Death to the Mana Bar!

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JMeganSnow

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Sicram said:
Although having you go on an uncontrolled rampage due to exhaustion would be a wee bit much. Having you temporarily collapse would've sufficed, or starting to eat away at HP or anything. The lore explanation was decent but you only know this if you read about it, otherwise it's like any other game.
It wouldn't have to happen all the time, just once or twice overall in order to make you a bit careful about running your mage completely out of juice. And come on, the shock factor would be terrific. Maybe only have it trigger when you die while you're out of juice (and have it so that running out of juice does damage to you or lowers your max hp and defenses so there's a reasonably good chance of them happening simultaneously).

But, yeah, the lore and mechanics of Dragon Age are in completely different rooms that only barely communicate. It's a shame, too, because if they were integrated they could both be excellent.
 

Drakmorg

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Aug 15, 2008
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If magic was unlimited and overpowered, no one would ever use anything else.

Maybe it might be interesting if say, your character uses health instead of mana. That way the game can still be challenging because if you misfire a great big spell or don't use your spells effectively enough to kill all the enemies, then you leave yourself vulnerable to getting one-shot by the next mook who can get within striking distance.
Plus if you try to do something out of your league, like casting a lvl 20 spell when your lvl 1, then instead of just not being able to do so, you get the more hilarious outcome of killing yourself.

Or maybe instead of health your character always has a normally nigh-impenetrable magic shield that gets weaker as you cast spells, so you are forced to make yourself vulnerable in order to proceed.
 

Zaverexus

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BFEL said:
why limit it at all? For game balance? The ENTIRE point of magic is to be unbalanced. I want to summon skeleton armies from my fallen foes and conjure firestorms to destroy cities in an instant!
Well therein lies your problem: that you are wrong.
In a game you need balance, like it or not. And a game in which you could raze whole cities and all your enemies to the ground instantly would be a freaking horrible game.

Does anyone remember the old Baldur's gate (and thus old aDnD rules) mechanic for magic? You had a spellbook full of spells you "knew" based on level and what you had found, but depending on your intelligence you could only "memorize" so many incantations. This meant that before you slept each day you had to choose which spells you wanted to memorize for the next day. And once you used that prepared spell, you had to sleep to memorize it again.
Personally I liked this mechanic, it made being a magic user difficult. Spells were a big deal that you held in reserve for when you absolutely needed it, and then you could strike down huge enemies. You had to have other ways to fight, namely a powerful party to protect you wizard, who had next to no health. It made casters human.
 

WanderingFool

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Legion said:
I thought this was going to be about Yahtzees bar in Australia, I am actually kind of disappointed as it would have made an interesting topic.
Only reason I clicked this thread.

Anyways, Im sure there is a limit to magic in almost single piece of fiction that has it. If magic was all powerful and there was no rules, than God help any poor sod in that world.
 

teebeeohh

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what bothers me more is that in most RPGs there are 2 or 3 spells that superior to everything else and you either only use those or you only use those and run around while the CD wears off.
why not have a system where magic is super powerful but you have to combine spells or elements to make the most out of it(thing magicka). so while when you need to defend yourself you can quickly push the enemies a few feet away you need a lot more time to summon a tornado that pretty much wreaks havoc. Also why is there never a system that rewards you for mixing up your spells. Like make a fireball stronger for every non-fire spell you cast.
 

nukethetuna

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Casting magic has to have some drawback, especially in games where you've got the "warrior" types as available options, because magic is generally shown to be far more destructive and powerful. Whether it be a mana bar, time, difficulty to perform, or only usable in specific situations, there needs to be some resource or restriction that limits its use.

Magicka kinda avoids a mana bar by just making everyone wizards with access to the overwhelmingly powerful spells, though. The element system does take a little more time, and there is kind of a stamina meter in that your fingers might fall off putting in spell combinations.
 

Smooth Operator

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Without limits you are invincible -> no challenge -> very limited fun

As for Gandalf he cast like 3 spells in his entire lifetime, and Harry cast 5, the average game mage can do heck of alot better with the mana bar.

But Magicka did an interesting new system, essentially you can cast as fast as your skill allows
 

trooper6

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Bloodstain said:
Well, being uber-awesome-godlike in games is simply not fun.
(On a side note: I too thought this was going to be about Yahtzee's bar)

trooper6 said:
And second, Tolkien's universe what exceptionally high-magic. Gandalf does not bust out massive spells. Here's an article noting that he's probably only 5th level:

http://www.therpgsite.com/showthread.php?t=7338
Gandalf wasn't allowed to use his magic as he could have. The Valar (gods) forbid it because the races of middle earth should do it on their own, without the Maiar (Gandalf and so on) marching in and rescuing everyone. Gandalf is as powerful has Sauron. Also, Maiar in general are as powerful as the Valar, but have a lesser rank. I receommend reading the Silmarillion.
If a player came to me in a game I was GM'ing as said that he wanted to play someone who was crazy powerful (let's say a 20th level wizard), but that was only in theory, in actuality he functioned exactly as a 2nd level wizard...then he'd just be a 2nd level wizard with some interesting backstory.

Mighty Wulrus said:
How about stamina? As in the force of life, not necessarily health directly, but your ability to run, jump, fight and cast magic all draw from your "stamina" bar? This would approach the classic film perception of magic users, collapsing when their power has been exerted to that extent.
There are table top games that work this way. GURPS has multiple possible magic systems. In the standard one, magic is powered by fatigue points...the same points that people use to hike long distances or exert themselves in some way or what you lose if you don't sleep. If a person runs out of fatigue, they slow down, can pass out, etc. If you keep trying to burn fatigue when you don't have any, you start losing hit points.

Now, the thing is, this isn't going to give the OP the godly unlimited magic user that he wants. Because you are still limited...this time by "stamina" rather than "mana" it is functionally the same thing in the end.

But there are many different models. Another GURPS model is the "energy accumulating" model. This is also available in GURPS, and also in Castle Falkenstein. In this, you can draw unlimited power from the universe around you...it just takes a long time to do it. Really big powerful spells might take days--or hours if you have lots of followers also drawing power. But that isn't going to work in a video game...though Fable 2 sort of did something like that, were you wait longer to charge up more powerful spells.

Not all film mages get tired from spell casting. It really depends on how magic is modeled in the universe and where they draw their power.

I believe there in an "unlimited mana" option in GURPS, where rather than drawing from your fatigue, you can immediately pull from ambient mana around you to power spells...though there are checks and balances on that system. Basically, you take too much from the universe, the universe takes back. "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction" and all that.
 

Comrade_Beric

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May 10, 2010
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Take away the mana and make magic casting cost you life instead. Magic casting can now KILL you if you do it too often or cast something too big. "Whew, that almost killed me, but we made it" = good feeling.
 
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AbsoluteVirtue18 said:
Legion said:
I thought this was going to be about Yahtzees bar in Australia, I am actually kind of disappointed as it would have made an interesting topic.
I was kind of hoping for that, too. I'd kill to have one of those here in the States.
yeah same here. I hope eventually we get something like it
 

pyramid head grape

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Legion said:
I thought this was going to be about Yahtzees bar in Australia, I am actually kind of disappointed as it would have made an interesting topic.
Me too... kind of a let down.
To cheer you up

I want to go to the mana bar so badly.

OT: I quite like mana bars in games.
 

Thirsk

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Jan 18, 2009
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Play some Magicka - there's eldritch goodness all over the place and no mana bars.

This have probably been mentioned before, but hey.
 

Bloodstain

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JMeganSnow said:
Bloodstain said:
JMeganSnow said:
Bloodstain said:
I receommend reading the Silmarillion.
Don't read the Silmarillion. Unless you're one of those people who likes to watch "The Making of . . ." segments and so forth.
It's not a "Making of", it's description of everything happening in Tolkien's universe, starting with the creation of the world and ending with the end of the War of the Ring.
It's difficult to read, but fascinating. Amazing what Tolkien invented.
I know what it is. I read it. But it won't appeal to people who are looking for a great story. It is like reading the encyclopedia or the bible or watching a movie clip ABOUT a movie. Hence why it probably won't appeal to people who don't like that sort of thing.

Reading comprehension tip: just because someone says that something falls into a the same category as something else, does not mean they're claiming that something is IDENTICAL to that something else.
Well, okay. So what now? All you're saying is "Don't read it, you won't like it". He (the one I recommended it to) should be able to decide on his own whether he is interested enough in the Tolkien universe. Of course the Silmarillion is nothing you read for superficial entertainment, but out of interest and fascination.
By the way, comparing reading the encyclopaedia to reading the bible is...let us just say it doesn't mae you sound credible.

And since you're so quick to give tips, here is one for you: Stop deciding on behalf of other people. They know best what they like.

Good day.
 

Bloodstain

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trooper6 said:
Bloodstain said:
Well, being uber-awesome-godlike in games is simply not fun.
(On a side note: I too thought this was going to be about Yahtzee's bar)

trooper6 said:
And second, Tolkien's universe what exceptionally high-magic. Gandalf does not bust out massive spells. Here's an article noting that he's probably only 5th level:

http://www.therpgsite.com/showthread.php?t=7338
Gandalf wasn't allowed to use his magic as he could have. The Valar (gods) forbid it because the races of middle earth should do it on their own, without the Maiar (Gandalf and so on) marching in and rescuing everyone. Gandalf is as powerful has Sauron. Also, Maiar in general are as powerful as the Valar, but have a lesser rank. I receommend reading the Silmarillion.
If a player came to me in a game I was GM'ing as said that he wanted to play someone who was crazy powerful (let's say a 20th level wizard), but that was only in theory, in actuality he functioned exactly as a 2nd level wizard...then he'd just be a 2nd level wizard with some interesting backstory.
Of course it is not a concept you would use in something like Dungeons & Dragons. I just wanted to clarify that Gandalf is indeed a powerful being in his universe, completely off-topic. I apologize for the confusion.
 

Katana314

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I think the point he's making is that the bible is a collection of stories, rather than an overall narrative, and it's not really intended for entertainment. Certain types of encyclopedias are like that too.

Anyway, I think more games should think from the standpoint of starting off with some overpowered ability, LEAVE that overpowered, and see how the rest of the game can fit around it. Outside of RPGs, Braid let you go back in time to any degree with no restrictions. Half-Life 2 let you use the Gravity Gun however much you wanted. Super Smash Bros. lets you use all your special moves at any time, but they're somewhat situational.

So I somewhat agree with the OP; in modern times the mana bar does seem like something of a needless restriction.
 

Aijou

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Nov 9, 2009
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Yeah, uh, what everyone else said about balance and challange and the rest. All that.

Personally I miss the old Baldur's Gate and NWN approach to spell balance with Casting Times. I always liked the original D&D approach to spellcasting, where more advanced spells would be hindered by taking a long time to cast and being highly interuptable. Seems much more realistic and interesting to me, and also increases your need to think tactically as a mage.

Cooldown meters work well from a gameplay balance perspective, but it makes little sense that it takes my character the same (usually instant) amount of time to cast "flare" and "super killer fireball of armageddon". Though I suppose this mostly relates to the deeper problem of RPGs getting more and more fast paced and action oriented, which I won't get into here.
 

trooper6

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Bloodstain said:
trooper6 said:
Bloodstain said:
Well, being uber-awesome-godlike in games is simply not fun.
(On a side note: I too thought this was going to be about Yahtzee's bar)

trooper6 said:
And second, Tolkien's universe what exceptionally high-magic. Gandalf does not bust out massive spells. Here's an article noting that he's probably only 5th level:

http://www.therpgsite.com/showthread.php?t=7338
Gandalf wasn't allowed to use his magic as he could have. The Valar (gods) forbid it because the races of middle earth should do it on their own, without the Maiar (Gandalf and so on) marching in and rescuing everyone. Gandalf is as powerful has Sauron. Also, Maiar in general are as powerful as the Valar, but have a lesser rank. I receommend reading the Silmarillion.
If a player came to me in a game I was GM'ing as said that he wanted to play someone who was crazy powerful (let's say a 20th level wizard), but that was only in theory, in actuality he functioned exactly as a 2nd level wizard...then he'd just be a 2nd level wizard with some interesting backstory.
Of course it is not a concept you would use in something like Dungeons & Dragons. I just wanted to clarify that Gandalf is indeed a powerful being in his universe, completely off-topic. I apologize for the confusion.
No problem at all! And actually, I think it makes for an interesting character concept. But since I would probably be running a GURPS game, I'd probably have the Gandalf character start off with the same number of points as everybody else, but he'd get some advantages that reflect his status: maybe Positive Reputation, Social Regard, High levels of Magery, Claim to Hospitality, High Status, or things like that to reflect the concept.
 

Amondren

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Oct 15, 2009
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Magicka has no mana bar and its fun and well balanced

(I thought this was about the Mana bar in Australia.)