Difference between revisions of "Experimentation Mechanics (Game Mechanics)"

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The experimentation effects above are listed from least favorable to the most favorable.  The least favorable type are critical failures. Failure events (and other types of failures) will actually reduce the experimentation percentage meter's value by the listed amount times the amount of points spent in that line. This will cause the player to have to spend more points to recover from this or just suffer from a lower stat item than what they would normally have been able to create. If a player for example, spent 5 points and got a Failure event, they would suffer a reduction of the line by 35. Positive events such as great success will increase the experimentation percentage meter's value by the listed amount per each point allocated to the experimentation line.  For example a player spends 5 points and obtains a great success roll, the player now gains a bonus to the line of 35%.
 
The experimentation effects above are listed from least favorable to the most favorable.  The least favorable type are critical failures. Failure events (and other types of failures) will actually reduce the experimentation percentage meter's value by the listed amount times the amount of points spent in that line. This will cause the player to have to spend more points to recover from this or just suffer from a lower stat item than what they would normally have been able to create. If a player for example, spent 5 points and got a Failure event, they would suffer a reduction of the line by 35. Positive events such as great success will increase the experimentation percentage meter's value by the listed amount per each point allocated to the experimentation line.  For example a player spends 5 points and obtains a great success roll, the player now gains a bonus to the line of 35%.
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Note on critical success/failures:  Critical Failure and Amazing Success events fall outside the typical success events in that they are purely dependent on the Random Roll portion of the process. Risk has no effect on the chance of these occurring.
  
 
==Source References==
 
==Source References==

Revision as of 12:57, 16 May 2008




Game Mechanics - Experimentation Mechanics

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Effects of Experimentation


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Experimentation Overview

Experimentation is the process by which a player increases the statistics on crafted items.

Almost every item that can be experimented on has stats . These stats are tied to particular experimentation categories. For example, Wind generators have two categories: Experimental Efficiency (tied to extraction rate) and Experimental Storage (tied to hopper size).

The experimental categories are displayed as percentages between 0% and 100%. The player experiments by allocating experimentation points of which whose quantity is determined by having experimentation modifiers. Every 10th value increase in experimentation modifiers, adds 1 experimentation point to the player. The success type of the experiment ("good success", "great success", "moderate failure") determines how much improvement (or deterioration) is applied to the experimentation percentage. For example, a "great success" increases the category + 7% for every point you spent; spend 5 points and get a great success, and the percentage increases by 35%.

Stats on in-game items have a minimum value (at 0% experimentation) and a maximum value (at 100%). The actual value of the stat is calculated using a linear scale between these two points and the experimental percentage you reached. You take the minimum stat value and add the stat range (Max - Min) times the experimental percentage.


For example:

Stat = [Base value at 0% experimentation] + ( [ Increase ] x [Experimental Percentage])

To determine the Mass bonus gained from experimenting we take the base amount that the item starts with and plug in the maximum amount that it can be increased by along with the value we experiment the item to. The result is as follows:

X-Wing Blueprint: Mass = 97500 + (5000 x E)

with E = Experimental Percentage
and 5000 = value of the item at 100% experimentation or in other words 5000 x 1.0 if E =100%.


The limits on the "best" item you can make is determined by the hard-coded maximum at 100% experimentation,and resource quality. Resource stats determine both the maximum experimentation percentage and (along with the assembly success) the starting experimentation percentage.


The Experimentation Window

After the initial assembly, a player is prompted to choose the option to experiment on an item if they are near a crafting station and are using a specialized tool. If the player chooses to experiment at crafting screen 4, they are then moved on to crafting screen 5 which is the allocation of experimentation points. On this screen there will be shown a bar to the leftmost, which contains the grouping of experimentation points available to be used.


Allocation Bar and Experimentation Percentage Meter

In the middle are the allocation bars and the experimentation percentage meters under them. The allocation bars are what players use to place the points into. These blocks are typically measured by the amount of experimentation percentage that the player fills up in the experimentation percentage meter under it. For every 10% filled in the experimentation meter, an experimentation allocation box is filled up and turned yellow. Once the box is filled, it remains this way unless a failure of some type occurs. During the occurance of an experimentation failure, the obtained experimentation amount is reduced by a rate which is linked to the type of failure. For example a critical failure will reduce the experimentation meter by 14%. This means that 14% is subtracted from whatever the current amount is on the experimentation meter and allocation bar. If during an experiment, the player gets a failure that brings down their experimentation meter to 0%, they will be unable to increase the experimentation bar any further and must either create the item as it is, or destroy it by closing the crafting process.

The general purpose of the experimentation percentage meter is to allow the player to gauge the progress of their experimentation to see if they are reaching the maximums available for that item. The experimentation percentage meter is somewhat misleading however as it only displays the average values of all the experimental properties under that particular experimentation line. This can cause a value to appear lower than what is actually present for some properties. Allocation boxes fill during crafting whenever the absolute caps are reached for the experimentation percentage meters. This means that when the player hits the highest value possible for all properties, then the allocation box will fill and turn yellow as well. Until this occurs, the player can continue to use the box(s) to fill the experimentation bars up until they run out of points to spend or reach the cap (whichever eventuality occurs first). For more information about how experimentation percentage meters work see Assembly Mechanics.


Complexity Bar


To the top right of the window is the complexity meter. Every item begins with a complexity value, and every time a player runs an experiment, the complexity value increases by one point. Running 8 experiments would increase the complexity value by 8 points. Each complexity point counts for 8 seconds additional factory time per object if a draft schematic of the item is made. For prototype objects, the complexity will increase crafting tool timer by a factor of 2 x complexity value before the tool will finish producing the item.


Risk Meter


The risk meter is found on the far right of the window and acts as an indicator of the chance that an unfavorable event will occur during an experimentation attempt. This meter is on a 0 to 100% scale where 0 indicates that there is zero chance of an additional penalties being applied to the crafting attempt and 100% indicates a gaurunteed penalty to the attempt. The risk meter is affected by the Malleability of the resources used in the crafting process as well as the experimentation skill modifiers of the player. Higher skill modifiers and Malleability decrease the risk meter. Attempting to experiment on more than one line (cross line experimentation) or using multiple experimentation points (more than 1) in one line will increase the risk meter by 5% per each point added or line crossed over. For example, a player has 3 experimentation lines and allocates a point to each line. The player has now increased their risk by 10% due to adding points to 2 additional lines. If the player adds 5 more points to either of these lines then they will have increased their risk by 25%. These penalties are in addition to whatever is incurred by having low Malleability and/or experimentation modifiers. At zero risk you can no longer get any type of failure except critical failure from the override on the experimentation roll.

Experimentation Success Rates & Rolls

Whenever a player clicks the Run Experiment button on the experimentation window, a process occurs to determine the type of event that will be given to the player. The result a player receives is based upon two things which will be called the Success Rate, and the Roll.



Here's a model of how it works.

Result = Rating + Roll Risk = 100 - Rating (Any rating at 100 or higher shows as zero risk)


Roll: Random roll. Rolling below a limit will always give a critical failure regardless of your rating and above another limit will always give amazing success. (Think of it as in RPGs where an original 1 or 20 on 20-sided die overrides your base chance.) Research City, Bespin Port and maybe crafting stations and tools modifies your roll before checking the limits and thus lessens your chance of critical failures. As well as improving your chance for amazing success. (The impact of crafting stations and tools seems to be fairly small if any.)


Risk: This is your chance of getting any kind of failure. Note that the lower results like marginally successful are not technically considered failures even though it feels like it. At zero risk you can no longer get any type of failure except critical from the override on the roll.


Rating: Calculated from your experiment skill and modified by average MA on the resources and how many points you spend. 900 MA is a 10 skill bonus, 100 MA is a -10 skill penalty. Each extra point used at the same time is a -5 skill penalty. The formula for the rating is:


50 + (Average_MA - 500)/40 + Experiment_Skill - 5 x Points_Used


Average_MA is the MA of the resources weighted by relative quantity just like the experiment qualities and resources without MA are not counted. It is weighted by resource quantity If none of the resources have MA, the Average_MA is considered zero. Average_MA follows the same rules as if it had a hidden 'MA 100%' experiment line. Points_Used is how many points you spend at once. Points_Used is 1 if you only use one point. (If you try to spend points in multiple lines at once, you get penalized pretty badly and the formula changes a bit) With 75% chance, the red failure bar will show 25%. At 100% or above chance, the red bar is no longer visible.

If you have 55 in skill, you get 100% with MA 500. At 100 skill you have 145% with MA 500. This means you can only test out the formula at a fairly low skill while the red bar is still there.

Once you get 100% you can no longer get any failures, except criticals. But the system considers even marginally successful as a success. As you get higher above 100% the worst type of successes are gradually no longer possible. I believe that if your success rate is high enough, you can't get below great success either.

But there are two parts affecting the experiment result and the other one is the experiment roll. The roll is basically a random number which is added to your success rate to give the final result. But the roll has special cases. Like RPGs where a roll of 1 or 20 on d20 will always hit or miss regardless of your base chance. So if the roll is below a certain number, it will force a critical failure, if it's above another number, it will force an amazing success. This ensures you can get amazing with almost no skill and that you can always get a critical. Fortunately things which gives bonus to your rolls are applied before checking for the special cases. Which is why you then get less critical and more amazing results. High enough bonus might theoretically prevent any criticals at all.

This means that once you are above 100% (no red bar) you will only get failures from the roll and not from your skill. So things which affects the roll are more important to avoid failures. Like being in a research city or drinking Bespin Port. Both the success rate and the roll matters for getting more amazing successes, but for being able to use more points at once, probably only the skill matters. And there is a possibilty that there is a cap on your skill in this formula. But then you can't use the failure bar to test it out since your skill is too high to even get a red line. A force sensitive master crafter with +25 clothing would have a mean success rate without a cap.

The MA is the surprise factor. Having 100 in MA will be just like losing 10 skill points, while 900 in MA is a 10 point bonus. Unfortunately this MA is considered zero if none of the resources have MA effectively giving a -12.5 skill penalty.

I strongly suspected Complexity to affect the chance, since it rises as you experiment. But it doesn't affect the chance at all. Also testing with various levels of crafting stations from public to 40+, there is no difference either. But both of them may affect the roll instead. The only way to find out would be to do tons of experiments with the same materials and use statistics. I remember an old post from someone who did this testing, but can't seem to find it again. Anyone with a link ?

And being in a research city doesn't affect the success formula either. But that is documented as affecting only the roll, so no surprise there. I have seen noticably better results from rolls in a research city than outside, but haven't done any tests on stations or complexity.


With Novice Medic only, the red failure bar will normally show 57%. (100 - (50 + -12.5 + 10 - 5) = 57.5 which is then truncated to 57)


Things that Affect Success Rate and Rolls are:


Success rate

  • 1) Experimentation / Assembly Skill including skill clothes. Any possible cap is unknown.
  • 2) Mallability of the resources used. (Higher MA is better)
  • 3) Number of experiment points spent in each attempt. (Fewer is better)
  • 4) Force Experimentation modifiers. Adds to the experimentation skill modifiers to factor in for success rate during experimentation.
  • 5. Force Assembly modifiers. Adds to the Assembly skill modifiers to factor in for success rate during assembly.


Roll


  • 1) Being in a Research City.
  • 2) Drinking Bespin Port.
  • 3) Crafting Tool Quality.
  • 4) Crafting Station Quality.
  • 5) Crafting Technique force sensitive skill modifiers act as a bonus to the roll.



Experimentation Success Types

After having made a roll, the system chooses a type of event that will occur. These events can come in the form of being positive or detrimental to the construction of the item. Here is a listing of the types of effects that are possible during experimentation and a description of what they do to the construction process.


Experimentation Results Effect
The experimentation attempt was a critical failure!! -14.00%
The experimentation attempt was a big failure.
The experimentation attempt was a moderate failure.
The experimentation attempt was a failure. -7.00%
The experimentation attempt was a moderate success. + 1.05%
The experimentation attempt was a success. + 1.75%
The experimentation attempt was a good success. + 3.50%
The experimentation attempt was a great success! + 7.0%
The experimentation attempt was an amazing success!!! + 8.05%


The experimentation effects above are listed from least favorable to the most favorable. The least favorable type are critical failures. Failure events (and other types of failures) will actually reduce the experimentation percentage meter's value by the listed amount times the amount of points spent in that line. This will cause the player to have to spend more points to recover from this or just suffer from a lower stat item than what they would normally have been able to create. If a player for example, spent 5 points and got a Failure event, they would suffer a reduction of the line by 35. Positive events such as great success will increase the experimentation percentage meter's value by the listed amount per each point allocated to the experimentation line. For example a player spends 5 points and obtains a great success roll, the player now gains a bonus to the line of 35%.


Note on critical success/failures: Critical Failure and Amazing Success events fall outside the typical success events in that they are purely dependent on the Random Roll portion of the process. Risk has no effect on the chance of these occurring.

Source References

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