Sunday, August 30, 2020

Doom Musings: Tom Hall's Design Gimmicks

Here we are in another Doom Musing. Once again, I'll look at the original designers, this time with my personal favorite map author in Tom Hall. Now, Tom's work with Doom was actually finished and finalized by others in the group (notably Sandy Petersen, but E1M4 was finished by John Romero). This post will more or less deal with the way Hall designed his levels, as well as one gimmick in particular.

So for those that have seen the level's Hall designed, they are E1M4, E1M8, E2M1, E2M2, E2M3, E2M4, E2M7, E3M3, and E3M7 for Doom, and MAP10 for Doom II. Notice how most of these levels look in an automap? Yep, on the grand scale or scope of things, they seem to be rectangular in shape, as if Hall was trying to fill out as much space as possible. Contrast this with Romero's design, which doesn't make as many attempts to rectangularize the sectors as much but attempts to keep things compact for the gameplay to be better. Hall seemed to favor making plenty of locations have some sort of feel to it, gameplay may or may not be withstanding in those cases. But at the same time, these levels that Hall had designed favored a lot of exploration and accessibility, and players don't have any trouble reaching key locations due to their easy accessibility, which combines well with the overall nonlinearity of each of these maps in general. Go left or right, your choice, you'll be finding the key at one end and other cool stuff at the other but the paths converge quite easily.

There is one particular gimmick with Hall and his design though, and this is seen on E2M2. In the beginning area with crates, there's two yellow key doors. Where would the yellow key be? Oh it's across from some sort of blood puzzle. While that's neat, and not difficult to figure out, the other two keys are the only ones required to beat the level, one retrieved after the other. The yellow key is only for those specific rooms, and in those cases the player is well-rewarded, a chaingun in one room, and the rocket launcher and more ammo in the other. These are actual secrets, but not only that, they provide extra challenges. Yet another major thing to note about this particular Hall gimmick is that the key is far away from the optional areas that need it. This is where the gimmick is.

Oddly this gimmick is more prevalent in his Wolfenstein levels, so this blog post may end up being more of a Wolfenstein 3D musing in the end. I think Hall designed all (or at least most) of Episode 2, and E2M8 is the first example of this, well sort of. The silver key is first to be acquired, but that door nearby requires the gold key, which is found later. But here's the thing, the room itself just has six mutants so in reality this room is a red herring. Then there's E3M6, which has the gold key in an optional maze so the player can get some good goodies at the starting point. But then there's the god-awful starting map of Episode 6, which the gold key is in a secret pushwall right near the exit, and the secret room of goodies is behind another pushwall that's easy to miss in the officer corridors, that needs the gold key as well. It's incredibly spiteful. This is practiced again in E6M3 just to get to the secret level, where the gold key is behind pushwalls near the exit, then you get the key and have to go back to the goodies behind the gold key doors (although I'm sure you can lure an enemy to opening them which is a bit better). All these levels are designed by Hall (well E6M3 was mostly done by Robert Prince himself, but Tom Hall had a hand with it).

The weird thing about Hall's "get optional key in hard-to-reach location, go back to previous area to get good stuff" is that it's somehow still practiced by lots of WAD authors to this day, even if he only used it in like one Doom map. I could name several WADs and levels that do it, but I can't remember any for now. Still, it's nice to know just how much Hall's influence with this gimmick had on mappers.

Thursday, August 20, 2020

A look back at: Grandia III

 


Grandia III is a disappointment. Now, when I started this, I had already read several reviews of this game, in particular RPGenius's blog which tore through the game and all its bad qualities, as well as several reviews on GameFAQs, so my expectation weren't really that high. That being said, I was actually amazed at how this game managed to be so bad.

So the sounds, music, graphics, and the battle system. They're all alright. I appreciate some well thought-out stuff going on here. I can appreciate the slight changes in the magic usage and the introduction to skills, as well as how to get new skills, fuse mana eggs, etc. I can also appreciate the slight randomness in getting new skills or even upgrading current ones, all of which are new. That's all honestly okay. Okay at the very best that is.

Grandia III's gameplay nosedive does happen around Disc 2, or perhaps just slightly before that. The biggest problem is the INI stat. This is what governs when your characters and the enemies can start their actions in combat. Two problems. One, your characters actually DON'T gain an increase in this stat upon leveling up, meaning you have to rely on equipment, which of course is a problem if you want to equip something better. Second, the enemies on Disc 2 get much faster. So much faster that they get several turns over your characters getting one, and sometimes cancelling out your own potential attacks. At least I bothered with mana egg fusion and skills quite a bit beforehand, but it's still tough. There's a few breathers, which feel unorthodox, like the Nautica Plains area that you drop off to with bunnies and sheep and it's quite ridiculous and somewhat insulting to be dropped in an easy area right after the annoyingly aggressive Verse Realm enemies from before. Those Excise guys in particular are the worst. The Psi variant is basically what I'm talking about in regards to a fast enemy, then he has an Omega counterpart in the last dungeon that can even cancel special attacks and spells before they occur. And let's not start with the bosses, because a boss in a SquareEnix game tends to be overblown with regards to HP and defense that it feels like a marathon to survive.

And then we have the characters and plot of Grandia III. It's easy to tell that there are loads of similarities between these characters and the previous Grandia games. Heck, there's a lot of similarities between this game and Skies of Arcadia too! Let's see here.

Emelious is basically Melfice 2.0, he's a brother of a protagonist, he's corrupted with evil, and he redeems himself but dies. But he's not as exciting as Melfice, or Skies of Arcadia's Ramirez by any stretch. Heck, even Sephiroth does his schtick better.
The other villains all suck too. There's Kornell, a typical muscle-bound oaf (who's actually called out on this) who's more or less supposedly a comic relief villain. There's Violetta, the saucy chick who's in love with the bad guy but doesn't get him, she reminds me quite a bit of Wild Arms' Lady Harken both in style and character. There's the dude in the communist beret who doesn't even have a name or combat scene, and then the General Grievous-looking guy La Ilim who is there to be fodder. They're not really allusions, but they still all suck.
Miranda is basically a budget Sue, except she's Yuki's mother despite not looking like a mother at her age. Like Sue, she's only there for the first half before a tearful goodbye but could have had a lot more potential.
Alonso is a budget Gadwin more or less, except significantly less macho and not as strong. He basically is another adventurer sort of person who also leaves after the first half.
Hect is a cross between the emotionless Tio and the mysterious Liete but without any of the fun parts of either.
Ulf is Rapp 2.0, a regular fighter, but has weird fireball skills just like Rapp. Hell, his voice is almost similar to Rapp's!
Yuki is a worser Justin (or a worser Vyse for that matter). He's definitely an adventurer, but is more in line with flying rather than just trodding. Then he gets caught in the intertwined plot of the mysterious magical girl Alfina (a worser Feena, Elena, or Fina, take your pick) and madly falls in love with her, saves her at every possible point, etc. Then he marries Alfina (just like Justin did with Feena) and has a kid. Real original...
Dahna is the only playable character who has some sort of originality, but that seems to be sidelined more or less for a past love that most players would only feel sad for once. She's got a few spicy qualities that remind me of Millenia, but she's definitely not like her attitude-wise.
I don't think Raven is a ripoff of anything. But he's probably the one character who should've been playable. I liked him somewhat, even if he's one of those brooding swordsmen archetypes that gets overdone.
The Guardians really do give off some Skies of Arcadia vibes, which don't really entail much overall.

Finally the actual plot seems like a crappy rehash of the original Grandia's plot. You have the sense of adventure in Yuki wanting to fly, much like Justin wanting to adventure, and then he basically succeeds at flying a great plane. Woohoo. But then you're thrust into the plot involving Alfina's brother Emelious and his dealings with Xorn. Seem familiar? Well, in Disc 2 of Grandia 1 the evil known as Gaia corrupts the world by way of petrifying nameless NPCs and other living things. Grandia III does the same thing with Xorn, who essentially does the same thing except turning them into glass instead. There's that moment where both games make it feel like it's hopeless (Justin losing hope after Gaia's attack, same with Yuki's here) but gets encouragement (Justin gets it from his companions, Yuki gets it by finding his mentor's plane). And I already mentioned that at the end, Yuki and Alfina marry and have a child together.

I heard this game was apparently rushed in development as well. That's never a good thing for any developer to do. There's no real sidequests, but just a main plot with a bad difficulty spike, and a plot that basically makes you, the player, try to figure it out for yourself. But it's just not worth trying.

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Doom Musings: The Plutonia Saga

Well with the new interface that Blogger has, I just have to say it, and I've said it before, and yet these stupid super-corps never ever understand things every time a customer complains about them.

IF IT ISN'T BROKE DON'T FIX IT

There. If you must know, the last Doom Musings was published today at 8/1/2020. But it says it was published on July 15th, which was actually the day I started writing on it, which sucks because I finished it on 8/1 instead. I decided to start this particular Doom musing at 8/1 and will hopefully get it published by 8/15, as I would usually do these bi-monthly and such. But I bet they'll be saying it was published today. Hell, I'm looking at the "Published" date right now and I'm annoyed by it.

So let's move on to the topic of Plutonia. Everyone by now knows it's one-half of Final Doom, and everyone knows it's basically the ultimate challenge as far as IWADs go. Made by the Casali brothers, at that point known members of TeamTNT and created a few levels in Evilution, their goal was to make Doom levels for battle-hardened players. Nowadays, there's plenty of those who have managed to beat far more than the Plutonia Experiment and probably think that standout level Go 2 It is too easy. And then you realize that the Plutonia wad features lots of green, brown, newer rock textures, as well as challenging, mostly claustrophobic encounters often with chaingunners, arch-viles, and revenants in notably tricky places.

The weird thing is this all holds up well to this day, as even now, I can still feel the challenge of playing it. The regularly tough levels are still regularly tough. Hunted, well-known for being the arch-vile maze, is still a harsh maze, and the secret maps do what they can to really drive their points home, with Go 2 It being a benchmark for slaughtermaps. Some of those annoying gimmicks like resurrecting chaingunners from beyond areas (MAP10, MAP15, and MAP27 all have this gimmick). The maps are original, but seem to have homages to classic IWAD maps to give you a small sense of familiarity overall. Plutonia not only holds up well, it even gets its own MIDI pack thanks to the community wanting to pitch in and change the IWAD music, as well as a few sequels.

Plutonia Revisited isn't necessarily a sequel per se. It is a community project, you know, like Evilution, which was a community project. Regardless, it's all about making maps in the Plutonia style, with the homage to levels here and there. It all is generally good, although one cannot help but think that a lot of these maps draw a lot of inspiration from Plutonia's levels, both in name and in design. MAP09 Ruined Kingdom draws heavily from MAP08 Realm. Maps 21 and 22 share slots with the maps they are inspired by, and so forth. Even with these obvious-seeming homages they're not to be untouched, as they all do what they can do well.

Except MAP15 Helix. This map actually sucks.

Finally I'll talk a bit about Plutonia 2. This one's an easy fan favorite. It takes general design styles from Plutonia, and makes them bigger and better overall. The short but hard romps of the original Plutonia are thrown off the table, but in their place you'll find medium-sized levels that all play with similar styles. There's generally no room for error in a lot of cases, and every map feels both fresh and interesting without relying too much on homage-y stuff. Overall though these maps are surprisingly well-balanced too. So if it isn't obvious, this one's my definite favorite of Plutonia's so-called "saga"

There's been plenty of other Plutonia-styled maps. Plutinya was a megawad for 1024-styled maps, then there's Skepland, a three-level wad designed to screw with speedrunners profusely more or less. These don't live up to the reception of the others, but they don't need to, as they are all still quite good challenges overall.

Sunday, August 2, 2020

A look back at: Pokemon Grass Jewel

ROM Hacks. They tend to have some alright things to them in general. Sometimes they feel completely fresh, and other times you're revisiting locales in a different limelight. This is the latter. Emerald's plot is basically the same as it usually is, except with only one enemy team to stop, and well, there's an interesting plot twist with a professor hellbent on world destruction. Yes, a Pokemon professor wants to destroy the world while letting the so-called Team Dream be taking the blame.

Grass Jewel also gives you a false sense of security. Once you can use Poke Balls, every mart in the game sells LOADS of convenient stuff from Leftovers to Ultra Balls to every Repel, Escape Ropes, Quick Claws, and even the prices are adjusted to be easier. Also the vitamins are cheaper, you can buy every berry from one salesman, and every TM at the department store and then some. There's even a mart inside the Artisan Cave that sells both Master Balls and Rare Candy. Yikes. The meadows where you can get Eevee and the starters are nice freebies and are quaint. Also most moves tend to have more PP and much more power. I was also not expecting a few type changes such as Cut being Grass, Strength being Rock, and the Fairy type coming back. There's also Epic Justice, a surprise move that is used by uber trainers that replaces Splash and is essentially an unavoidable one-hit KO.

This is all offset by the weirdness of seeing sitcom characters around. And also level gaps more or less as the levels of wild mons are higher, and the trainer levels are also higher. The champion (who is BARNEY STINSON) has at least one Lv100 mon, while all the uber trainers, from Red to Eric to the Smallville cast to two characters from Buffy and two characters from Glee, all having Lv100 mons, and usually a full team. There's also for some reason the seven frontier brains who challenge you to double battles with Lv100 mons in random locations. So yes, there is a false sense of security with what you're offered with, as then you'll be facing the big challenges just as soon as you get to have a big advantage. It's a weird way to balance this hack.

Of course, I didn't like plenty of things too. I can appreciate the little usage of HMs this time around, but the opening of many areas feels strange to me. And the Safari Zone really does suck since so many areas are locked off. And I just HATE those NPC guards that block everything until certain points. And there's no justice for that invisible wall maze in the Neverland portion of the Storybrooke post-game.

Well here's a walkthrough as usual. I plan to have all my walkthroughs on GBAHacks at this point, as well as on my PokeCommunity account.