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Thoughts on Weapons Balance (Gaming)

by Blackt1g3r @, Login is from an untrusted domain in MN, Thursday, July 27, 2017, 13:34 (2474 days ago)

So it feels like maybe Bungie decided to move Special weapons into the power weapons category due to the difficulty in finding a good balance between primary, special, and heavy in PvP. I wonder if there might have been other ways of accomplishing the same goal?

For example, Titanfall 2 has sniper rifles, but they rarely get used in actual PvP instead of other weapons. For example, the Kraber has the is a one-shot kill anywhere on the body, but it has several disadvantages:

  • Sniper bullets have travel time, so you have to learn to lead your targets depending on the range (extra hard because players move so much in TF2).
  • Sniper shots have bullet trails so if you miss the player has a chance to figure out where they were getting shot from.
  • Zoom is generally higher than other weapons

Similarly, shotguns in TF2 are either very close range compared to average engagement distances or they have travel time.

Are there other ways Bungie could have handled the special weapons slot without just turning everything into power weapons again?

Maybe they could have give snipers a long ADS time to give other players an advantage against a sniper that isn't hard-scoped down a hallway? Add aim movement so you have to constantly correct your aim?

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Shotguns, too.

by BeardFade ⌂, Portland, OR, Thursday, July 27, 2017, 14:29 (2474 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

I think they also never knew quite what to do with shotguns, and thus they got moved as well.

I don't really have any thoughts or a solution for them, though, just thought it should be in the discussion.

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What issue did you have with Shotguns?

by INSANEdrive, ಥ_ಥ | f(ಠ‿↼)z | ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ| ¯\_(ツ)_/¯, Friday, July 28, 2017, 12:22 (2473 days ago) @ BeardFade

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What issue did you have with Shotguns?

by BeardFade ⌂, Portland, OR, Friday, July 28, 2017, 13:29 (2473 days ago) @ INSANEdrive

They tried to fix shotguns 3-4 times. Their damage, spread, and abundance of ammo made them the go to choice for at least 2 "seasons" in the Crucible. My point was that snipers aren't the only hard to balance gun archetype.

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Shotguns, too.

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Friday, July 28, 2017, 12:57 (2473 days ago) @ BeardFade

I think they also never knew quite what to do with shotguns, and thus they got moved as well.

I don't really have any thoughts or a solution for them, though, just thought it should be in the discussion.

All pellets should have been required for a one hit kill. Making no other changes from the HoW days, that might have been enough.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Ragashingo ⌂, Official DBO Cryptarch, Thursday, July 27, 2017, 15:24 (2474 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

I think maybe the problem.. well a problem.. is that if you nerf the infinite range one shot kill guns far enough into the ground that they aren't a balance problem you have also made them zero fun to actually use.

Putting snipers back into the power weapon category gives the freedom to keep sniper rifles good.

Like BeardFade mentioned, I think maybe shotguns were actually the harder problem. Basically, movement and map size and everything is such in Destiny that they really could not nerf shotguns enough. If they made it so shotguns had a range measured in millimeters it still would not have been enough because planting the end of the barrel against an enemy's head was a common enough occurrence due to the way Destiny played.

Like Sniper Rifles, I think it's better shotguns be allowed the freedom to be a little ridiculous in exchange for having true limited availability again.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Harmanimus @, Thursday, July 27, 2017, 15:31 (2474 days ago) @ Ragashingo

The shotgun part is in parts funny to me. Because I always thought the base range of shotguns should have been longer with a faster rate of fire, but the OHK potential was basically at melee range, so most shotguns were 2-3 shot kills within a reasonable and functional range. It actually makes them more flexible, but limits their frustration power.

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I agree entirely. It's what excites me about the new scheme

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Thursday, July 27, 2017, 20:52 (2474 days ago) @ Ragashingo

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Kahzgul, Friday, July 28, 2017, 00:53 (2474 days ago) @ Ragashingo

I think maybe the problem.. well a problem.. is that if you nerf the infinite range one shot kill guns far enough into the ground that they aren't a balance problem you have also made them zero fun to actually use.

Putting snipers back into the power weapon category gives the freedom to keep sniper rifles good.

Like BeardFade mentioned, I think maybe shotguns were actually the harder problem. Basically, movement and map size and everything is such in Destiny that they really could not nerf shotguns enough. If they made it so shotguns had a range measured in millimeters it still would not have been enough because planting the end of the barrel against an enemy's head was a common enough occurrence due to the way Destiny played.

Like Sniper Rifles, I think it's better shotguns be allowed the freedom to be a little ridiculous in exchange for having true limited availability again.

Agree. Personally, I think shotguns would have been fine as 2 hit kills instead of 1 hit kills, and I think that would have slowed them down enough that you wouldn't find yourself in as many trades. As for snipers, giving them longer ADS times would have forced people to hard-scope or abandon them altogether. I know, the super pros only like to quickscope like RealKrafty, but - seriously - giving a sniper rifle something like a two second ADS time would have kept them as powerful while preventing them from being the "useful in any situation" guns they became. Longer zooms, too, would help.

As for D2, I'm optimistic. Gotta see how the balance plays out once the real game is launched.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Harmanimus @, Friday, July 28, 2017, 14:10 (2473 days ago) @ Kahzgul

I personally always preferred the notion of pushing the range bands. Most of the time shotguns should be a 2SK, 3SK for faster firing or what not, but that all shotguns should have more range that works in and faster fire rates overall. Let them have a point blank 1SK potential, to make sure they stay powerful (and let people whiff all the time trying to score the 1SK) but reigned in with their function.

Contrasting that to sniper rifles? Minimum engagement range for precision damage. Probably the unpopular opinion option for a lot of people given that most games have damage drop off instead of increase based on their weapon types. Given that a precision hit was almost always a kill in Destiny with a sniper in PvP the ideal route was lowest 1SK impact with best ease of use. Perhaps making it so that the faster firing snipers have better potential to double-tap the body up close while the heftier ones more reliably one shot everything gives separate purpose.

Personally, while I like pushing hard scoping for snipers I do think making it too severe would just lead to people camping lanes even harder than they already do in Destiny.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by dogcow @, Hiding from Bob, in the vent core., Thursday, July 27, 2017, 15:46 (2474 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

I hope Bungie boosts the effectiveness of the secondaries that were moved to power-slots, especially for PvE. Perhaps requiring a little more ammo restriction in PvP(?). Regardless of what needs to happen in PvP I hope they really shine in PvE now.

Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Old Fire Thief @, Silverton, OR, Thursday, July 27, 2017, 22:43 (2474 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

The nice thing about putting shotguns and snipers into heavy is that pvp playes like old school halo. Waiting for the rockers, sniper/shotgun to respawn kept them from being overused (see destiny 1 pvp). Now not only can we have that pvp strategy, we can still use our "own" guns. Also when someone does pick up heavy, the power weapon they are using glows at the barrel. So they made it more obvious who has it.

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I'll give ya that. It is a bit more Halo-esk.

by INSANEdrive, ಥ_ಥ | f(ಠ‿↼)z | ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ| ¯\_(ツ)_/¯, Friday, July 28, 2017, 12:26 (2473 days ago) @ Old Fire Thief

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Kahzgul, Friday, July 28, 2017, 00:49 (2474 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

So it feels like maybe Bungie decided to move Special weapons into the power weapons category due to the difficulty in finding a good balance between primary, special, and heavy in PvP. I wonder if there might have been other ways of accomplishing the same goal?

For example, Titanfall 2 has sniper rifles, but they rarely get used in actual PvP instead of other weapons. For example, the Kraber has the is a one-shot kill anywhere on the body, but it has several disadvantages:

  • Sniper bullets have travel time, so you have to learn to lead your targets depending on the range (extra hard because players move so much in TF2).
  • Sniper shots have bullet trails so if you miss the player has a chance to figure out where they were getting shot from.
  • Zoom is generally higher than other weapons

Similarly, shotguns in TF2 are either very close range compared to average engagement distances or they have travel time.

Are there other ways Bungie could have handled the special weapons slot without just turning everything into power weapons again?

Maybe they could have give snipers a long ADS time to give other players an advantage against a sniper that isn't hard-scoped down a hallway? Add aim movement so you have to constantly correct your aim?

Oh boy. Something I know about.

Titanfall 2 is both a good and bad example for a few reasons. First, it's a twitch shooter where if you get shot you're almost always dead with no chance of escape. Destiny is really not that and is much more about positioning and map control. Titanfall 2 has map flow and it's basically impossible to win by camping simply due to the nature of the game. It also has massive maps compared to Destiny. Like four to eight times bigger. Which means weapon zoom is a really important thing, and sometimes you'll encounter someone too far away to attack or too close for comfort and your best option is to run and hide *when you see them on your radar* rather than even trying to engage. Personally, I find the titan combat to be much more similar to destiny's combat than the pilot combat is. it's class-based, positioning based, and team-shooting based.

To get to the meat of your questions, though, yes, of course bungie could have balanced their weapons more effectively. I've talked about this a lot on these very forums. Everything from adjusting ADS speed to turning speed to movement speed to rate of fire to accuracy etc etc etc can be tweaked. Lots of it was. BUT... Bungie designed themselves into a corner, apparently, in D1. They made each gun draw its base properties from a class of weapons, so if they changed one gun, they changed them all. This was very problematic.

The other problem is map design. Bungie is famous for their wide open spaces in the middle of their maps, but Destiny is very much the opposite, with circular maps that have an obstruction in the middle and lots of twists and turns with few, very controlled sightlines for sniping. This makes shotguns and snipers super effective. A sniper can hold an entire avenue of approach singlehandedly, usually with some cover, and a shotgunner is constantly popping around corners to catch people by surprise, already in shotgun range.

Imagine, if you will, playing Destiny on Blood Gulch. Wide open middle. Ledges at the extreme ends for sniping. Warrens on one side for shotguns. But the vast majority of the map is medium range engagements with very little cover. The game would be completely different. In fact, I imagine everyone would load up a sniper rifle at the start, and - as the game grew more chaotic, would switch to their primary weapons more and more. Or maybe my favorite all time map from any game ever, Hang 'em High. Harder to snipe there, some places where shotguns would be useful, but mostly, again, primary weapons because of the excellent target acquisition.

One more problem destiny has is a shocking lack of verticality in pvp arenas. Or rather, poor use of verticality in a game where vertical mobility is so great. The strength of the game is player control and mobility, and yet most of the maps are strictly linear with small elevation changes. There are very few alternate traversal paths which require deft movement to successfully navigate. That's not to say you couldn't make novel use of the vertical space, but it was almost always with the appearance of glitching the geometry (such as being on top of the pipes by B on rusted lands) rather than going somewhere the designers placed with intent. Anyway, all of that generally circular, generally linear design with few open spaces lends itself towards sniper and shotgun play.

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Wow. There are alot of Halo Refs. in this thread...

by INSANEdrive, ಥ_ಥ | f(ಠ‿↼)z | ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ| ¯\_(ツ)_/¯, Friday, July 28, 2017, 12:38 (2473 days ago) @ Kahzgul

Kahzgul: Oh boy. Something I know about.

...

The other problem is map design. Bungie is famous for their wide open spaces in the middle of their maps, but Destiny is very much the opposite, with circular maps that have an obstruction in the middle and lots of twists and turns with few, very controlled sightlines for sniping. This makes shotguns and snipers super effective. A sniper can hold an entire avenue of approach singlehandedly, usually with some cover, and a shotgunner is constantly popping around corners to catch people by surprise, already in shotgun range.

Imagine, if you will, playing Destiny on Blood Gulch. Wide open middle. Ledges at the extreme ends for sniping. Warrens on one side for shotguns. But the vast majority of the map is medium range engagements with very little cover. The game would be completely different. In fact, I imagine everyone would load up a sniper rifle at the start, and - as the game grew more chaotic, would switch to their primary weapons more and more. Or maybe my favorite all time map from any game ever, Hang 'em High. Harder to snipe there, some places where shotguns would be useful, but mostly, again, primary weapons because of the excellent target acquisition.

One more problem destiny has is a shocking lack of verticality in pvp arenas. Or rather, poor use of verticality in a game where vertical mobility is so great. The strength of the game is player control and mobility, and yet most of the maps are strictly linear with small elevation changes. There are very few alternate traversal paths which require deft movement to successfully navigate. That's not to say you couldn't make novel use of the vertical space, but it was almost always with the appearance of glitching the geometry (such as being on top of the pipes by B on rusted lands) rather than going somewhere the designers placed with intent. Anyway, all of that generally circular, generally linear design with few open spaces lends itself towards sniper and shotgun play.


...for some reason.

*Imagine playing Destiny on Blood Gulch*

Wow. Those Halo Maps really were open. I never really thought about this before. To be fair, there are some maps that - while not as open, are so large that they make for a better test to how Destiny would play in a Halo Map. Anything with a Vehicle option in Destiny is what I mean. Large game-play space.

I really don't have anything to say about your post right now, other then thank you. I didn't even consider the range and space of the maps into the thought of weapon balancing. Geez. Destines maps ARE really close combat spaces. Heh.

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Wow. There are alot of Halo Refs. in this thread...

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Friday, July 28, 2017, 12:52 (2473 days ago) @ INSANEdrive

Regarding Halo.

PvE and PvP had separate weapon balance in Halo! There's literally a check when the map loads as to what mode it is. In multiplayer the pistol does more damage, and plasma weapons stun among other things.

Of course someone else already mentioned this :-p

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Wow. There are alot of Halo Refs. in this thread...

by Robot Chickens, Sunday, July 30, 2017, 08:05 (2472 days ago) @ Cody Miller
edited by Robot Chickens, Sunday, July 30, 2017, 08:09

Regarding Halo.

PvE and PvP had separate weapon balance in Halo! There's literally a check when the map loads as to what mode it is. In multiplayer the pistol does more damage, and plasma weapons stun among other things.

Of course someone else already mentioned this :-p

Can't tell if sarcastic but plasma weapons stunned in pvp to my recollection

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Not sure if you read that right

by kidtsunami @, Atlanta, GA, Monday, July 31, 2017, 11:05 (2470 days ago) @ Robot Chickens

Regarding Halo.

PvE and PvP had separate weapon balance in Halo! There's literally a check when the map loads as to what mode it is. In multiplayer the pistol does more damage, and plasma weapons stun among other things.

Of course someone else already mentioned this :-p


Can't tell if sarcastic but plasma weapons stunned in pvp to my recollection

In multiplayer the pistol does more damage, and plasma weapons stun among other things.

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Not sure if you read that right

by Robot Chickens, Monday, July 31, 2017, 12:07 (2470 days ago) @ kidtsunami

Regarding Halo.

PvE and PvP had separate weapon balance in Halo! There's literally a check when the map loads as to what mode it is. In multiplayer the pistol does more damage, and plasma weapons stun among other things.

Of course someone else already mentioned this :-p


Can't tell if sarcastic but plasma weapons stunned in pvp to my recollection


In multiplayer the pistol does more damage, and plasma weapons stun among other things.

Fair, but I must still be confused. Plasma weapons stun in both multiplayer and campaign. The previous post talks about differences in how weapons behave between the two modes. If it isn't to highlight a difference, then why bring it up? Non sequitur?

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Not sure if you read that right

by Ragashingo ⌂, Official DBO Cryptarch, Monday, July 31, 2017, 13:44 (2470 days ago) @ Robot Chickens

Specifically, ever normal shot of the Halo 1 Plasma Rifle (and Plasma Pistol?) had a slight stun effect in multiplayer that made it marginally harder to swing your view around and return fire. Maybe hitting a unit with enough damage in single player would stun some of them (Grunts and Jackals for sure) but wasn't really tied to using a plasma weapon.

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Not sure if you read that right

by Robot Chickens, Monday, July 31, 2017, 14:30 (2470 days ago) @ Ragashingo
edited by Robot Chickens, Monday, July 31, 2017, 15:18

Hmmm, it might just have been a placebo effect on me then. I remember running up to elites from the side and unloading on them with the plasma pistol on legendary. Their shields would melt before they could turn. This was not using the charged up shot; rather the rapid fire-as-fast-as-your-finger-could pull-shots. My friend and I used to do the same to hunters and slowly kill them in an out strafing dance with puny pp shots.

That being said, it could be that I "felt" it stunned them because of the role in pvp. I'm not by my xbone so I cant test.

Edit:

It does appear others had the same recollection as I do in this thread.

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Hmm. Maybe so. Somebody test this!

by Ragashingo ⌂, Official DBO Cryptarch, Monday, July 31, 2017, 16:43 (2470 days ago) @ Robot Chickens

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Mad_Stylus, Saturday, July 29, 2017, 00:37 (2473 days ago) @ Kahzgul

I feel like level design was the biggest factor in which guns were so effective over others.

Take, for example, year one handcannons. Thing is, most encounters in PVE happened at close-mid range. Which they excelled at, beating out several top competitors. Thats not to say they didn't have problems with balancing, but they fit the niche in the gameworlds so well only magnified the issue.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by INSANEdrive, ಥ_ಥ | f(ಠ‿↼)z | ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ| ¯\_(ツ)_/¯, Friday, July 28, 2017, 12:18 (2473 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

So it feels like maybe Bungie decided to move Special weapons into the power weapons category due to the difficulty in finding a good balance between primary, special, and heavy in PvP. I wonder if there might have been other ways of accomplishing the same goal?

Oh goodness. I'm glad I'm not the only person who had this same thought. I recently watched Datto RAVE over the Fusion Rifle in D2B PvP. I sighed.

There is a way to make a balance in PvE & PvP. Make PvE different then PvP. In essence - Problem solved. Bungie simply has made things harder for themselves then it has to be. I don't mind them trying new things - I encourage it. As if, they needed my encouragement. Yet this experiment really feels like it has gone on too long already. Every time they fix it, they make a problem. After a while, I have to wonder is it those who do the balancing or the system they have to work with. Thought experiment: Give someone who surfboards professionally a plank of wood, how well do they do? Give some one who has never surfed ever a professional surfboard, how well do they do?

Does anyone here recall having any issue with weapon balance between the PvE and PvP of any of the Halo Games? I was much more a PvP person at the time, and I don't recall having any issues with either. While granted, the gameplay stylings were different, they also didn't have to change the load out scheme to try and "fix" the balance.

At the very least we know that PvE and PvP were separate things in Halo:CE, with separate numbers for each. How? Hardy LeBel, one of the designers of Halo: Combat Evolved's multiplayer: (Link)

I also pointed out that if we just used one set of data, as I was changing the gun data for multiplayer I might be damaging the overall balance of the single player game. Jason agreed, and we decided to “branch” the data and create two versions of the numbers, one for single player and the other for multiplayer

Halo: Combat Evolved's multiplayer! Arguably why we have PvP multiplayer in the first place!

This balancing problem is totally Bungies own doing, their own choice. The more they dig... well. Seems I'll know about it without needing to touch PvP. I hope they can prove me wrong if they stay the course.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Harmanimus @, Friday, July 28, 2017, 14:19 (2473 days ago) @ INSANEdrive

Does anyone here recall having any issue with weapon balance between the PvE and PvP of any of the Halo Games? I was much more a PvP person at the time, and I don't recall having any issues with either. While granted, the gameplay stylings were different, they also didn't have to change the load out scheme to try and "fix" the balance.

I think it is an interesting thing to consider, as there were definitely weapons that felt more powerful in one over the other, but given the patch structure and general lack of a living update cycle I don't think it's as easy to compare. And when changes were made to PvP stuff I'm pretty sure they were separate.

A retroactive consideration of how overlapping changes would have negatively impacted Halo is an interesting thought, to say the least. It definitely gives more reason to support split balancing. However, it seems that with D2 we will be getting numerical differences between PvE and PvP, but not so much functional differences when it comes to balancing. I expect this is the good way to do it, so that the gameplay feel for your Guardian is the same between them, but allows for making a more substantial distinction in power depending on gameplay environment.

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Thoughts on Weapons Balance

by Durandal, Monday, July 31, 2017, 11:47 (2470 days ago) @ Blackt1g3r

Bungie tried to have a "mid-tier" set of weapons, but couldn't reliably slot them in between the primaries and the heavy weapons.

I think they could have leveled out shotguns and snipers to be equal to primaries, but it would have been tough and would have changed the feel of the guns tremendously or resulted in significant overlap and redundancy with the various primaries.

How would you balance shotguns vs. AR and HCs for example? Snipers vs. Scouts?
DPS would have had to come down, and that would have driven many of the "pro" players away from those guns. Keeping the damage, but reducing the ammo would make the guns unusable in PVE.

Sure, you could have added scope charge time for snipers and made the shotguns like the low impact archtype where you had to be 5 feet away for a OHK, but most players would (and did) object to that.

So D2's implementation is about the best you can do while still maintaining the feel of the D1 weapons.

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