Non-vindictive Mod Rant & Praise thread
#21
Posted 01 April 2005 - 05:57 AM
While a part of me can understand the sense of "parental pride" that must come from having "your" NPC born into the BG2 gameplaying society, it does seem to be to be a criminal abuse of mod-writing power to so flagrantly undermine every NPC in the game other than your own.
With great power comes great responsibility... Spidey's Uncle was dead right on that one!
Chrysta... could helping her to uncover her past threaten your own future?
"Pity the land in need of Heroes."- Bertolt Brecht
"A little madness, now and then, is relished by the wisest men." - Willy Wonka
#22
Posted 01 April 2005 - 07:44 AM
You forgot "manages to intimidate Korgan"
that's worse than the others, in my opinion.
Heheh. You beat me to that one. It's certainly right up there with reducing Jaheira to awed acquiescence and out-talking Edwin or Jan.
Couple things though. First, nobody's going to write an NPC if the author isn't interested/amused by that NPC. So some bias in favor of an NPC is almost inevitable because the author is going to try to make the NPC interesting to others also. The most an author can do is be aware of this syndrome and at least consider the objections of others regarding the most serious failures to self-edit. But you have to accept, too, that there are so many others with as many particular points-of-view that no one, not even the author, is ever going to be perfectly satisfied with the result.
Second, some NPCs will normally out-shine most, or even all, the official ones within the area of their particular expertise. For instance, I once wrote some dialogues for a character, now, alas, defunct, whose backstory included a long tour of duty in the New Lands. Because of this experience, no one, not even Viconia, was thought better able to discuss the effects of culture clashes in the game world, though the character in question was otherwise neither a great intellect nor outstandingly empathetic. The point is that general injunctions to the effect that "you can't do this" or "never do that" can and should be broken in individual mod NPC cases for specific reasons. Even if an author produces an ubermensch NPC; one who is in fact superior to all the official ones in all ways and whose actions and banters confirm this superiority, if the rationale is appropriate and the official NPC characterizations are respected, then really the only valid criticism is that such a character is not to your taste.
So, while all these lists show a great deal of thought and concern and make their quite valid points, they shouldn't, I wouldn't say, be regarded as a check list against which to grade a mod or all mods. Authors write NPCs for fun. If the scope for permissible fun is drawn too tightly, then there will never again be a new character for the game and that would be a greater pity than infraction of all these rules together.
#23
Posted 01 April 2005 - 09:21 AM
Second, some NPCs will normally out-shine most, or even all, the official ones within the area of their particular expertise. For instance, I once wrote some dialogues for a character, now, alas, defunct, whose backstory included a long tour of duty in the New Lands. Because of this experience, no one, not even Viconia, was thought better able to discuss the effects of culture clashes in the game world, though the character in question was otherwise neither a great intellect nor outstandingly empathetic. The point is that general injunctions to the effect that "you can't do this" or "never do that" can and should be broken in individual mod NPC cases for specific reasons. Even if an author produces an ubermensch NPC; one who is in fact superior to all the official ones in all ways and whose actions and banters confirm this superiority, if the rationale is appropriate and the official NPC characterizations are respected, then really the only valid criticism is that such a character is not to your taste.
I'd submit that characters have been designed with that rationale in mind and it has proven largely unsatisfying to a large segment of the player base. Saying "My character is more awesomer because he had this really awesome background and was born into a family of awesomeness and trained for awesomeness at an early age and has a special Awesome Master kit which gives him the great abilities of the ancient Awesomes" means that you have created a character with a "rationale" that explains why they're so awesome, but doesn't at all explain how such a character can really be taken seriously in a game alongside rather less awesome peers.
You can explain away anything you like, but after a while, credibility is stretched pretty thin for a lot of players. It's not necessarily enough to simply explain why somebody is the Second Coming--some players are rather puzzled why such a thing belongs in the game in the first place.
Pocket Plane mods and modlist etc.
#24
Posted 01 April 2005 - 09:56 AM
I'd submit that characters have been designed with that rationale in mind and it has proven largely unsatisfying to a large segment of the player base. Saying "My character is more awesomer because he had this really awesome background and was born into a family of awesomeness and trained for awesomeness at an early age and has a special Awesome Master kit which gives him the great abilities of the ancient Awesomes" means that you have created a character with a "rationale" that explains why they're so awesome, but doesn't at all explain how such a character can really be taken seriously in a game alongside rather less awesome peers.
You can explain away anything you like, but after a while, credibility is stretched pretty thin for a lot of players. It's not necessarily enough to simply explain why somebody is the Second Coming--some players are rather puzzled why such a thing belongs in the game in the first place.
No argument. I wouldn't bother downloading a "superhero" mod myself. In fact, my personal list of modding do's and don't's is quite extensive and almost all of it appears here in one form or another. I was merely suggesting that no consensus of player opinion, no matter how well thought-out or grounded in past experience, should be construed as an a priori straightjacket for any conceivable mod. If someone tries such a thing and, in popular estimation, fails, that still shouldn't absolutely prohibit the next person from trying.
Put prospective modders on notice as to what has hitherto been found most generally acceptible? Certainly. Establish a pretense that Moses bore a recently rediscovered third tablet from Mt Sinai bearing these injunctions? No.
#25
Posted 04 April 2005 - 09:49 AM
Nicely put, Hendryk. I remember a time in the infancy of BG2 modding when any prospective new NPC was treated with cries of "cheese" and "sacrilege" simply because some short-sighted players saw the Bioware NPCs as canon and did not want anyone messing with the status quo. I am happy to say that the quality of such NPCs as Kelsey, Tashia and the like soon dispelled that particular notion in the minds of all except a few die-hard purists.No argument. I wouldn't bother downloading a "superhero" mod myself. In fact, my personal list of modding do's and don't's is quite extensive and almost all of it appears here in one form or another. I was merely suggesting that no consensus of player opinion, no matter how well thought-out or grounded in past experience, should be construed as an a priori straightjacket for any conceivable mod. If someone tries such a thing and, in popular estimation, fails, that still shouldn't absolutely prohibit the next person from trying.
Put prospective modders on notice as to what has hitherto been found most generally acceptible? Certainly. Establish a pretense that Moses bore a recently rediscovered third tablet from Mt Sinai bearing these injunctions? No.
There is nothing wrong, in my mind, in "pushing the envelope" as far as what is considered "acceptable" in NPC (or other) modding. However, I do agree 100% with the observation that uber-powered NPCs are pretty much guaranteed game spoilers. Attempting something non-standard in a mod is no crime... however, not taking sufficient care to ensure the changes are sufficiently balanced and in character with the "spirit" of the game most certainly is.
Chrysta... could helping her to uncover her past threaten your own future?
"Pity the land in need of Heroes."- Bertolt Brecht
"A little madness, now and then, is relished by the wisest men." - Willy Wonka
#26
Posted 04 April 2005 - 10:43 AM
Still modding the Mod for the Wicked... It is a big project you know... And I got sidetracked (several times) a bit... sorry.
However, as we all know, Evil never really sleeps.
Sentences marking (my) life:
Winds of change... Endure them, and in Enduring grow Stronger
It takes a fool to look for logic in a man's heart
Never question the sanity of the insane
The Harmony of Life is Chaos
Living on Wings of Dreams
(1st march 2009) SHS women over me:
Kat: if there were more guys that looked like you out here, people's offspring wouldnt be so damn ugly
Noctalys: you are adorable
~~ I love it, and I am humbled! Yay! ~~
#27 -Ashara-
Posted 04 April 2005 - 12:00 PM
The things that are secondary to me are battles, quests, 1001 interjections with scenery NPCs ... It can be absent or present. It won't make or break the NPC for me.
The romances though I like a lot I think they are very natural in the BG setting. But I crave romances that do not follow the traditional setup. I do not want that obligatory talk about BS heritage, and about Imoen, the tale of the NPC's life in 10 talks, I dread the Bodhi's abduction, the Tree of Life avowement... I am looking for something different. I hope to find it in BG1 rather than BG2 atm.
Another important thing for me is that the character was well-grounded in Faerunian reality. I prefer it over dropped-in characters and characters with hard/impossible-to-believe storyline or origins.
I also like NOT to have a control over everything NPC says or does or will say/do.
I do not like PST style integrated into BG1/2 for all of the dialogue (I saw it on Quitch's RTW screenshots). I think it does not work for BG1/2 which allows you to create any type of PC - the PC's emotes will not correspond to how the character feels more often than not. It also kills the enjoyement of imagining things happening during the dialogues.
Edited by Ashara, 04 April 2005 - 01:57 PM.
#28
Posted 04 April 2005 - 06:27 PM
Another important thing for me is that the character was well-grounded in Faerunian reality. I prefer it over dropped-in characters and characters with hard/impossible-to-believe storyline or origins.
An excellent point and one I largely share. However, one does have to admit that "Faerunian reality" does include an awful lot of critters that weren't born/hatched/cloned/spawned/sprouted on Faerun. Where this sort of "dropping in" is just an excuse for an Undead/half-dragon/half-beholder/paladin/sorcerer/who-turns-lycanthrope-under-the-full-moon NPC, well...yeah. What you said.
Otoh, an alien NPC who isn't overpowered and who does have a plausible reason for being on Faerun and cooperating with the PC isn't automatically a poor choice just because he/she/it is of non-standard race. It depends on how thoroughly the background is worked in, how consistently it's applied and on how interesting or amusing it is. In other words, it all depends on the imagination and skill of the writer - and that's the case, too, for the standard cleric-next-door.
Edited by Hendryk, 04 April 2005 - 06:30 PM.
#29
Posted 04 April 2005 - 07:23 PM
Another important thing for me is that the character was well-grounded in Faerunian reality. I prefer it over dropped-in characters and characters with hard/impossible-to-believe storyline or origins.
An excellent point and one I largely share. However, one does have to admit that "Faerunian reality" does include an awful lot of critters that weren't born/hatched/cloned/spawned/sprouted on Faerun. Where this sort of "dropping in" is just an excuse for an Undead/half-dragon/half-beholder/paladin/sorcerer/who-turns-lycanthrope-under-the-full-moon NPC, well...yeah. What you said.
Otoh, an alien NPC who isn't overpowered and who does have a plausible reason for being on Faerun and cooperating with the PC isn't automatically a poor choice just because he/she/it is of non-standard race. It depends on how thoroughly the background is worked in, how consistently it's applied and on how interesting or amusing it is. In other words, it all depends on the imagination and skill of the writer - and that's the case, too, for the standard cleric-next-door.
Freaks like to band together after all. It shouldn't suprise anyone to have the PC collect a bunch of other individuals who are just as weird as he/she is.
PnP Celestials
Geomantic Sorcerer Kit
#30 -Ashara-
Posted 05 April 2005 - 07:45 AM
#31
Posted 05 April 2005 - 10:02 AM
On the other hand, the number of NPC mods out there isn't unlimited, and many of them feature strange characters. As long as they are well-written and interesting enough (there are those, you know), I can live with their far too complicated ancestries or weird backgrounds.
In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move - Douglas Adams
I like persons better than principles, and I like persons with no principles better than anything else in the world - Oscar Wilde
Give a man a fire, and he's warm for a day. But set a man on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life. - Terry Pratchett
#32 -Ashara-
Posted 05 April 2005 - 12:18 PM
On the other hand, the number of NPC mods out there isn't unlimited
I think it is - or close enough that it does not matter
#33
Posted 05 April 2005 - 03:51 PM
I think it is - or close enough that it does not matter
Naah, I just saw a Romance Mod that gets you lovin' a Kobold NPC, I kid you not. I'm not positive, but I think the Kobold was blue, too...and if that isn't unlimited, I don't know what is.
Edited by Togashi Renshi, 05 April 2005 - 03:52 PM.
#34
Posted 05 April 2005 - 03:59 PM
I think it is - or close enough that it does not matter
Naah, I just saw a Romance Mod that gets you lovin' a Kobold NPC, I kid you not. I'm not positive, but I think the Kobold was blue, too...and if that isn't unlimited, I don't know what is.
Drat! I've got a female PC that I've been saving up to romance a kobold. But she wants a purple kobold monk who is psionic. Still too limited for me.
#35
Posted 05 April 2005 - 05:07 PM
"Such a pint-sized scaly bigheaded (literally) lover thou are, Kurt!"
(I have no idea where the Kurt came from, to be honest. My mind is strange like that...)
Edited by Togashi Renshi, 05 April 2005 - 05:10 PM.
#36
Posted 07 April 2005 - 02:51 PM
Was the little fella' blue before it got "romanced" (nudge, nudge... ), or as a result of?...I just saw a Romance Mod that gets you lovin' a Kobold NPC, I kid you not. I'm not positive, but I think the Kobold was blue, too...
...er... I think I'll go get some therapy now
Edited by Sir Kalthorine, 07 April 2005 - 02:51 PM.
Chrysta... could helping her to uncover her past threaten your own future?
"Pity the land in need of Heroes."- Bertolt Brecht
"A little madness, now and then, is relished by the wisest men." - Willy Wonka
#37
Posted 08 April 2005 - 03:45 PM
In any case, methinks he's different because he's blue. I think I forgot to mention that he's a GOOD kobold. (And that just got me thinking of the song "OH, I just gotta be meee!")
Edited by Togashi Renshi, 08 April 2005 - 03:46 PM.
#38
Posted 10 April 2005 - 04:03 AM
Hehe...Hmm...good job Sir K. Now my mind has a few mushroom clouds exploding inside of it.
In any case, methinks he's different because he's blue. I think I forgot to mention that he's a GOOD kobold. (And that just got me thinking of the song "OH, I just gotta be meee!")
<Sir K crosses off "love affair with undersized humanoid lizards" from his list of desirable mod content>
Chrysta... could helping her to uncover her past threaten your own future?
"Pity the land in need of Heroes."- Bertolt Brecht
"A little madness, now and then, is relished by the wisest men." - Willy Wonka
#39
Posted 10 April 2005 - 07:16 AM
NOTE: This info may or may not be correct. I trust my memory enough to trust it, but some insidious bug may be up in there twisting levers and knobs so I'll do insane things, so beware.