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Yururu

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A member registered Jan 31, 2019

Recent community posts

I finally figured out Hammermen can Knockback bombs. That's a big plus in my book!

topkek

I think you shouldn't put 1/3 of your game's witty lines on the front page, kinda gives away a lil too much, you know?

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Took a little trial-and-error to get used to the controls (and the amount of movement each opponent has), but I really enjoyed it. Didn't really understood to those stats to the left though, I went dying and learning the "feel" of each class. Here are my thoughts so far!

From my D&D years (and the Alpha's campaign mode), I must say: these Spearmen have way too many reactions; they're kinda OP.  Forming a frontline with 2 and retreating 1 step not to get bombed, then mowing down the small fry with 3 attacks on their turn is a bit too good. I feel 2 reactions would already be great.

I got a little confused due to the alpha interface, but I did realize that at some point my Swordsmen were attacking some 4 times in a turn while raging. Same point as the Spearmen, except not as powerful as acting in the enemy's turn: how about one attack less? A rather minor comment also: the most mobile unit in the game is the only one wearing heavy armor. Perhaps it'd be more fitting for the Hammermen to be in plate.

Alchemists completely rule the battlefield. I loved that. From healing, area denying the boss' spawn hexes, blocking swarm's movement and  preemptively setting a minefield, they're hands-down the best class. I suggest a bit of cooldown-tweaking though. Heal, Fire Bomb and Poison Bomb having it 1 turn longer, while Bomb and Bomb Push having it 1 turn shorter. 

(Heal, for it's so good that you can end a 2-alchemist, 3-boss run with your entire team at full health. Fire Bomb/Poison Bomb also present a challenge with 2 alchemists, as they can limit/lock enemies to a corner by alternating the effects way too easily. Bomb is like the Zero to Fire/Poison Bombs' Coca-Cola: it's not as good, and it's the basic Alchemist skill. Finally, Bomb Push is usually the panic button. A ranged, splash-AoE Hammerman Knockback, pretty hard to set up.)

I found the Hammermen to be more of a liability than anything else, as the early swarms aren't the greatest of match-ups to their low mobility (3 squares, no Hop/Jump as melee). Either way, that seems part of their design, so I'd suggest a buff to their Knockback instead. Like affecting other 1-2 adjacent hexagons rather than 1, or a domino-effect that knocks back both the target and any amount of enemies in a straight line,  or knocking the target back an additional square.

Archers, rogues/sneaking, high ground and flanking might interest you as well :)

Even as an Alpha, this was better than Dungeoneers. Kudos, Zemeroth.

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I suggest some spell checking. For example, in "Spoils of War", the dialogue states "Remember that suppy crates? Lets go and get them!" instead of "Remember those supply crates? Let's go and get them!" The following points below have some small grammar issues too, which I'll indicate

Some of those dialogue options either A: don't make much sense or B: aren't English expressions. 

As an example of A, in "Ther is no order!" (There), the dialogue states "We trusted you sire!" The problem is that its name and description appear to indicate a bad event, but in reality, it's an event that gives you 5 Order after 1 day if you say Yea and which you can say Nay just like any other at the same cost of -5 Order. It's also a random event; I've had it trigger several times even with Order above the maximum bar, which doesn't really fit the event's description.

As an example of B, in "River Resources", the dialogue states "We can hit 2 stones with one shot! We should go to the riverside?" instead of the English expression "We can hit 2 birds with one stone! Should we go to the riverside?"

My last suggestion is to either increase the consumption of resources, decrease how powerful Faith is, decrease the amount of resources given by events or decrease how powerful Order is. Perhaps a combination of those.  Or add a harder mode with these and negative events.

As is, it all just becomes kind of repetitively meaningless after the early game: all your bars are maxed out beyond what you can see, and you just have to keep choosing the long-term events that give you the most to continue increasing the only resource that's left for you to manage: how many days you've played this run.