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A Thousand Papercuts


cyrus_krell

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What does it mean, “A Thousand Papercuts?”

 

In late 2010, there was a thread created on the EVE Online forums with the same title. The players organized to civilly and thoughtfully outline their issues with the game, sticking almost exclusively to small, quality of life issues, or very simplistic suggestions to improve their gameplay experience. Game developers at CCP, the makers of EVE, quickly took notice of the thread and kept their eye on it for a while, eventually organizing a small team within the company to get together in their spare time to look into “the small things.” Their efforts were rolled into the summer 2011 expansion, Incarna.

 

After EVE’s Noble Exchange debacle in the summer of 2011, in which there was a sudden focus on exorbitantly overpriced vanity items that sent the community in an uproar, CCP was forced to call an emergency meeting of the CSM (a player-elected group of representatives that meet with developers in Iceland biannually to discuss and address the concerns of player constituents) and plot a new direction for development.

 

After many meetings, public apologies, and internal restructuring, CCP pivoted towards seriously addressing the concerns of players. The Thousand Papercuts Project quickly turned from an erstwhile hope into a very prominent development plan, and the small team working in their spare time became an officially recognized group with the resources necessary to bring that plan to fruition. The Crucible expansion, released in the winter of 2011, was the realization of all their efforts, and focused mainly on the Thousand Papercuts idea, as well a large contingent of bug fixes, balancing, and other quality of life stuff.

 

Crucible was welcomed by the community with open arms, and CCP made it a point to emphasize that the spirit of the expansion, the Thousand Papercuts idea, would remain a significant part of every subsequent release that followed. Indeed, CCP kept good on their word, and in the expansion that followed (and the one currently in development for winter 2012), a significant portion of the content released has included a focus on “the little things.”

 

As an aside, it should be noted that CCP is very close with their community of players and fans, and there is much that Bioware can learn from their example--both from their successes and from their failures (like the NeX incident).

 

I’d also like to point out that I have been playing EVE Online since early 2005, and I enjoy it and SWTOR very much.

 

 

Overview

 

With this thread I aim to gather the papercuts--the little things that don’t necessarily break gameplay, but add up to lessen our experience with the game as a whole--and list them in detail, along with some possible solutions to increase the quality of life for all players. The focus will primarily be on small things (annoyances, quirks, and the like), but I’d also like to include a couple of larger feature requests just to round things out.

 

The goal is to get the community organized and put all of the feasible, well thought-out ideas into a single thread. To keep things as focused as possible, the intervention of moderators and community leaders may become necessary to keep things tidy.

 

I’d ask anyone who wants to contribute to the thread to limit their suggestions to the small, quality of life stuff (examples will be outlined below), and to also limit discussion in the thread to coming up with and working out creative solutions that others may not have considered. Don’t judge or criticize anyone’s post, instead try to be constructive and offer solutions or feedback. Repeating complaints or ideas outright also isn’t helpful, but do feel free to offer a unique solution that has not yet been presented on a certain issue. Brainstorm!

 

Please, don’t post unless you want to contribute to the discussion; remain on topic and, above all, be civil.

 

 

Contributing

 

Try to focus on small things, i.e. things that seem too insignificant to file bug reports, or things that most people don’t openly view as an inconvenience; the things that you get used to after a while and find workarounds for, or simply put up with, but they still bother you to some degree; the little things that--by themselves--don’t account for much, but all of them in concert cause frustration or decrease the quality of your gameplay experience.

 

Some examples:

 

  • Mailing currency between characters on my account, despite the fact that they’re connected through the Legacy system, is cumbersome and annoying.
     
  • What do I do with all of my planetary commendations now that I’m level 50? I have no real use for them besides buying armor mods and selling them on the GTN.
     
  • When on my speeder, or running with my saber drawn, I can see the back of my Inquisitor’s head clipping through the mesh for the hood of my chest piece.
     
  • The sounds used by vibroswords are nearly identical to that used by lightsabers. This makes no sense given prior context (KOTOR).
     
  • Font options in the UI would be nice. I can barely read the chat window unless I’m in a dark area. Hoth is hard enough on one’s eyes, but reading chat text while playing there is a nightmare.
     
  • The /r reply system for whispers is annoying and sometimes broken. In some instances, it will display one character’s name, but will reply to another if you have had more than one recent private conversation.
     
  • It’s also hard to differentiate at a glance whom it is that’s whispering you because all the names are the same color.

 

Try to keep your posts clean and well organized. The use of bullets and indentations will help immensely to that end. The easier they are to read and comprehend, the more likely it will get a community manager’s attention, and just maybe they’ll forward the thread to a developer.

 

 

The Little Things

 

Here are some of my own “papercuts.” Feel free to expound upon and contribute to them if you have ideas or solutions other than the ones I’ve presented. :)

 

 

Appearance / Art

 

Inquisitor head mesh clips through hood mesh under certain circumstances.

 

When on my speeder or running with my saber drawn, I can see the back of my Sith Pureblood Inquisitor’s head clipping through the mesh for the hood of my chest piece. I do not have this issue on my Miralukan Jedi Knight.

 

I don’t really know of a solution, other than perhaps someone in the art department looking at the issue and changing how hoods hang on player meshes. I know that the hood up/down feature is being looked into and worked on (it’s on the backburner, I think (?)), so perhaps this issue is also being addressed therein. Also, I personally know of someone who has already submitted this issue in a bug report.

 

 

Inquisitor and Consular hoods don’t stay up with any non-circlet style headgear.

 

The hood of the chest armor on my Inquisitor disappears when wearing helmets like [Kallig’s Countenance], as well as in the preview window. However, I have noticed that some helmets do actually work with hoods, like the [santhe Corps Light Exoskeletal Headgear] or the [Force Sentinel Headgear] (which looks really cool), but they only seem available to wearers of medium armor. :(

 

A solution seems pretty simple, but if there’s anyone with direct knowledge of how the underlying mechanics work (like a developer), please feel free to correct me if I’m mistaken. My guess is that it’s simply a flag that’s set in whatever database entry that exists for the medium armor pieces in question.

 

 

Many styles of armor, especially level 50+ pieces, are too elaborate or unrealistic for the purposes of combat. Some seem difficult to move around in while wearing.

 

Again, this is another matter of personal taste and an issue with art direction. While not as gaudy or garish as the much derided clown suits in the World of Warcraft, it’s something that annoys me, and perhaps creates a semi-conscious link to the WoW aesthetic that leads many players to place SWTOR in the same (tired) concept box.

 

Star Wars has a particular look associated with it--one that is simple, if not practical, and without too much flash or gimcrackery. Simplicity is a good thing! I like the simple-yet-elegant design of the [saber Marshal’s Robe], for example.

 

 

As an Inquisitor (or Consular), I am tired of wearing robes and dresses! :(

 

This is just a personal preference, honestly, but I would love to see more variety in the options availed light armor wearers. More access to pants and matching tops would be wonderful. Let’s face it, the Formal and Ulgo Noble social/adaptive armor sets are gaudy, and are essentially two of a small handful of style options.

 

 

Limiting armor pieces and styles to certain classes or factions often seems pointless and can be limiting to the point of frustration.

 

It’s just frustrating to find that, even though the armor class requirements are met, I can’t dress a particular character in a style befitting the character or my personal desire for its appearance. Worse still is that--especially in the case of custom (orange) armor pieces--it limits my options for gearing my companions. Finding a really cool-looking medium armor piece that would help keep Mako up to date with my Bounty Hunter is pointless if it’s restricted to Imperial Agents or Marauders. True also is the frustration with which I’m met when--in the case of perhaps wanting to roleplay a fallen Jedi, or a neutral Sith, or maybe a former Republic Trooper-turned-Bounty Hunter--I’m limited to whatever so-called ‘neutral’ armor looks like depending on which faction I’m playing, or that I can’t have a Dark Side Consular wearing a [Dark Acolyte’s Robe].

 

Removing class and faction requirements could be an excellent start, although with the latter I would think it necessary to allow the appearance of certain armor styles of various factions to appear the same for an opposing faction (i.e. a class-agnostic [Guardian’s Exalted Body Armor] looks the same for Empire characters as it already does for Republic characters). Perhaps I picked it up off a Jedi I just ran through; why let his armor go to waste now that I’ve killed him when I could use it as a disguise, or simply wear it as a trophy or a display of my dominance? Or maybe it just looks bleeding cool and I want to wear it, consarnit!

 

 

Even though it’s been 300 years, I’m sure there have to be some Sith Trooper armor pieces from KOTOR floating around the galaxy.

 

Sith Trooper armor (image link) is not to be confused with the Imperial Trooper armor set. I’d love to see this in the game, especially the chrome set--I wore it for quite a long time in KOTOR. It just looks so boss! :)

 

Perhaps it could be included as adaptive/social gear, or an armor style (see “Lofty Ideas” below). Considering its age and (perceived) rarity, maybe one might purchase it from the upcoming cash store when the game goes free-to-play in winter 2012. For a reasonable fee, of course (please, Bioware, learn from EVE Online’s NeX folly).

 

 

Some lightsaber handle models look awfully brittle or unwieldy, and not very practical.

 

This is simply a matter of personal taste and an art style issue. The one thing I really love about the Star Wars universe is that, even at its most fantastical, things operate with a certain sense of practicality and realism within the context of the setting.

 

 

Lightsaber beam meshes can disappear when viewed head-on (i.e. from the top down).

 

I realize this is a limitation of the lightsaber mesh itself, and the part for the beam is constructed of intersecting polygons with a (seemingly) animated (probably through script) texture that features an alpha channel. I seem to recall the shader used in KOTOR for the lightsabers not behaving in this fashion (correct me if I’m wrong), and would like to see an improvement in their appearance if possible, including the light that is cast from the saber (which sometimes appears on walls in a weird fashion, looking like a cone spotlight from a flashlight with a dark center for some reason).

 

 

The textures of planets in the ship approach cutscenes are blurry, no matter how high graphics settings are set.

 

Obviously, it’s a texture resolution problem. The texture size is fine for the smaller planetary view, like when viewing the data before making a jump to the location. But when viewed up close during the approach of your ship, it looks atrocious; as though it belongs in a game from the early oughts, rather than 2012. Nar Shaddaa is perhaps the most glaring example of this.

 

 

Legacy

 

A Legacy Wallet would be awesome and of immense help.

 

My brief time with the Diablo 3 beta introduced me to the concepts of shared currency between all characters on my account, and also a centralized place to store items all my characters could access. Say what you will about the shallowness of a game like Diablo (which is sometimes fun to just veg out and play, don’t get me wrong), but these are brilliant ideas that I’m surprised haven’t made it into MMOs yet.

 

Shared currency between the characters seems pretty straightforward, so I shan’t expound upon that too much.

 

A legacy bank tab would operate much in the same way as the current mechanics for ship cargo holds and guild banks, especially the latter due to how the item binding system works currently. Obviously, it would only be able to hold unbound and Legacy-bound items. The most practical method of acquisition would be to connect it with a legacy unlock; Legacy 1 and a reasonable amount of credits for the first tab for example.

 

This is the only Legacy idea that I have off the top of my head. I’m really interested in hearing more ideas from other players because I feel that the Legacy concept has a lot of untapped potential.

 

 

UI

 

Sending my companion out to sell all my grey junk is fine and well, but clicking through every single item at a vendor is tedious at best.

 

I’m sure you’ve all been there: You’ve just finished about an hour of grinding or running heroics with a friend, but have forgotten to send Khem Val off to sell your junk, and you’ve just come to a vendor. Only being able to click one thing at a time is, indeed, monotonous and annoying.

 

There could be a couple different solutions to this dilemma. One way would be to allow the selection of multiple items before selling, but existing hot keys might have to be changed (CTRL+Click previews an item and Shift+Click links an item in chat). Another option is a Sell All Junk type button in the item or vendor windows.

 

 

It’s not easy to determine the level of a given item’s augment slot.

 

The item modification window does not show what level an augment slot is unless the slot is empty. Since augment slots are backwards compatible with augments from lower levels, guessing what level the slot is can be difficult without removing the augment. Aside from the annoyance at the cost involved in doing this, it is just poor design.

 

 

Game text is sometimes illegible.

 

I can barely read the chat window unless I’m in a dark area. Hoth is hard enough on one’s eyes, but reading chat text while playing there is a nightmare. Text colors can be changed, and the ability to change text colors is limited solely to chat text, but legibility in changing environments is difficult at best without sacrificing valuable screen real estate. Furthermore, whatever smoothing/scaling algorithm is being used can sometimes make all text on the screen quite blurry, though that could depend on certain display resolutions and aspect ratios (I operate at 1280x1024).

 

Expanding font color options elsewhere would be helpful, as would having more options for varying the size and typeface used for various independent UI elements. Tweaks to the smoothing/scaling algorithm to improve legibility could also be beneficial.

 

 

The /r reply system for whispers is annoying, confusing, and sometimes broken.

 

In some instances, the text entry bar will display one character’s name--presumably the last person to whom you’ve replied--but will reply to another if you have had more than one recent private conversation.

 

Character chat tabs could be a solution, though I have long enjoyed EVE Online’s implementation of chat windows. Coming from windowed IRC (and later IM) clients where each person had a dedicated window, it just feels intuitive to me.

 

And on that thread, chat logging would be nice--for private conversations, certainly, and also to assist in code of conduct/end-user violations cases for any player or GM that’s monitoring general chat.

 

 

It’s hard to differentiate at a glance whom it is that’s whispering you because all the names are the same color.

 

Let’s be honest, all the text in that chat window is smashed together pretty tightly, and it’s pretty hard to distinguish any one person without giving it your full attention. And even then, the text can sort of...run together after a while. Changing text colors for various chat messages only changes the color for the message type and does little to address legibility and the discernment between other players.

 

A possible solution would be to alternate the shade of a particular color every other line. Highlighting messages that you send out to differentiate them from the chaff, as well as those messages which mention your name, would also be good. The adjustment of line spacing, indentation, character name spacing--it’s all important for increasing legibility.

 

 

Economy

 

Mailing items and currency between characters in my legacy is cumbersome and annoying.

 

Shortly after 1.3 was released, the mail system buckled under heavy load, and there have been occasional glitches even before that. I can imagine that a very significant portion of mail traffic involves the transfer of items and currency between other characters within a player’s legacy.

 

The aforementioned Legacy Wallet solution should remedy everything quite nicely.

 

 

What do I do with all of my planetary commendations now that I’m level 50?

 

As our class storyline takes us through all the available planets, we acquire many planetary commendations along the way. And sometimes, even after we’ve hit 50, we like to go back and help some of our lower-leveled friends with heroics and other difficult content, for which we are rewarded with yet more commendations. By the time we’re in the end game, however, these forms of currency are essentially useless to us, unless we sell them on the GTN or use them to equip our other characters.

 

Allowing all the collected commendations to coalesce into the Legacy Wallet mentioned above would bring new purpose to commendations. And do consider the future: planetary commendations become useless while we’re focused on acquiring Black Hole or Rakata gear. As new content emerges and the level cap is raised, the commendations used to purchase end game armor will eventually fall to the wayside, too, but would be useful for other legacy characters.

 

Another potential use for outmoded commendations would be the option to redeem them for hard currency. This would be especially useful for those who have all their character slots filled with high level characters.

 

 

Loot

 

NPCs (Sith, Jedi, Troopers, etc.) should drop items associated with their appearance or class/faction.

 

In KOTOR, you were able to take the black clothes or robes off fallen Sith acolytes and wear them on your character or party members (you could use the aforementioned Sith Trooper armor, too). They also could drop lightsabers containing red and purple crystals that you could use or remove and place in the lightsaber you were using.

 

I’d like to be able to wear what that Jedi was wearing, or use that Marauder’s interesting looking lightsaber handle. Maybe, as a roleplayer, I like collecting trophies from my victories (and putting them in a rectangular wooden box...lol). In any case, it makes more sense for you to get from a particular NPC an item or items that are likely to be carried by that NPC.

 

Just as an example, the ships of a particular NPC pirate faction in EVE Online drop the modules, ammo, tags, etc. that’s associated with those groups as well as the ship’s class.

 

Addressing this would involve one of my aforementioned solutions (removing class/faction limitations on gear), as well as changing up loot tables and the distribution of loot amongst mob types.

 

 

Ambience

 

Vibroblades should not sound like lightsabers.

 

The sounds used by vibroswords are nearly identical to those used by lightsabers, despite the fact that, in KOTOR, vibroblades and Echani weaponry clearly use metal sounds, except when clashing with a lightsaber. It’s a distinctive characteristic that doesn’t make sense for the weapon and kind of breaks immersion. Vibroblade-type weapons should sound like a piece of metal cutting through the air, and should clang like metal when hitting armor or another metal weapon; they should not sound like lightsabers.

 

 

Miscellany

 

Why does the entire website, including the index page and forums, need to be unavailable during a patch deployment, server-side hotfix, or rolling server restart?

 

Indeed, this seems...a bit unusual, if not archaic. There’s not much sense for the basic face of the game--the main index page--to be unavailable at any time (save those rare 0.0005% moments). And for those players that are curious or chatty during downtime, there’s nothing for them to do as it relates to the official website; no patch notes to read, no forum in which to participate to pass the time.

 

Not everyone knows that there’s an official SWTOR Twitter account, and even that can be extremely vague at times. Worse still, the Tweets from the official twitter account will, during downtime, often link to things on the site that readers can’t get to because every page on swtor.com is unavailable.

 

 

Even when active in using the GTN terminal, I still go idle if that’s all I’m doing.

 

Changes were made to reset the idle timer for chat and engaging in crew skills, so that clicking around and searching the GTN still doesn’t count against your idle timer is a bit baffling.

 

 

Lofty Ideas

 

A more advanced and gear-independent character styling system.

 

As a casual player of DC Universe Online, I’m greatly impressed by their implementation of, and the depth of configuration for, character appearances. It’s amazingly straightforward and offers a degree of customization I haven’t seen since EVE Online’s character creator (while there aren’t yet many clothing options for EVE's character creator, its facial and body customization options are absolutely peerless).

 

Armor, weapon, and skin styles are acquired through equipping gear pieces for the various character sheet slots. They are also bestowed by special one-use items whose sole purpose is unlocking a particular style for a given slot. The appearance style for that particular slot (chest, head, face, main hand, etc.) is then saved to a list. This list of styles is available as an appearance tab on the character sheet, and a given style can be selected for each slot independently of the gear actually used by the character.

 

Coloring of the character and the armor is handled interestingly, as well. When creating a character, players select the primary palette to be used by the character’s armor, consisting of 3 colors, as well as the colors and appearance of the character’s skin, hair, and eyes. Players can later change these colors after character creation. The combination of the 3 colors, and their order as used by the armor, are configurable for each armor slot, and can be altered in such a fashion that the armor can use all three colors or just one.

 

The implementation of such inspired features would go a long way to affording players the freedom to render their characters’ appearances precisely the way they want, and to do so without the headache and difficulty involved with hunting for new gear with precisely the kind of style they want, in the color that they want, every time they progress a few levels.

 

Crafters need not be left out of the opportunity for the monetization of gear styles. Synthweavers and Armormechs could have a single set of orange custom armor for each of the armor classes that has a very basic or unitarian style, and schematics would allow the learning of styles for crafting.

 

To facilitate the transition and to keep crafters from feeling snubbed for all the work and money spent previously in the acquisition of schematics, converting all the armor schematics they’ve already learned into said style-only schematics would be a good idea. This would also help to mitigate the frustration many players feel when the dreaded armor/gear hunt (that keeps their stats up to date as levels progress) clashes with their desire to have their characters appear as they envision.

 

Like DCUO’s own cash store, a handful of unique or whimsical armor styles could be purchased with Cartel Coins. It would add another incentive for free-to-play and subscription players alike to spend the currency they acquire through subscription rewards or direct purchases.

 

 

An NPC and player-driven contracts system; NPC and player bounties organized and issued through the Bounty Hunter’s Guild, and acquisition/delivery contracts issued through a black market system.

 

The lauded Bounty Hunter’s Guild from Star Wars fiction has the potential to add interesting gameplay options and storylines to the game. Weekly and/or monthly NPC bounties could be issued by Guild NPCs to players, and players could be able to issue bounties on other PVP-flagged players. This would add a very interesting dimension to PVP gameplay, as well as open the door to the galaxy-wide PVP some players (not myself, mind you) are clamoring for.

 

It seems unfair for this concept to be limited only to the Bounty Hunter class, but it does make sense within the context of the universe and, indeed, the storylines surrounding the Bounty Hunter’s Guild (read K.W. Jeter’s Bounty Hunter Wars trilogy, seriously). Smugglers need not be left out completely, however; the acquisition, transportation, and delivery of rare and volatile goods would give them a similar gameplay experience.

 

Regardless of either side, Bounty Hunter or Smuggler, players of other classes could join in for a piece of the action, partake in the risk, and split the rewards. This could add another layer, and a very interesting aspect, of cooperative play.

 

 

Where’s the API? Like spice, the data must flow.

 

A game API that’s accessible to independent developers of mobile and web apps, as well as PC applications, is achingly absent. I’m not much of an expert on API development, but in the case of EVE Online (and World of Warcraft way back in the day), it’s something I’m used to using to glean important information to utilize in making various aspects of gameplay less imperative or time consuming.

 

As an example, I’d like to cite the incompleteness of Torhead in comparison to the other ZAM Network sites and tools, like Wowhead. Determining drop rates and loot tables, or culling useful statistics from other game mechanics, is extremely difficult without access to more data. A site like Torhead or As Mr. Robot should be much more useful and contain much more information than is currently available.

 

 

Visually, the game looks a bit long in the tooth. The periodic implementation of graphical improvements would be welcome.

 

SWTOR has been in development a very long time (since 2005, according to an article I read, but haven’t been able to verify), and even with the updates and improvements to the Hero Engine, its age is beginning to show. Again, this is partly due to the length of the development cycle, but I understand that the limitations of the Hero Engine itself are also a factor. Another reason would be that the bulk of game development has been focused on story elements and gameplay mechanics (and from what I understand, updating the underlying mechanics of the Hero Engine).

 

Bear in mind that the focus on story and gameplay elements over keeping the graphics up to date is not to SWTOR’s detriment--I’d go so far as to say that it’s paramount over how the game looks. But now that the game is here and content development pipelines have been streamlined, it’s a good idea to address game visuals in the near future so as to keep the game fresh and to take advantage of the graphics hardware many of us have.

 

I’ve mentioned it a few times so far, but I must give credit where it is due: EVE Online is a distinctive representation of a game that refuses to stagnate or remain dated in the visual sense. Since its release in 2003, EVE has always looked visually striking through each iteration, and periodically improves upon that beauty--from the massive Trinity expansion to

, and into the
. And somehow, in spite of the push to create new visuals that rival the old and take advantage of the newest and best in graphics hardware, it remains a game that is accessible to wide range of hardware.

 

Does SWTOR need to be as visually jaw-dropping as EVE? No. But sincerely, Bioware, don’t sit idle. :)

 

 

Updates

 

Well, it's been a while since I've first posted the start of this thread, and I must say that I'm overwhelmed (in a good way) at the response it's gotten from the community. It's been referenced on blogs and fansites, and just last night there was a significant amount of attention paid to it in the latest episode of The Cantina Band podcast (thanks guys <>). As I've said before in other posts, you guys have been great. Keep the ideas and the discussion going.

 

Hey everyone,

 

I just wanted to hop in to this thread and commend everyone on how respectful and constructive the feedback has been. We have been reading all of your feedback and will certainly pass it on to the appropriate teams. We will continue to watch this thread as well for anything else that is added. We always love to see threads like these!

 

I had hoped to get a response from a community manager at some point, but didn't think it would be quite this soon, if at all. This is a pretty significant accomplishment, and you should all take at least a little comfort by the fact that Bioware is seemingly very interested in what we've done here, and what we'll hopefully continue to do. I don't think we should we pop the Champagne and throw a party now, no, but it is significant all the same.

 

Keep in mind, there are three development teams working on this game at the present time (one on converting the game to Free to Play, one pushing out the regular content like the upcoming Warzone, and one working on the coming story/expansion). They have a lot on their plates and we may not see some of these changes right away, but it should be enough to know that they're listening, they're taking our issues seriously, and that they'll get to them when they can.

 

So, although we've received a response from Eric Musco of the community team, and information is making its way to the various development teams, our work is far from over. And while we must remain vigilant, we should continue to observe decorum and afford them the respect they deserve--even when they're being quiet, and even if the changes don't come right away.

 

Now, with that out of the way, I'd like to set about placing here some of the suggestions that have been made by others. I think we're at 31 pages right now, and it's a lot to ask for someone to read through all of that. Below, I will organize and try to summarize as much as I can, as well as offer my own commentary where applicable.

 

 

Your Papercuts

 

Many people have voiced support for some of my suggestions, so I will not repeat them here unless there has been any relevant discussion that adds anything to them, or offers an opposing viewpoint.

 

This is a placeholder for now, as compiling the list of your suggestions is going to take quite a while. :)

Edited by cyrus_krell
Updating the original post, adding user suggestions.
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Very impressed with your post. You make some excellent points and I hope that most of them will be addressed.

 

A few of the things you mentioned regarding class/faction limitations on gear really irk me. My inquisitor is really tired of wearing robes or having all her choices limited by whether or not she wants a hood/no hood or to show her belly or not. I made a previous post on the differences between appearances when equipping such items as the Traditional Brocart Vestments on a female and a male, and would really really like the ability to chose NOT to have the top be cut off at the midriff on my SI. Most of the beautiful artwork on this chest piece is removed as there is elaborate detailing around the waist when displayed on a male character. Plus there's the fact that it's one of the few sets that is not black, red or purple centric.

 

As for faction specific items, this same set displays radically differently depending on whether or not you are Empire or Republic. On the Republic side, this set looks like the robes that the Revanites on Dromund Kaas wear, something I'm sure quite a few Imperials would love to look like.

 

One thing I don't think I caught is our companions insisting on not putting away their weapons. It's annoying and seems random. I know when out and about that Andronikos runs with his blasters drawn about 90% of the time, but occasionally he'll start holstering them. I have no idea what triggers it but it shows that yes, they will sheathe their weapons when not in use.

 

One thing I would like to suggest to add to the UI functionality is a right mouse click menu for items in our inventory. On it would be certain options that would include "Equip on Character," "Equip on Companion," "Never sell to vendor" (for those items you may want to keep in your inventory but may forget when it's full of other things), "Never RE" (so you don't accidentally RE an item you didn't intend to), and... I had a few other ideas but have forgotten them. Maybe a "Equip on..." and have a fly list of all your companions.

Edited by Pairaka
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Companions always having you fixated with their gaze. It looks very unnatural in a lot of cases, such as when you stand on an elevation and they bend their backs and necks looking like something straight out of the exorcist.

 

Just have them look straight ahead.

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The world boss weekly missions.

 

You have one for the Nightmare Pilgrim, and one for Gargath, the Primal Destroyer, AND the Nightmare Pilgrim again.

 

I'd believe the latter was supposed to be one for the lower tier, cut the Pilgrim out there, it already has it's own weekly.

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My inquisitor is really tired of wearing robes or having all her choices limited by whether or not she wants a hood/no hood or to show her belly or not. I made a previous post on the differences between appearances when equipping such items as the Traditional Brocart Vestments on a female and a male, and would really really like the ability to chose NOT to have the top be cut off at the midriff on my SI. Most of the beautiful artwork on this chest piece is removed as there is elaborate detailing around the waist when displayed on a male character. Plus there's the fact that it's one of the few sets that is not black, red or purple centric.

 

This is a fantastic suggestion. As a guy, I almost never play a female character unless it's the only option, or it makes sense for the roleplay, as I feel it would be disingenuous of me to do so. So my experience with the game as it relates to female characters is limited at best. I truly appreciate your taking the time to illustrate this. :)

 

As for faction specific items, this same set displays radically differently depending on whether or not you are Empire or Republic. On the Republic side, this set looks like the robes that the Revanites on Dromund Kaas wear, something I'm sure quite a few Imperials would love to look like.

 

It's stuff like this that made me suggest the change to class/faction locking on armor styles. If NPCs can get away with it, why can't we? In the case of EVE Online, pod pilots (players) are viewed by their crew and by the planetary inhabitants of the four empires to be nothing short of Gods (because of their ability to live forever through clones). Players ought to have, at least in the end game, more power and freedom than the majority of NPCs in a given game.

 

One thing I don't think I caught is our companions insisting on not putting away their weapons. It's annoying and seems random. I know when out and about that Andronikos runs with his blasters drawn about 90% of the time, but occasionally he'll start holstering them. I have no idea what triggers it but it shows that yes, they will sheathe their weapons when not in use.

 

This absolutely irks me, too, lol. And Jandoon, above, mentions that companions are always staring directly at you, regardless of their position and orientation, which looks terribly unnatural. I've seen some contortionists in my day, but with the way Mako has twisted herself around, I'm certain she's broken something by now.

 

One thing I would like to suggest to add to the UI functionality is a right mouse click menu for items in our inventory. On it would be certain options that would include "Equip on Character," "Equip on Companion," "Never sell to vendor" (for those items you may want to keep in your inventory but may forget when it's full of other things), "Never RE" (so you don't accidentally RE an item you didn't intend to), and... I had a few other ideas but have forgotten them. Maybe a "Equip on..." and have a fly list of all your companions.

 

Absolutely. The UI feels very incomplete and unintuitive, and still needs a lot of work. Right-click context menus are something else that's in EVE that I'm also used to using in modern operating systems, so it often just makes sense.

 

I will say, though, that the UI for SWTOR isn't anywhere near as bad as it is for DCUO. DC Universe Online may have a lot of interesting ideas, but the game is not without its own very deep flaws.

 

The world boss weekly missions.

 

You have one for the Nightmare Pilgrim, and one for Gargath, the Primal Destroyer, AND the Nightmare Pilgrim again.

 

I'd believe the latter was supposed to be one for the lower tier, cut the Pilgrim out there, it already has it's own weekly.

 

I haven't done much in the way of end game content yet, and I've only tackled a few world bosses so far, so thanks for this insight.

 

You also mention the Tionese crystals/commendations, and I've seen them mentioned elsewhere as kind of a nusiance. There should be more vending options for them. And when they're of no use to one character, having them in a Legacy Wallet would make them useful to another. Of course, when you have all your characters maxed out, having an avenue of redemption/compensation for them would also make sense, as credits are needed by everyone all the time.

 

Some things in chat should be possible to hotkey (ie: east incoming)

 

I, too, would like to see this. WoW may be old and tired, but it does have a couple of interesting and relevant ideas, and being able to set macros and hotkeys would be one of them.

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Here's another: NPC bystander conversations that you keep hearing even if you move away. You keep hearing them even if you're on a speeder halfway across the planet. Also, they interfere with mission conversations, sometimes making the stuff you want to listen to hard to hear.
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I have to say...I agree with every single point made here except for one: I don't mind the way the outfits look. This is what, ~3000 BBY? Fashion trends change. =P

I wouldn't mind normal looking gear in addition to the current gear, though.

 

EDIT: to add my own complaint:

With Pureblood Sith and Kaleesh, the lower part of their faces clips through their chestpieces.

Edited by DarthVitrial
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This one is a bit more than a papercut, but gotta mention respawn times for mission objectives. These really has to go down across the board, makes for a lot of annoyance when questing, and will only be worse when there's an influx of F2Pers. Get the impression that most missions that require an objective to be picked up or interacted with are designed with the mindset that no more than two people will do them at a time.

 

Edit: The republic puzzle for the event treasure on Coruscant is case and point.

Edited by Jandoon
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Here's another: NPC bystander conversations that you keep hearing even if you move away. You keep hearing them even if you're on a speeder halfway across the planet.

 

I find this also incredibly annoying, and it's obviously a bit bugged. Hopefully it can be addressed.

 

I have to say...I agree with every single point made here except for one: I don't mind the way the outfits look. This is what, ~3000 BBY? Fashion trends change. =P

I wouldn't mind normal looking gear in addition to the current gear, though.

 

Absolutely. :) To each their own.

 

I don't want to remove the armor sets that are already present as I'm sure there are people that like them. As I said, it's a matter of personal taste. But I do think there should be more armor sets in line with the grander Star Wars theme of form following function and practicality.

 

That said, would I say no to an armor style lit up in the vein of Tron: Legacy's costumes? I can't say I would, lol. I think it'd look cool, but that's just a personal taste thing.

 

EDIT: to add my own complaint:

With Pureblood Sith and Kaleesh, the lower part of their faces clips through their chestpieces.

 

I've noticed this, too, and have forgotten it as I don't use Xalek on my Inquisitor. Good catch!

 

This one is a bit more than a papercut, but gotta mention respawn times for mission objectives. These really has to go down across the board, makes for a lot of annoyance when questing, and will only be worse when there's an influx of F2Pers. Get the impression that most missions that require an objective to be picked up or interacted with are designed with the mindset that no more than two people will do them at a time.

 

This is annoying to me, too. However, my usual workaround is to wait for an area to get populated enough to switch phases. My guess is that, with the influx of F2P folks, more areas are likely to have more phases. Of course, it's also possible that the developers could lower the player cap for areas that are particularly busy in order to mitigate respawn issues. Lowering respawn timers could help, but I have to wonder if there might be other solutions we have yet to consider.

 

We should also be able to unify colors and hide the head slot on our companions. Sure, I'm looking great compared to before that update, but my companion still looks like a clown.

 

They've actually stated recently that they've been working on this and it should be included with the next update. Probably a major update, rather than a collection of bugfixes.

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The ability to save a hotbar configuration.

I'd like to be able to save my hotbars, layout, which abilities are in which slots, hotkey bindings, etc; so that when I respec or change roles, I can reload the appropriate hotbar configuration.

 

If my companion was out when I mounted up, then it should still there when I dismount

Far too often you dismount and your companion does not reappear, even though you meet the requirements to summon them. e.g. This happens while in a group with one other person very often.

 

Scroll panes in crafting windows scroll too slowly when using the mouse wheel

I'm sure there are other examples where this is also the case.

 

I have many more simple suggestions in subsequent posts in this thread. Below are some of my rantings about balance and poor game design.

 

Holding aggro is far too reliant on taunting.

Tanks do pathetically little damage. Holding aggro very often devolves into taunt... wait 15 seconds... taunt... Save for maybe the first couple seconds of a fight. Your damaging abilities are virtually meaningless in comparison to the effectiveness of taunting every 15 seconds.

 

Far too many mobs are ranged (about 90%)

...with far too few tools for dealing with them. Again, as a tank, I'm not in control of my destiny. I can really only occupy one mob for more than 2 seconds. I just kind of stand around playing with my new friend until the rest of the group cleans up and gets around to me. If it weren't for boss fights, you'd be better off with 3 dps instead of a tank and 2 dps.

Edited by Amuntet
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Cast-through ability activation

 

If I have an enemy targeted, and it has a friendly player targeted, I should be able to cast Intercede without manually switching targets first and then manually switching back to my previous target.

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/who <player name> should work.

 

Along with other relevant search and/or filter criteria.

 

Don't make me open the social window, click in the text field, and erase whatever text is already in there.

 

And more often than not I need to search twice in a row because the first search simply returns the whole who list again. i.e. fix your bugs.

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In-Game Combat Log

 

It should show me all the same information that's already being written to the log file.

 

Short of alt-tabbing out of the game, uploading a file to a 3rd party web site, and reviewing my incoming damage for the past 3 minutes, I have no way of knowing if I'm "Standing in the Fire". Floating combat text is not sufficient when there are multiple sources of damage at the same time.

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