is insignificant they don't care if they die, the respawn point is there anyway so rejoining the battle is as simple as respawning.
  • ruinedmirageruinedmirage Member Posts: 440 Bounty Hunter
    edited May 2013
    tilt42 wrote: »
    evakane, your post reveals that your expectations for this game are not in line with the developers. Why would anyone run a healing build with healing abilities to solo at level 60? Because Neverwinter is primarily a solo MMO, that's why. It might not be your playstyle, but that doesn't make your playstyle right or wrong.

    I have played many Foundry quests that were specifically built for solo play (I don't play group quests. It's just not my thing), and many of them stacked encounters routinely, as in just about every encounter. Also, a Foundry quest with no warning about it being a group quest in the description is assumed to be a solo quest and should be judged as such.

    This discussion is about solo content. For group content all bets are off, and if that's what you want to discuss as regards to stacking, I don't think you're in the right thread.

    I could be interpreting evakane's post wrong, but I think the point was that a healing cleric is the most mundane and useless build in all of Neverwinter , including GWF. To get a positive review, even the worst character (a solo healing cleric) must be able to at least complete the quest. In that case, imagine what a solo rogue would think of that same quest (too easy, no fun), or better yet, ANY type of group doing the same quest.

    Some quests are simply built for groups, and stacked mobs is one way to increase difficulty. Some quests you might even find are built only for a Foundry author's friends to play through, complete with names and expected classes being referenced. In general, if you can't solo the mobs, get a friend. Likewise, the authors should say something in the desc like, "It's dangerous to go alone, take a friend!" if there are multiple stacks.
  • angryspriteangrysprite Member Posts: 4,982 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    tilt42 wrote: »
    This comes from a typical behavior whenever people make quests for anything at all, really. The natural instinct is to think that your quest needs to be challenging, but the author rarely thinks about why this is or what it will accomplish. The author also doesn't have a realistic image in his mind of how this will work in practice.

    There are certain tell-tale signs that you are about to enter a mediocre to poor quest. One of them is stacked encounters. They can be used well, but in my experience rarely are.

    Yes. When I go in if I see a stacked encounter the first time I won;t even bother wasting my time: bail. I just hit the "exit" on the minimap and abort the quest from my journal. It is the "red flag" (for me) that this is a potion-spamming hack-n-whack combat-fest. Thank you, but no thank you. Just not my play style.

    In (somewhat) defense of new authors: there is a major learning curve, not just in the Foundry tools, but also how the play experience translates from Foundry Preview to Live. These authors will learn quickly (I hope).

    As to "test" publishing - When I do it, I just change the title of the quest to [Incomplete - Don't bother] - then I go in and test. Now that I have a level 33 Cleric I have a decent character to test with. I'll start my making the quest relatively easy. Then if I feel more challenge is needed, I'll go in and add a bit more. Rarely the other way around.

    When I do publish a "final" version I always go conservative on challenge level. Then if I get a lot of reviews that say it felt too easy, I'll ramp it up a notch or two. At least this way I'm getting completed plays and reviews I can use.

    As to the OP: I concur completely. Not only is to too difficult to deal with stacked encounters at mid-range to higher levels, it's completely unnecessary.
  • angryspriteangrysprite Member Posts: 4,982 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    evakane wrote: »
    2.) Many authors create adventures that are simply not intended for solo play.

    THEN SAY SO.

    This is the problem - if you create a quest for multiplayer - SAY SO.
    I've been doing Foundry works for almost three years in STO and I am fortunate to be a silverstar so I got a head-start on it here. Sure, the author has no control over power-balancing, but the author DOES have control over which encounters he chooses.

    Lokk, the old mantra that only one in every few hundred Foundry works will be really god is true - not because a story sucks, or because there are bugs (i.e. Encounters stuck in the walls or something) - but because the Author doesn't have a clear understanding of how his work will affect the majority of players.

    Now allow me to qualify the above statement: "good" is relative. So the above statement is from the perspective of the player, not the quest itself. What's great for me may suck for you. We all understand that. All I'm saying is this: use your Quest description *wisely* - be as verbose as possible. Tell players exactly what they're in for.

    Sure, a lot of players won;t read all that stuff - but those are the players looking for straight-action and loove the idea of impossible-to-kill stacked encounters. But there are even more people who *will* read the description in full as they go through the list Quest-shopping the Foundry.
  • angryspriteangrysprite Member Posts: 4,982 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I could be interpreting evakane's post wrong, but I think the point was that a healing cleric is the most mundane and useless build in all of Neverwinter , including GWF. To get a positive review, even the worst character (a solo healing cleric) must be able to at least complete the quest.

    This is how I took the comment also - and I think it's a good suggestion, except I'd change one thing: the perfect "testing" character on like would be a mid-range DC - around level 30-40 - primarily because a level 60 character will (often) have the best gear and more powerful abilities. However a mid-range DC (or any class) is at their weakest in terms of the context of this discussion, because they may certainly not have the best gear for their level and are still in "transition" from start to finish leveling-wise.

    Seriously, though: I did a Foundry quest where every encounter spawned AFTER you walked past it - and they were too close to each other - so you run along, encounter spawns then chases you (you don;t notice) by the time they catch up to you you've already triggered the next batch or two - get three stacks going. Then there was the end encounter - three stacked "medium" difficulty and a Hero Hulk - it took me six (SIX!) fricken' respawns to complete it. (I was only level 26 at the time). I would have bailed, but I was determined to finish just so I could rant in the review box.

    Now: one stacked encounter and I bail.
  • maddllamamaddllama Member Posts: 223 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    Problem is, even if you say it is group content, which I do in all of mine, nobody reads the quest description. Just a fact of the Foundry, my friends.

    Just remember, you will never please everyone with your quests. Out of 5K reviews, 2500 say there is not enough combat and 2500 say it is too hard. Balance it out with other things... like a great story or detailed map. Grab your stars that way. I prefer moderate combat that a player can survive so that they can actually put in a review.

    Once again, remember that you WILL NOT please everyone.
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  • tilt42tilt42 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I've received a ton of reviews for my quests by now (my featured quest had over 700 pages of reviews at last count), and I've noticed a trend. Some players say the quests are easy (and very rarely do they say they are too easy), while a lot of players say that the quests are challenging, as in the good kind of challenging. Some say the quests are very hard. None that I have noticed expressed any frustration over the difficulty, except from one player who used his review to give me one star and complain about the weakness of the GWF.

    I almost never stack encounters. When I do, it's to make an encounter stand out, and I'm always very careful about it. Stacking an easy encounter with a standard one can be fine with some care and as an exception, but expect this fight to be the hardest in your quest (the spider fight in A Hidden Blade is like this, for example). In The Lanaar Legacy I stack encounters regularly in the outdoors street section of the quest, but this is because the player is accompanied by friendly soldiers in almost every fight there. Only one of the fights where the player is alone is stacked, and that's two easy encounters (don't underestimate these! They can be brutal at high levels).

    So take this into consideration: If my quests, featuring a minimum of encounter stacking, are called "very challenging" by a large amount of players, what does that tell you about quests that feature plenty of stacking?
  • raphaeldisantoraphaeldisanto Member Posts: 402 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I tend to err on the side of non-challenging combat when I design an adventure. My adventures are primarily story-based, heavy on the dialogue and light on the combat.
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  • staalkbhstaalkbh Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    One thing I did instead of stacking encounters is having them pop after the first encounter dies, that way you don't have to fight several groups of mobs at the same time, but you don't have any downtime for the next wave.
    While I have heard some of my fights are pretty hard on 60, I have had some people run through them and find them challenging, but also quite expensive health potion wise.

    I have spent most of my time in foundry since the 27th last month, and my highest character is lvl 18, so testing out stuff for higher levels does get tricky.
  • tfangeltfangel Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    This is the problem - if you create a quest for multiplayer - SAY SO.

    I agree with this so much. Quests should be clearly marked if for solo or group play, and should be searchable as such.

    I played a quest that started out seeming good, but then escalated to the point where the tavern area had so many major mobs all attacking me that i ended up dead a lot. Felt like a group quest, but no mention. The reviews said it was a harder quest, but not why.
  • dsadsafdsafdsadsadsafdsafdsa Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Knight of the Feywild Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    Is there a way to find your own foundry quest? I've been trying but it doesn't seem to show up :"(
  • zovyazovya Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users, Neverwinter Knight of the Feywild Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I stacked 2 easy groups for my "boss room". I rather have more action than a single meat bag to chip away at.
  • evakaneevakane Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    tilt42 wrote: »
    This discussion is about solo content. For group content all bets are off, and if that's what you want to discuss as regards to stacking, I don't think you're in the right thread.

    My comments pertain to this thread just fine Tilt. So go pretend to moderate somewhere else... As for me wanting to discuss group content, did you even read what I wrote? I offered the OP insight and a possible remedy to his complaint regarding difficulty that would also help the Foundry content be more searchable and organized.
    tilt42 wrote: »
    evakane, your post reveals that your expectations for this game are not in line with the developers. Why would anyone run a healing build with healing abilities to solo at level 60? Because Neverwinter is primarily a solo MMO, that's why. It might not be your playstyle, but that doesn't make your playstyle right or wrong.

    I play how I want, when I want, and I don't really care if it's "not in line with the developers." You clearly don't have any idea what my playstyle is about, and your assertion that the developers don't want people to expect this game to actually be an MMO is contradicted not only in the game itself, but also in the changes that have come into play since the beginning of closed beta. So I really don't think you are qualified to second guess either of these items.

    Now, on the matter of the 60 healing cleric, which is not a solo arrangement, I'm sorry but it's not, if it were they wouldn't be discouraged with that -40% self healing debuff.. Let me try this another way, since my clean concise english isn't getting the job done. Try this:

    A man is building himself a new deck, and you wander up. You see that the man is standing there trying to drive a 10 penny nail into a deck board with a table spoon, while a perfectly good hammer is sitting not 2 feet from him, looking lonely and unused.

    Would you:

    A.) Take the man to the hardware store, and complain that the nails they sold him were not nearly sharp enough for him to drive them in with his tablespoon? Then when they looked at you like you were a nutcase, picket the store because they wouldn't sharpen their nails so this poor fool would have an easier time building his deck with his tablespoon?

    or

    B.) Tell the guy to put the tablespoon back in the kitchen and use the fraqin hammer?

    or

    C.) Tell the guy to take that tablespoon in the kitchen, use it to cook you a good meal, and you'll use the hammer to work on the deck.

    The right tool for the job, that's all I'm saying...
    tilt42 wrote: »
    I have played many Foundry quests that were specifically built for solo play (I don't play group quests. It's just not my thing), and many of them stacked encounters routinely, as in just about every encounter. Also, a Foundry quest with no warning about it being a group quest in the description is assumed to be a solo quest and should be judged as such.

    In my post I think I make myself pretty clear on my thoughts regarding proper advertising. That still assumes the person playing actually takes the time to read what's written there, and if not it's no ones fault but their own.
    THEN SAY SO.

    This is the problem - if you create a quest for multiplayer - SAY SO.

    So you are in full agreement then?
    evakane wrote: »
    Personally, I always include in the description what I recommend to enjoy the adventure. I would recommend everyone do likewise, but recommendations for completion is not its own required field (though I feel it should be).

    ....Does this really need commentary?
  • tilt42tilt42 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I've had horrible luck with stacked encounters today. I've been trying to play as many quests as possible in the For Review section (I feel for the poor people stuck in there), but 3 out of 4 quests, despite seemingly listed as solo quests or with no additional information, abuse stacking so horribly that the quests are pretty much unplayable. In the last one the author had stacked 3 Hard encounters on top of each other, with a Standard encounter on top of that again just in case the Hard ones were too easy. I had to exploit the game's limitations to even have a hope of surviving all of that.

    What is it that makes people think they know better than Cryptic when it comes to game balance? What is it that makes someone go "oh surely this can't be right. This Hard encounter doesn't look hard at all" and then smack down multiple of them on top of each other to compensate? What's with the hubris?

    I dropped most of those quests when I saw where they were heading, then sent a mail to the authors to explain the problems with their quests. It's a shame too. A couple of them looked absolutely brilliant. The one I did get through I rated low with a clear description of why. Unplayable, and worst of all unfun.

    I hope this was just bad luck and that it doesn't mark a trend among authors. If I have to blindly stumble into stacked encounters in 3 of 4 quests forever, I'm going to seriously lose all my interest in playing other people's content, and that would be a bloody shame.
    Is there a way to find your own foundry quest? I've been trying but it doesn't seem to show up :"(

    What on earth does that have to do with this thread?
  • gemstrikegemstrike Member Posts: 127 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    tilt, I understand that you're frustrated about bad quests, but please stop going on a holy war against stacked encounters. It is a perfectly valid technique to use, if it is used correctly. If an author wants to make a quest that is solo-unfriendly, that doesn't make them a hack, or mean that they arrogantly believe they know better than Cryptic, or anything else like that. I use it my quests. And one of them is solo intended. Now on the solo one I make sure they are spaced out so the stacking only becomes a problem if you are a fool and rush the final room. Take it slow with a tiny bit of strategy, and you can do it just fine. Another member of my guild also uses stacked encounters, and again, perfectly doable solo without guzzling potions like an addict. On my second quest in the graveyard chain I warn in the description that it extremely hard for a solo player, and yet solo players till do it and like it.

    So yes, I sympathize with you on badly designed quests that aren't fun. But that's not because they have encounter stacking, it's because they are badly designed quests. Encounter stacking is just one element.

    Oh, and Cryptic does want us doing content in groups. Otherwise they wouldn't have a party system or dungeons :)

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  • tilt42tilt42 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    The quests I played today didn't seem intended to be solo-unfriendly. They simply appeared to have been made by someone who didn't know how encounter balance works in the game. They did not give the slightest indication they were meant for groups, and the almost random mix of doable encounters and absolutely ridiculous ones in short order showed that there was little method to this madness.
  • wininoidwininoid Member Posts: 534 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I don't think many new authors do it on purpose. When you test, you default to a level 1 guardian. Everything is super easy, so you throw more encounters in until it feels right. Then higher level players get hammered. It happened when I made my first one.

    But now you can change your test character. I suggest (and use) a level 31 cleric for testing difficulty under worst case scenario. They did say they would and could add higher level testing specs, so hopefully they'll keep going up with them.
  • nezroy123nezroy123 Member Posts: 165 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    Is there a way to find your own foundry quest? I've been trying but it doesn't seem to show up :"(

    Search by shortcode, it seems to be the only search option working for newly published or republished quests (within the last few days). The shortcode is the NW-123485etc ID that shows up in the summary/overview area in the first tab in the Foundry.
    Quests: Fate of the Bonnie Kate (NW-DE6K6H63Q)
  • boydzinjboydzinj Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    Actually, that's interesting information to note. Personally, I've been doing quests on characters I have - which right now is a 26 cleric, 25 guardian fighter, and a 15 control wizard. I had started using mutliple mob encounters simply because with those characters at the time, anything less felt very trivial - 2 standard pulls on a level 26 cleric isn't something I sweat.

    I'll have to rethink this and down-tune my quest a bit I think. It's worth nothing that given the foundry tools, the buggy author character with poor gear and no companion, it's not uprising there are some very difficult encounters. Things like The Draconis Pub are very popular because they spawn rooms full of silvers.

    I did however play test my quest immediately after I published it and proved that I could solo it, and that it was working, for what that's worth :)

    Some mobs get more powerful at the higher levels. Believe it or not, 26-ish is not too high. One of the Mind Flayer "hard" encounters do not start getting hard until about level 30. Likewise, I also think SOME people may want EZMODE all the time. Inversely, you may be a pro at your character and have all the uber purple epics for your level - while someone else may be new and have whites and green equipment SEVERAL levels lower than themselves and the mobs. Lastly, I would also suggest if you plan on grouping "HARD" encounters in your foundry quest you tell people upfront it is difficult and may make a suggested size of 2+companions. I created a foundry mission where I could solo it... at level 31 and 32, but i purposely put in the description that it was a difficult, fight intensive, and meant for a group. I also mentioned it was hard and I recommended 3+Companions. Would you believe all the one stars that i talked to... were solo players. Go figure. Reading and comprehension for the win?
  • gstonecleavergstonecleaver Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 3 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    tilt42 wrote: »
    evakane, your post reveals that your expectations for this game are not in line with the developers. Why would anyone run a healing build with healing abilities to solo at level 60? Because Neverwinter is primarily a solo MMO, that's why. It might not be your playstyle, but that doesn't make your playstyle right or wrong.

    I have played many Foundry quests that were specifically built for solo play (I don't play group quests. It's just not my thing), and many of them stacked encounters routinely, as in just about every encounter. Also, a Foundry quest with no warning about it being a group quest in the description is assumed to be a solo quest and should be judged as such.

    This discussion is about solo content. For group content all bets are off, and if that's what you want to discuss as regards to stacking, I don't think you're in the right thread.

    tilt42, I have read the entire thread and did not see where this was intended for solo content. The suggestion that you not stack encounters and test from end to end is just advice. Testing from end to end seems solid advice for solo or group content and depending on level or difficulty desired not stacking encounters could apply to either solo or group content as well. As with all tools they will only help so much in the end its up to the craftsman to judge his work, and then the populace at large as his creation is consumed. Just my 2 cents. Peace and thanks to all the users churning out content. Thus far everything I have run has been enjoyable. Some easy some hard but still fun.
  • gerricktriergerricktrier Member, Neverwinter Beta Users, Neverwinter Hero Users, Neverwinter Guardian Users Posts: 1
    edited May 2013
    boydzinj wrote: »
    Some mobs get more powerful at the higher levels. Believe it or not, 26-ish is not too high. One of the Mind Flayer "hard" encounters do not start getting hard until about level 30. Likewise, I also think SOME people may want EZMODE all the time. Inversely, you may be a pro at your character and have all the uber purple epics for your level - while someone else may be new and have whites and green equipment SEVERAL levels lower than themselves and the mobs. Lastly, I would also suggest if you plan on grouping "HARD" encounters in your foundry quest you tell people upfront it is difficult and may make a suggested size of 2+companions. I created a foundry mission where I could solo it... at level 31 and 32, but i purposely put in the description that it was a difficult, fight intensive, and meant for a group. I also mentioned it was hard and I recommended 3+Companions. Would you believe all the one stars that i talked to... were solo players. Go figure. Reading and comprehension for the win?

    I can't say I'm surprised 26 isn't too high. What I think really caught me off guard was this idea that encounters at level 1 are much EASIER than at level 35. I think the problem was with 2 basic assumptions I had:

    1 - The developer was smart enough to make monsters scale evenly. If my level 26 can do it, so can a 45, ect.
    2 - And furthermore, as I get to higher level, I will have more tools, and more power at my disposal. This will further decrease the difficulty.

    The second piece of the puzzle is that I was chatting with my friend about my quest, and his initial feedback was that it was too easy because there was nothing really he had to CC actively to live. Without something large to kill him, it was too easy, and so version 2 with evil monsters of doom was born :)

    Obviously, this isn't the case. If I think about this in a somewhat logical manner, I would think this: If a level 1 guardian fighter with no companion and only an auto attack can solo my quest, a level 45 with a companion should have no issues. That's the dissonance that's going on right now. Also, all I have published was my very first quest, like many of the other authors on here right now. It's good that this thread is here, it let's me know I should rethink the difficulty a bit.

    My final bit of curiosity - is it possible to enable or disable spawns based on a text selection made early in the quest? That way we can establish multiple difficulties based on a dialog selection made at the start. This would let me make my nice hard 2 man quest, but still tune it down for a solo player to enjoy. I feel that is the real solution to this problem, configurable difficulties.
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