Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.

Derek and his team have been busy working on the sequel to Elemental: Fallen Enchantress, the sequel to last year’s War of Magic.The final release date for Fallen Enchantress hasn’t been set yet but we do expect to go into beta around Thanksgiving.

Beta and Release

The initial beta will only be available to those who already have War of Magic. A later beta will be available to anyone who wants to pre-order it.  The beta will be available via Stardock’s new digital store. We plan to run the beta exclusively via our digital updater (tentatively called Stardock Central) though the final version will be available through multiple channels.

Where things stand right now

In many respects, Fallen Enchantress is a lot closer to what we had initially envisioned for the first Elemental strategy game. Specifically:

  1. Terrain matters for city placement
  2. More differentiation between factions
  3. Much better economic system
  4. Much better magic system
  5. Much better tactical battle system
  6. Cleaner, more compelling tech tree.

Before the beta hits, we’ll be releasing some videos along with some AI vs. AI battles to show players how the new game plays.

A few highlights

image

There are more technologies in Fallen Enchantress for players to research.  However, we’ve consolidated them into three distinct trees – Civilization, Warfare, Magic (The Empires have their own equivalent). 

The display has been changed such that you can easily tell what each tech gives you. You can also choose a technology that has multiple steps to get to and it will take you through the intermediary techs automatically.

 

image

When your city levels up, it now gets to choose from a random assortment of special city improvements that it can build. The higher the city, the more powerful the selection becomes.

 

image

We have cleaned up the way armies are handled. At first, your armies will only be able to support 4 to 5 units (depending on your faction). Of course, each “unit” can be made up of many guys but the point being that researching the logistics to support larger army sizes becomes one of those strategic choices rather than a “must” to win.

 

image

This is a small thing but for grognards (like myself) every tooltip has been redone such that you get an instant display of where a given stat is derived from.

The Gameplay

While some artwork and music survived from War of Magic, not much else has.  So your skills at War of Magic aren’t really going to carry over here.  While Elemental: War of Magic did eventually become a fairly decent TBS game,  we were never satisfied with its underlying game mechanics. Specifically, the way production, research, farming, etc. worked. Rather than tweak it, we decided to take a different path.

image

In addition, the way heroes were handled was something that felt too much like luck.  Instead, you will find champions being powers unto themselves. They’re typically living in their fortress, keep, dungeon, or what have you. The more powerful they are, the better your recruiting skill will need to be to recruit them. 

image

In Fallen Enchantress you are also encouraged to kill off champions that are allied with the other side to prevent them from becoming allied with an opponent. 

image

The land is a dangerous place. Virtually all the prime spots are surrounded by serious dangers. The good news is, they won’t just run out and attack you normally. The bad news is, as soon as a city’s sphere of influence spreads to one of their enclaves, they will be all over that city.

Tactical Battles

image

image

Players have the choice to either instantly resolve a battle or go to a tactical battle screen. Once there, they can either watch the battle resolve turn by turn, fight it out themselves or just resolve it.

My personal preference right now is to handle the first few turns and then turn it over the the auto play and watch the gory results.

Fallen Enchantress combat works based on initiative. There are no “rounds”. The faster a unit is, the more turns they get. There’s no counter-attack (unless that unit has it as a special ability).

Some spells take time to cast and that spell will appear in the film strip on the left so that players know what’s coming up and can see if there’s time to counter it.

Some units are more effective than others. Mounted warriors are harder to hit via archers and thus a very effective counter.

There’s a lot of combat in Fallen Enchantress and the battles tend to be fairly quick.  They visually look a lot better as well (since every fighter in a given unit will take part in a given action rather than simply the lead one as was the case in WOM).

The most obvious difference in Fallen Enchantress, imo, is that nearly every unit has some sort of special ability. You can even design them into your soldiers if you have researched the appropriate techs.

image

Rewards after battle tend to be more meaningful.

 

image

Now that so much of the game has been put into XML, we and modders can throw in basically as many abilities and such into the game as our imagination comes up with.

Diplomacy

This is an area that is getting a lot of attention. With each faction playing in very different ways, we needed to make sure those ways were sufficiently apparent to players. That meant having players who were effective with diplomacy and giving diplomacy more teeth. That means more treaties, more opportunity for manipulation, more tools to play the puppet master.

AI

The AI challenges in Fallen Enchantress are significant. This is the area of the game I’m focused on.  I’ve written elsewhere on this but the AI is much more XML driven than anything I’ve done in the past. The less I hard-code, the more broad strokes I can take with regards to deciding what spells to cast, what special abilities to pick and use, what improvements to construct, what technologies to research.

Unlike a typical Stardock beta cycle, the first beta of Fallen Enchantress will have the first AI pass in (normally our first betas have no AI in it). So players will be able to quickly discern how we’re doing in this area.

Marketing

There will be no real marketing effort for Fallen Enchantress in 2011. Basically, the betas are going to have to speak for themselves.

In the meantime, assume it’s going to suck and give you a disease. Smile


Comments (Page 5)
5 PagesFirst 3 4 5 
on Oct 23, 2011

Frogboy



Looks good, but still looks underwhelming in terms of gameplay.

Just like to repeat some points I've mentioned in various suggestion posts... now I know you want to skip watching...

Just take Archivist in the screenshoot as an example, we need to have Archivist levels like Archivist I, Archivist II ... Archivist V etc. Having just '-1 Gildar per turn' 
and '+1 Research' is so underwhelming especially in late games.

Again, taking random improvement for cities again is feel like too much luck. Why not allow the Archivist II as a 'pinned' city improvement option when Archivist I
has been chose before. A ribbon of improvment choosen will appear at the buttom of the 'your settlement has grown a level' whenever city grown.

I can see breadth in tech trees & city improvment, but no depth. Can there be depth? so specialization of heroes/soveriegn/tech/city improvement is possible. 
Need some kind of Leather boots I,II,III,etc.

Again, champions should be not be simply killed off when a battle has been lost, especially recuriting a high level one is hard. Defeated champion should be
able to be escape, or become a turncoat. A customized champion is valuable, they should take risks and has 9 lives so they got more chances to gain more levels.



I think you should assume that FE will suck and give you a disease.
 
Assume that all your worst fears about it are true and give up hope now. You'll feel better.



That is a good way to manage expectation, lol.

Anyway, there maybe some misunderstanding of my post, or maybe I came from Mars that I am different from the huge majority of forum. lol.  

 The point being how best to differentiate cities/heroes/etc etc, and how best to make specialization more 'special'  especially in late game.    I like the way how monsters are supposed to automatically gain more HP at late FE games, so I would like similar mechanics for most other ability/item/improvement/etc.  

Thereby in my pipedream that, at late game, taking taking Archivist will "automatically" become -20 Gilder per turn & +20 Research per turn (regardless of whether there will be Archivist levels, or whether you need to paid more to get higher level, whether it is auto-upgrade,  this is flexible to game designer).  

 Having Archivist doing -1 Gilder & +1 Research per turn in late game aren't look good to me.     Developer can design the some late game archivist alternative, then name it Historian that do  -20 Gilder per turn & +30 Research per turn... but still it is similar to my 'leveling' suggestion other than giving it a fancier name.    And the cons will just having too many names... for effectively very similar stuff.

on Oct 23, 2011

I think the problem with that would be that every random building would get leveled. So you would arrive at a situation where your city doesn't need to specialize because it has 4 of the random buildings by level 5 and each one is giving huge bonuses. It just makes more sense to have a research building for every of the 4 level ups. 

ex: Alchemist   +1 Research

      Laboratory +3 Research

      University  +5 Research

      Library of Alexandria  +100% Research, +5 Research

= +28 Research

 

Whereas if each of those buildings leveled each time, you would have ten times the total. 

on Oct 24, 2011

Looks good. Nothing really new but good blend of what has gone before.. basically heavily using A classic "pick one cool option out of x" everytime you level (champion/city) mechanic. Oldie but goodie AND initative based TC is also nice.

But as many have said that alone wont unseat MOM if the magic and spells are tame, and all indications for this expansion at least FE might not yet have what it takes to be a classic even if the spells shown so far are but the base... 

on Oct 24, 2011

No need to worry too much. The tech tree, buildings, etc. still have a fair amount of work ahead of them. These early screenshots don't reveal how everything is going to look in the final version of the game.

Jon

on Oct 25, 2011

"In addition, the way heroes were handled was something that felt too much like luck.  Instead, you will find champions being powers unto themselves. They’re typically living in their fortress, keep, dungeon, or what have you. The more powerful they are, the better your recruiting skill will need to be to recruit them."

 

In Aow:sm there was a problem with no matter how many heros you put in the scenario/map before the game started (I'd make maps with 200-300 sometimes, splitting up a couple of factions around the board making each segment a minor faction), the AI would quickly get them all killed & then not have any for the mid-late game.  While using certain spells effectively they would/could be able to bring back one or two, and be able to summon another if they were still available somewhere (can't remember if ai did this or not), but the problem remained the same to a large part. 

 

Was just wondering if there was another way to keep the heros 'coming', since alot of players tend to go for the ai heroes first in a tacbattle.  Perhaps make any hero that falls be replaced with a 'Son of such & such' or 'daughter of such & such' that would be randomly placed on the map, or possibly even close too or in the area of influence of the faction that hired on the predecessor.

 

 Edit: Could even be found in a new building, tha Orphanage (I spent a few years in one & know for a fact that the orphans would appreciate it).

on Oct 25, 2011

Are you guys doing any more contests? A tile building competition would be pretty sweet. 

on Oct 25, 2011

I'm a little sad that I will have to install another launcher program to have access to the Beta.  I already have Impulse and Steam.  Though Impulse I'm slowly beginning to hate ever since gamestop took over.

on Oct 26, 2011

Grizzyloins
"In addition, the way heroes were handled was something that felt too much like luck.  Instead, you will find champions being powers unto themselves. They’re typically living in their fortress, keep, dungeon, or what have you. The more powerful they are, the better your recruiting skill will need to be to recruit them."

 

In Aow:sm there was a problem with no matter how many heros you put in the scenario/map before the game started (I'd make maps with 200-300 sometimes, splitting up a couple of factions around the board making each segment a minor faction), the AI would quickly get them all killed & then not have any for the mid-late game.  While using certain spells effectively they would/could be able to bring back one or two, and be able to summon another if they were still available somewhere (can't remember if ai did this or not), but the problem remained the same to a large part. 

 

Was just wondering if there was another way to keep the heros 'coming', since alot of players tend to go for the ai heroes first in a tacbattle.  Perhaps make any hero that falls be replaced with a 'Son of such & such' or 'daughter of such & such' that would be randomly placed on the map, or possibly even close too or in the area of influence of the faction that hired on the predecessor.

 

 Edit: Could even be found in a new building, tha Orphanage (I spent a few years in one & know for a fact that the orphans would appreciate it).

I never had this problem in AOW:SM but then I had many hero lists and added all of them to every map I made and all the maps I downloaded plus all the maps the game came with. Did the same for the magic items list. So the games never lacked for heros or items

on Oct 26, 2011

So now that impulse is sold we need to get the beta through star dock central? Is that available yet? Where do I get it?

5 PagesFirst 3 4 5