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Playing Allure of the Stars
===========================
The following backstory blurb is a copy of the game intro screen:
Your party of trusty explorers is about
to test its fortune by plundering a vast
derelict passenger cruiser. The grand
spaceship was abandoned and lost after
an accident at the Solar System's outer
frontier, but recently unexpectedly
reappeared. Reportedly, deposit safes
and jewelry inventories were never
salvaged. Neither are emptied the gilded
robot holds, the expensive arboretum
nor the extravagant whole-deck habitat
of natural and enhanced animals.
Up to this day, countless autonomous
life support and damage mitigation
subsystems with redundant power sources
busy themselves throughout dozens
of decks. They seem successful, because
there are abundant traces of ongoing
metabolism all over the ship. That
should make exploration so much easier.
Yours can't be the only shady Neptune
Area crew interested in the giant wreck,
so you shouldn't count on reaching it
unopposed. The feral outer frontier
denizens are not famed for scruples
nor for restraint when using hazardous
nano, cyber and bio technologies. Expect
to bump into crazed machinery, warped
nature, deadly residues and astounding
treasures. Assume you'll be tracked
and chased via sight, sound and smell.
Prepare to hide in shadows, distract
and set up ambushes. Gather clues and
resources. Use and abuse. Outsmart.
Outlast. Your survival is at stake.
What to expect
--------------
Allure of the Stars is a turn-based game. You issue a command.
Then you watch its results unfold on the screen, without you being able
to intervene. Then the dust settles and you have as much time
as you want to inspect the battlefield and think about your next move.
Once the few basic command keys and on-screen symbols are learned,
mastery and enjoyment of the game is the matter of tactical skill
and literary imagination. To be honest, a lot of imagination is required,
because the game's plot and characters are yet very lightly sketched.
However there are already hours and days of replayable fun to be had
and gameplay mastery to build, confirm via high scores and pit against
challenges, the first challenge being to finish all scenarios on standard
difficulty (5) that already requires careful planning and use of multiple
resources, but gives some leeway for trial, error and imperfect execution.
Role playing and piecing clues from text descriptions is mandatory
at the start of the longest scenario, but completely optional elsewhere
for players that prefer tactics and optimization challenges to storytelling.
The game differs from classic roguelikes in a few ways:
* player manually controls each member of his squad, though often the best
tactics is to scout with only one character (a classic roguelike feel)
and let others guard important areas
* the game is turn-based, but with visibly high granularity --- projectiles
fly gradually over time with varying speeds and can be sidestepped
or shot down; less so explosions that are swarms of projectile particles
(turn-based just the same)
* time passes and factions pursue their goals on a few levels
simultaneously, while other floors are frozen (but all are persistent)
* the same laws of simulated world apply to all factions and all actors,
whether player-controlled or AI-controlled; e.g., the same field of view
calculation, skill checks, equipment limitations, rules for item
and terrain use
* combat mechanics is deterministic; randomness comes only from AI
decisions and procedurally generated world
* there's (almost) no HP regeneration; attrition ensures all past (silly)
decisions matter; HP of every actor starts at around half max
* each character has 10 uniform equipment slots, which fill quickly given
that most melee weapons have cooldowns
* each faction has a single shared inventory of unlimited size,
which has a physical location on the map and so can be ransacked
If the game window is too large for your screen or the game doesn't start
or you experience other technical issues, please consult
[README.md](https://github.com/AllureOfTheStars/Allure/blob/master/README.md)
or describe your problem on [Discord](https://discord.gg/87Ghnws)
or [Matrix](https://matrix.to/#/!HnbpAHMjOGHlYtrASl:mozilla.org)
or the issue tracker. Contributions of all kinds are welcome.
Please offer feedback to mikolaj.konarski@funktory.com or, preferably,
on any of the public forums.
Starting your adventure
-----------------------
Commands for starting a new game, saving and exiting the current game,
configuring convenience settings and toggling AI control of the party
are listed in the main menu, brought up by the Esc key.
Game difficulty level, from the new game setup menu, determines how hard
the survival in the game is. Each of the several named optional challenges
make the game additionally much harder, but usually simpler, as well.
Not that in-game hints don't take challenges into account
so kindly ignore, e.g., advice to use ranged combat more often,
if the chosen challenge bans ranged combat use altogether.
Of the convenience settings, the `suspect terrain` choice is of particular
interest, because it determines not only screen display of the floor map,
but also whether suspect tiles are considered for mouse go-to, auto-explore
and for the `C-?` command that marks the nearest unexplored position.
Game scenarios, as ordered by their number, lead the player along
an optional story arc. The first three adventures double as tutorials
that offer rudimentary preparation for the main game, the long crawl.
They gradually introduce exploration, stealth and melee combat,
helping the player develop his repertoire of squad formations
and move patterns, suitable for different tactical contexts.
When the player loses, a defeat message for the scenario appears
with hints about strategies known to work in the given tactical context.
Alternatively, the player may postpone reading these messages and instead
try to puzzle out the tactics himself --- this is not so hard, as there are
not yet so many moving parts to figure out in the first three adventures.
In the third scenario, the main 'crawl' game mode, the player starts
employing ranged combat, stealth, light sources, item and terrain alteration.
As soon as the player learns to navigate the initial levels of crawl,
but still dies a lot, it makes sense to return to the remaining
short adventures. They bring forth many extra game features
and tactics and prevent the player from missing half the fun by trying
to play the crawl just like a normal roguelike with spare heroes.
The extra scenarios continue the plotline from the initial tutorial adventures
in the form of flashbacks and eventually lead up to the events that start
the main crawl adventure. The training they provide has narrow focus,
drilling a particular skill set, even as exotic as opportunity fire
management, a frantic race to the exit and big asymmetric melee battles.
The challenge the scenarios offer may be, accordingly, quite extreme,
particularly at higher difficulty settings and when striving for high scores.
The main adventure, the long crawl, is the only one that takes place
over many floors, some initially blocked, requiring lots of time to beat.
The focus is on resource management and survival, including food gathering
and cooking, crafting, terrain transformation using tools, spotting
environment clues and guessing and countering opponents' strategies.
The player has a choice of exploring a single level at a time or portions
of many floors along a single staircase. On some levels he may explore
and loot with a single scout, eluding most opponents. On others he may be
forced to change pace and perform a complete exterminatory sweep
involving his whole party. On yet others, his best course of action may be
to defend a key location until the first wave of attackers is broken.
The large game arena calls for strategic thinking, including resource
management and area denial. Thus, the crawl scenario is the most replayable
adventure, but even the small ones can be refreshed by striving to beat
a high score and by ramping up the difficulty settings.
Exploring the world
-------------------
The map of any particular adventure consists of one or many
levels and a level consists of a number of tiles with a particular
terrain kind on each. The game world is persistent, i.e., every time
the player visits a level during a single game, its layout is the same
(unless modified by other actors).
Letters and digits on the game screen are likely to represent actors.
On the other hand, terrain is depicted with non-letter and non-digit
characters and with zero `0`. Blocky solid symbols are likely to be
non-passable and/or not translucent terrain. White, cyan and green terrain
is usually inert, red is burning or trapped, blue activable or trapped,
magenta activable or searchable.
Items lying on the ground are represented with non-letter and non-digit
characters, just as terrain, though rarely with blocky symbols.
In case of doubt, one of the aiming commands (`/` and `KP_/`,
that is, `/` on the keypad) cycles through all visible and remembered
items on the level and another (`*` and `KP_*`, all with default keybindings)
through all foes. Also, pointing at a map position with MMB
(middle mouse button) displays a short description of its contents.
Pointing with RMB enters aiming mode, in which pointing again
or pressing Space key or MMB decreases detail level of the description.
If a foe or interesting terrain is being pointed at, tilde key `~` shows
the relevant lore details, including crafting recipes afforded
by this terrain, if any. The basic terrain kinds are as follows.
terrain type on-screen symbol
bush, transparent obstacle %
trap, ice obstacle ^
wall #
tree, rock, man-made column 0
rubble &
stairs, exit up <
stairs, exit down >
closed door +
open door '
ground, corridor .
water, other fluid ~
smoke, fog, open fire ;
workshop, curtain, foliage :
The four groups above, from top to bottom, block movement but not view,
block both, block neither, block view but not movement.
Additionally, each tile, regardless if open and if translucent,
may be permanently lit with ambient light or not.
Actors are marked with lower and upper case letters and with
characters `@` and `1` through `9` (but never `0`). Player-controlled
heroes are always bright white and at game start they are selected
(e.g., to run together) so they have a green highlight around their symbol.
If player manages to take control of animals or other actors, they retain
their letter and color, but gain a highlight as well.
So, for example, the following map shows a room with a closed door,
full of actors, connected by a corridor with a room with an open door,
a pillar, a staircase down and rubble that obscures one of the corners.
The lowest row of the larger room is full of items.
###### ######
#@19.#########....&&
#r...+.......'...0.>&&#
#Ra..#########[?!,)$"=#
###### ##########
Leading your heroes
-------------------
The heroes are displayed on the map with bright white color (red if they are
seriously wounded) and symbols `@` and `1` through `9` (never `0`).
The currently chosen party pointman is highlighted on the map with yellow.
The easiest way to control your team is to run a short distance
with your pointman using Shift-direction or LMB, switch the pointman
with the Tab key, repeat. In open terrain, if you keep consistent distance
between teammates, this resembles the leap-frog infantry tactics,
in which the immobile team members cover the movement of the others.
For best effects, try to end each sprint behind cover or concealment
(note that a thin pillar is neither, but a single shadowed spot may be
enough to hide in the dark).
Pointman hero's attributes are displayed at the bottom-most status line which,
in its most complex form, looks as follows.
*@12 2m/s Calm: 20/60 HP: 33/50 Pointman: Haskell Alvin 6d1+5% 4d1
The line starts with the list of party members, with the current pointman
highlighted in yellow. Most commands involve only the pointman, including
movement with keyboard or keypad or LMB (left mouse button).
If more heroes are selected (highlighted in green), they run together
whenever `:` or S-LMB (LMB while holding down Shift) over map area
is pressed, though that's usually not a precise enough method
of controlling a team. Any sleeping hero is highlighted in blue
and can be woken up by yelling with `%` key, which also taunts
and unnerves nearby enemies.
Next on the bottom-most status line is the pointman's current and maximum
Calm (morale, composure, focus, attentiveness), then his current
and maximum HP (hit points, health). The colon after "Calm" turning
into a dot signifies that the pointman is in a position without ambient
illumination, making stealthy conduct easier. A brace sign instead
of a colon after "HP" means the pointman is braced for combat
(see chapter [Moving and acting](#Moving-and-acting)).
In the second half of the bottom-most status line, the pointman's name
is shown. Then come damage dice of the pointman's melee weapons and
the pointman's appendages, ordered by their power. The dice of the first
recharged weapon, the one that is going to be used now, is adorned with
percentage damage bonus collected from the whole equipment of the pointman.
If the dice are displayed with upper-case `D` instead of lower-case `d`,
the weapon has additional effects apart of the usual direct damage.
The nature of the effects can be appraised via the equipment outfit menu.
Only the most common piercing direct damage, denoted by the damage dice,
is affected by the percentage damage bonus. The other direct damage kinds,
such wounding and burning, are represented by extra added integers
and are not scaled by bonuses from melee skill nor maluses from
the opponent's armor.
Weapon damage and other item properties are displayed using
the dice notation `xdy`, which denotes `x` rolls of `y`-sided dice.
A variant written `xdLy` is additionally scaled by the level depth
in proportion to the maximal level depth (at the first level the result
is always one; it grows up to the full rolled value at the last level).
Section [Battling monsters](#Battling-monsters) below describes combat
resolution in detail, including the role of the percentage bonuses.
The upper status line describes the currently visited level in relation
to the party.
5 Lofty hall [33% seen] dire basilisk [__**]
First comes the depth of the current level and its name.
Then the percentage of its explorable tiles already seen by the heroes.
Then the common focus of the whole party, coming from the aiming crosshair
marked on the map with a red box and manipulated with mouse
or movement keys in aiming mode. In this example, the crosshair points
at a dire basilisk monster with its hit points drawn as a half-full bar.
Instead of a monster, the aiming crosshair status area may describe
a position on the map, a recently spotted item on the floor or an item
in inventory selected for further action or, if none are available,
a summary of the team composition. For example, this form
5 Lofty hall [33% seen] spot (71,12) p15 l10
indicates that the party is aiming at an exact spot on the map.
At the end of this example status line comes the length of the shortest
path from the pointman's position to the spot in crosshair and
the straight-line distance between the two points, one that a flung
projectile would travel if there were no obstacles.
Moving and acting
-----------------
This chapter is a copy of the few initial pages of in-game help.
The in-game help is automatically generated based on a game's keybinding
content definitions and on overrides in the player's config file.
The remaining in-game help screens, not shown here, list all game
commands grouped by categories in detail.
Walk throughout a level with mouse or numeric keypad (right diagram below)
or the Vi editor keys (middle) or the left-hand movement keys (left). Run until
disturbed with Shift or Control. Go-to a position with LMB (left mouse button).
In aiming mode, the same keys (and mouse) move the aiming crosshair.
q w e y k u 7 8 9
\|/ \|/ \|/
a-s-d h-.-l 4-5-6
/|\ /|\ /|\
z x c b j n 1 2 3
Press `KP_5` (`5` on keypad) to wait, bracing for impact, which reduces any
damage taken and prevents displacement by foes. Press `S-KP_5` or `C-KP_5`
(the same key with Shift or Control) to lurk 0.1 of a turn, without bracing.
Displace enemies by running into them with Shift/Control or S-LMB. Search,
open, descend and melee by bumping into walls, doors, stairs and enemies.
The best, and not on cooldown, melee weapon is automatically chosen
for attack from your equipment and from among your body parts.
The following few commands, joined with the movement and running keys,
let you accomplish almost anything in the game, though not necessarily
with the fewest keystrokes. You can also play the game exclusively
with a mouse, or both mouse and keyboard (e.g., mouse for go-to
and terrain inspection and keyboard for everything else). Lastly,
you can select a command with arrows or mouse directly from the help
screen or the dashboard and execute it on the spot.
keys command
I manage the shared inventory stash
g or , grab item(s)
ESC clear messages/open main menu/finish aiming
RET or INS open dashboard/accept target
SPACE clear messages/show history/cycle detail level
TAB cycle among all party members
* cycle crosshair among enemies
/ cycle crosshair among items
M modify any admissible terrain
% yell or yawn and stop sleeping
Screen area and UI mode (exploration/aiming) determine mouse click
effects. Here we give an overview of effects of each button over
the game map area. The list includes not only left and right buttons,
but also the optional middle mouse button (MMB) and the mouse wheel,
which is also used over menus to move selection. For mice without RMB,
one can use Control key with LMB and for mice without MMB, one can use
C-RMB or C-S-LMB.
keys command (exploration/aiming)
LMB go to pointer for 25 steps/fling at enemy
S-LMB run to pointer collectively for 25 steps/fling at enemy
RMB or C-LMB start aiming at enemy under pointer/cycle detail level
S-RMB modify terrain at pointer
MMB or C-RMB snap crosshair to floor under pointer/cycle detail level
WHEEL-UP swerve the aiming line
WHEEL-DN unswerve the aiming line
Note that mouse is optional. Keyboard suffices, occasionally requiring
a lookup for an obscure command key in help screens.
Battling monsters
-----------------
The life of heroes is full of danger. Monstrosities, natural
and out of this world, roam the dark corridors and crawl from damp holes
day and night. While heroes pay attention to all other party members
and take care to move one at a time, monsters don't care about each other
and crowd and stampede all at once, sometimes brutally colliding by accident.
Monsters are depicted on the map with letters. Upper case letters
are unique monsters, often guardians of special floors, resources
and keys to other areas. Lower case letters are the rabble.
If there are humans not from our team, they are marked
with `@` and `1` through `9` in other colours than white.
When a hero walks and bumps into a monster or a monster attacks
the hero, melee combat occurs. Hero *running* into and displacing
a monster (with the `Shift` key and, in case of keypad movement,
alternatively a `Control` key), does not involve inflicting a damage,
but only causes an exchange of places. This gives the opponent
a free blow, but can improve the tactical situation or aid escape.
In some circumstances actors are immune to the displacing,
e.g., when both parties form a continuous front-line.
In melee combat, the best recharged equipped weapon (including fighting
organs that are not on cooldown) is taken into account for determining
the damage and any extra effects of the blow. To calculate the damage
dealt, the outcome of the weapon's direct piercing damage dice roll
(but not any additional direct damage summands such as wounding or burning)
is multiplied by a percentage bonus. The total bonus is calculated
by taking the damage bonus (summed from the equipped items and organs
and conditions of the attacker, capped at 200%) minus the melee
armor modifier of the defender (capped at 200%, as well). However,
at least 5% of damage always gets through, even if the bonus is nominally
below -95%, so excessively strong armor acts only as a buffer against
high melee skill of opponents.
The current pointman's melee bonus, armor modifier and other detailed
stats can be viewed in the skill menu, accessible via the `#` command,
which summarizes all the stats conferred by organs and conditions listed
in the organ menu, invoked by `@`.
In ranged combat, the projectile is assumed to be attacking the defender
in melee, using itself as the weapon, with the usual dice and damage bonus.
This time, the *ranged* armor skill of the defender is taken into account
and, additionally, the speed of the missile (based on shape and weight)
figures in the calculation. You may propel any item from your inventory
(by default you are offered only the appropriate items; press `+` to open
all choices). Only items of a few kinds inflict direct damage, but some
have other effects, beneficial, detrimental or mixed.
In-game detailed item descriptions contain melee and ranged damage estimates.
They do not take into account enemy armor nor damage from effects and,
if bonuses are not known, guesses are based on averages for the item kind
in question. The displayed figures are rounded, but the game internally
keeps track of minute fractions of HP for all actors in all calculations.
The combat stress drains Calm, gradually limiting viewing radius and,
if Calm reaches zero and the actor is sufficiently impressed by his foes,
making him defect and surrender unto their domination. Whenever the monster's
or hero's hit points reach zero, the combatant falls down and quickly
gets permanently incapacitated. When the last hero is disabled or dominated,
the adventure ends in defeat.
Attacking from a distance
-------------------------
Before the player presses `f` to make a ranged attack, he may move
and set the aiming crosshair in aiming mode. However, this is
not often needed, since crosshair is set automatically as soon
as a monster comes into view and can still be adjusted for as long
as the missile to fling is not chosen.
Nevertheless, sometimes before flinging you want to examine
the level map tile by tile by moving the crosshair
or to assign persistent personal targets to party members.
The latter is essential in the rare cases when your henchmen
(non-pointman characters) can move autonomously or fire opportunistically
(via innate skills or rare equipment). Also, if your non-pointman character
is adjacent to more than one enemy, setting his target makes him melee
a particular foe.
You can enter the aiming mode with the `*` and `KP_*` keys that select
enemies or the `/` and `KP_/` keys that cycle among items on the level.
You can move crosshair with direction keys and assign a personal
target to the pointman with the `RET` key (Return, Enter).
The details about the shared crosshair position are displayed in a status
line close to the bottom of the screen, as explained in chapter
[Leading your heroes](#Leading-your-heroes) above. You cycle aiming
mode from foe to spot and to vector with the ``\`` key, which is useful,
e.g., when a monster vanishes but you still want to fling at its last
known position.
Winning and dying
-----------------
You win an adventure if you escape the location alive (which may prove
difficult, because your foes tend to gradually build up the ambush squad
blocking your escape route) or, in scenarios with no escape locations,
if you eliminate all opposition. In the former case, your score
is based predominantly on the gold and precious gems you've plundered.
In the latter case, your score is most influenced by the number
of turns you spent overcoming your foes (the quicker the victory, the better;
the slower the demise, the better). Bonus points, affected by the number
of heroes lost, are awarded only if you win. The score is heavily
modified by the chosen game difficulty, but not by any other challenges
(which are, however, proudly displayed in the high score listing).
When all your heroes fall, there's a hope they'd be found and brought
back to life using nanomedicine perfected for space travel hibernation.
The side effect of such a treatment is the loss of any bodily augmentations,
whether acquired by training, surviving harsh experiences or artificial
implantation. The heroes would start their next attempted conquest afresh,
with no endurance coming from experience, no supplies for survival
and no equipment. They should also expect new undaunted enemies
to bar their way.
The only immutable factor throughout the chain of the heroes' adventures
is their personal life stories, with the resulting unique characteristics,
virtues and vices. However, a true hero is not determined by the past
nor deterred by present transient defeats. The allure of fame, wealth
and glory is the beacon that shines as bright as the stars in deep space.
FAQ
---
- Q: I've explored the first three decks of the crawl game mode and I don't
know what to do next.
A: Role-play a little. Re-read the scenario description, deck
descriptions for all three levels and the description of crucial
terrain items. Think in-character about visiting the lowest deck.
What would you do? What would you look for? Remember you heroes have
carelessly strolled through these decks before. Has anything changed
compared to what the texts recall? Would anything surprise you?
When you encounter any special terrain, actors, unexpected groups
of actors or items, ask questions, think how that ties to your initial
goal from the scenario description, examine terrain, actors and your
own items, discover and follow the plot, gather clues, find and set
for yourself new immediate goals, look for resources to attain them.
Don't be afraid to take notes. Eliminate hypotheses. Solve mysteries.
You don't need to move your heroes to examine positions on other
explored levels. It's enough to press `<` or `>` and move the crosshair
or use mouse. Feel free to recall the lore pertinent to a position
and use the lore menu by pressing `~`.
- Q: In the crawl scenario, I already investigated and decided
I won't use the `[spoiler]` nor `[spoiler]` way of escaping the ship.
`[Spoiler alert: players that didn't, may want to role-play and try
these ways first, see the previous question. Otherwise, read on.]`
Assuming I want to attempt the way through the welded staircase,
how do I open the '"staircase up welded shut' and reach the levels above
the first three?
A: Examine the staircase to determine how to open it. Look for clues
about who can have the right tool. If you didn't collect any clues
while investigating the other story elements, you need to bump
or examine interesting terrain more often. Listen to what encountered
unique characters say. Read the descriptions and piece the puzzles together.
If still no luck, it may be that there was a murder and the item
enabling the easiest solution got stranded. In that case, explore every tile,
pick up every item, equip it and try opening the staircase.
The item can't be destroyed and is too scary to be picked up by foes,
so your success is assured. Ask on a forum if desperate.
If that's any consolation, it's the only blocking puzzle in the game.
All other puzzles and mini-games can be brute-forced (with some losses).
BTW, there are less obvious but more advantageous ways of opening that path.
- Q: Where to buy light sources in the crawl scenario game?
A: Too late to buy anything. However, they can be crafted in at least
two ways in the very early stages of the scenario. See the terrain lore menu
for crafting recipes after exploring the initial levels.
- Q: How do I craft?
A: Stand adjacent to the workshop terrain (blue colon on the map)
and experiment. Note that walkable positions can't be activated
by bumping and, anyway, crafting requires the Modify command (key `M`)
even for terrain that could be bumped into. Other crafting spots
(e.g., any water and fire) work similarly, but the recipes differ.
Read the recipes in the lore menu, terrain submenu, or by pressing `~`
when crosshair points at terrain that enables crafting.
- Q: Does power of crafted items depend on the depth of current level?
A: No, unlike items found on the floor, items created by crafting
are considered to originate at maximal depth whether regarding item kind,
item stats or lifetime, if applicable.
- Q: Why do I summon hostile animals all the time, why do I defect
to the enemy faction every level, why am I constantly sabotaging
my own adventure, what is going on?
A: Whenever anything bad happens, notice it and use it as a learning
experience. Especially if it happens often or periodically.
Check carefully the messages overlaid on the map and in history log,
look at your outfit, organs, stats. Observe coincidences.
Build conjectures. Deduce. Prevent. Adjust. Win. Whomever told you
bumping is enough, lied.
- Q: Why is my hero immobile?
A: Perhaps he's just sleeping (blue box indicates that)? If so,
you can wake him up with the `%` command. If he's not asleep,
his movement skill may be temporarily drained. Switch to another hero
or perform some other productive action different from walking
or wait with `KP_5` or rest with `R`.
- Q: Is autoexplore safe?
A: Not at all. It doesn't try to guess which hazardous terrain you want
to avoid and which to barge through, so be prepared to abort exploration
if open fire or slippery ground comes into view. Unless you have HP to spare.
Oh the other hand, running is very safe and go-to is rather safe.
- Q: Why does the percentage of explored tiles turn from 100% to 99%?
A: Apparently enemies transformed a tile from unexplorable terrain kind
to explorable. The new tile has never been seen by the player,
so the percentage is no longer at 100%.
- Q: Why when a single hero gets ambushed and is fighting at close quarters,
his distant teammates don't jointly come to his rescue.
A: The teammates wait for him to come back into the formation instead
so that they may assume a front line and then melee their foes together.
The immobile heroes are assumed to be pinned to their positions
by fear and shock, but also by their imperative to hold formation,
so as to defend an important position or avoid running piecemeal
into a trap or into friendly fire or avoid breaking concealment
and revealing their position or leaving a vantage point from which
they can observe and relay enemy movement. For untrained teams,
simultaneous synchronized squad movement is not feasible.
It would be practical if all squaddies had cameras, with a few drones
overhead for best effect, and if a team of off-site coordinators analyzed
the situation and micromanaged them all. This is not the case here.
- Q: Why is the noise I'm hearing "indistinct"?
A: That's because it's out of direct hearing range of each teammate
on the level, but ponderous enough to be perceived by all as vibrations
and echos from afar. Any other noise adjective indicates that the noise
is heard by at least one teammate and how far it is from the pointman
(who may or may not hear it directly, as signalled by his Calm drop).
- Q: Why are there two 'weakened' conditions in the organ menu of my hero?
A: Each team has a different recipe for their weakness brew.
Consequently, multiple affliction by the concoction from a single team
prolongs a single malady, but affliction by concoctions from many teams
causes concurrent ailments, with compounded effects, but independent
and short durations. The benefit of the mechanism is that
it's possible to tell the perpetrator team of any ailment.
The exceptions are the conditions that activate each turn, e.g., healing
(regeneration, various resistances that effectively cure each turn)
or wounding (poison). These are similar regardless of the team and so
the condition is always only prolonged.
- Q: Why is a harpoon in my shared inventory stash charging for hundreds
of turns?
A: This is an artifact of time running independently on each level.
Any ideas on how to improve this game mechanics are welcome.
A workaround is to drop and then pick up the item on the level
you want to use it. When picked up, it gets recharged after, randomly,
from one to two times the normal cooldown period of the item
and then recharges normally while it's used on this level.
- Q: Why the bottom line displays a weapon with a timeout to the right
of a weapon without timeout? Doesn't it mean the former is never used?
A: Yes, it's never used and, quite possibly, it's your party inventory
management mistake and if not, at least a very special situation
and the display turns your attention to it. Shuffle the equipment
among your team if you want the weapon to get used.
- Q: When can I learn all characters' backstory items?
A: Each backstory item triggers in specific circumstances, so it may take
some time and even not be revealed during a single playthrough.
For vices, that may be the desired turn of events. Alternatively,
you can try to reveal a vice early and then prevent it from triggering
again, taking advantage of the activation condition becoming known.
- Q: Can I kill off heroes permanently and reset all character backstories?
A: Yes (not judging). Just remove all savefiles.
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