What would be an efficient use of FAF's funds to improve FAF?
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So you want money to optimize the game but you don’t want to pay developers? I see zero coherency between thinking giving a mapper $50 as a prize or a $50 world machine subscription are different. Buying servers does basically nothing for reducing lag, the game is p2p. How are you supposed to buy ladder options without paying a dev?
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The way I understood it so far from the comments paying core developers for additional features is very expensive and brings future problems or dependencys. I said giving better tools to map developers and paying the license of these tools for instance.
adding additional ladder options aren't that difficult or costly to implement I imagine. maybe something like an arranged team ladder or some noobs friendly ladder with build timer and with the option to be unranked. just ideas...
if there is no option to improve the connection or lag issues through further investments that's of course a pitty because that is THE major issue with the multiplayer in this game I think. everyone is bothered by the restarts you have to do sometimes because someone drops early in the game no? would be great to find some solution or work around to this problem
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@thomy100 said in What would be an efficient use of FAF's funds to improve FAF?:
adding additional ladder options aren't that difficult or costly to implement I imagine. maybe something like an arranged team ladder or some noobs friendly ladder with build timer and with the option to be unranked. just ideas...
Why would we need or want this when we have custom lobbies? I don’t mean that to be accusatory, just wondering if there’s a different view point you have there that newer players might have.
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@exselsior
Well, one of the problems seems to be that we lose new players too quickly. by creating a less competitive 'safe zone' for newer players in form of a ladder it would help keeping these players longer and give them a chance get more familiar with the game and learn to love it.Right now the learning curve for new players seems too steep and it's frustrating to get blown away by a 10min spam rush or 20min nuke while being called noob. no wonder newer players leave and don't come back.
since this game is old and most players already play it for years even the skill gap to a mid range rated player is huge. So I think creating an artificial more noob friendly area by automated ladders for specific maps or limited rating range would go a long way.
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I'm late to the party here, but I have read the the whole thread (mostly). On the subject of player retention and advertising what FAF really is at ground level (as opposed to the surface, i.e. shiny robots & explosions), my suggestions are as follows;
First, pick a few RTS Streamers and invite (pay) them to host a mini-series in which they learn the game's mechanics alongside veteran players. This would allow said players to briefly explain how FAF has significantly more important economy considerations than other titles, on top of the normal unit microing and tech factors of actual battle, and why that makes it a more satisfying experience for the armchair general.
Second, the current streaming community, while dedicated, is both small and geared towards existing players/fans. I suggest that on both Twitch and Youtube, we create an official FAF Streaming channel in which groups of players can casually talk about how the game works while playing at the same time, effectively explaining as you go. We could also have Clan involvement here in order to expand community interaction among our own playerbase.
That's all I've got for now.
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@immortal-d said in What would be an efficient use of FAF's funds to improve FAF?:
First, pick a few RTS Streamers and invite (pay) them to host a mini-series in which they learn the game's mechanics alongside veteran players. This would allow said players to briefly explain how FAF has significantly more important economy considerations than other titles, on top of the normal unit microing and tech factors of actual battle, and why that makes it a more satisfying experience for the armchair general.
This sound like a good idea on paper but trying to be the middle man and get this all organises will take a heap of work to do and need one person to be dedicated to dealing with time constraints & time zones
Second, the current streaming community, while dedicated, is both small and geared towards existing players/fans. I suggest that on both Twitch and Youtube, we create an official FAF Streaming channel in which groups of players can casually talk about how the game works while playing at the same time, effectively explaining as you go. We could also have Clan involvement here in order to expand community interaction among our own playerbase.
This is Basically what we have for FAF Live but only really used for Tournaments but i don't see why it can be branched out for something like this or their is the option for the FAF YouTube which i maintain and could give a stream key out too select people.
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A couple years back there was a community run tournament for Overwatch called "The Scrub Cup" - basically it was for low level players, and it introduced a whole host of people to the competitive tournament scene. That game is heavily team focused, and having a randomly assigned dedicated team to work with for a couple months before the tournament was incredible in showing people an entirely new side to the game.
I think FAF could benefit from something similar. A tournament designed specifically for noobs, who could work together on a team to learn and grow and improve. I don't know if it'd help with player retention or anything like that, but I think it would certainly help people see why competition can be fun without all the pressure of being the best of the best.
Here's a link that explains what Scrub Cup is (was, RIP)
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this issuse is low rated player thier never enough that show up to tournamnets it ben tryd time and time again ans allwasy lkinda flops. might be somthing the next Community manager could look in to
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@rowey On the first point, provided we are slightly organized, I have time to be the FAF rep. for a few one-off sessions with a popular RTS streamer learning the game. I can wrangle some players from my clan to help as well, if only to serve as punching bags.
On the second point, having multiple players using the same channel to maximize up time would be nice, and could be done across both Youtube and Twitch.
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You need to pay me to do video tutorials on everything, think people would play more if there were clear tutorials on how to improve.
Also I need to improve the website and create a much better infrastructure for tournaments and newshub…
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@femboy best to focused on one thing than spread yourself over too many things
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@rowey alright, lets focus on the paying me part B)
No but for real, I've been doing that, sadly it just hasnt been FAF related but with my new experiences/projects I come back a better developer to help here.
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I agree with bully that spending money on bribing streamers is just as questionable as funding developers, since it could easily come off as being a fuck you to everybody who is doing it for free. Also people need to realize that we are not talking about small sums of money here. Not to mention the fact that some complete beginner learning SupCom for 2 hours is pretty damn underwhelming as far as content goes.
Speaking as someone who has actually spent a lot of time in other RTS games; people are frothing at the mouth for a new RTS, especially in sc2. Most of these people have never even heard of SupCom, let alone having played it. The question that needs to be asked is why do these people have a huge hard on for Frost Giant, but are unwilling to try old games?
People don't want to play an old game, they board hypetrains. The most significant impact on playerbase comes from big releases which create a sense of newness. Can a sufficiently large singular event, such as a big release, be recreated in FAF? Maybe not, but it's something to think about.
Another thing. I recall ftx saying something about how FAF needs to focus more on teamgames instead of 1v1. I have to agree.
It's not that I don't like 1v1 as a format - I love 1v1. I played tons of pretty high level 1v1 in sc2, aoe2, aoe4, among others. I'm gonna be honest here, 1v1 is simply not that fun in FAF. I'd rather play any of the three aforementioned games than 1v1 in FAF. I think it's fixable with drastic changes to balance and maps, but I disgress.
For now, let's focus on what the game, in its current state, is actually good at: teamgames with 8-10 players on ~15km maps.
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You mean good as an introduction for players? I like to think the ideal game sees at least late t2 and at most late t4 push gameplay. The outliers are late t1/arty style games. For high level gameplay you see that in 2v2 for sure. New players/low skill players are likely to require 4v4ish games for it.
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Would you pay me $100 from FAF funds to stick with FAF? Why not? If not, why would you try to spend $100/head to get new people to play FAF? That's basically what it would cost.
Even if 10% of a streamer's audience decided to try the game, how many of them would stay more than 2 weeks?
If FAF is going to spend donations to recruit new players, what does that tell the people who donated? "Thanks for the money, we will use it to replace you."
Money should be spent on retention of high-level players (through cash prizes for winning tournaments) and in recognition of creating new content (e.g. pay $100/map to the makers of the top 10 new maps each year).
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Another option - invest in passive index linked share funds with the aim that the approximate long term average income yield from such investments could be used to fund server costs in the event future donations weren’t able to cover future costs (i.e. deferring the ‘problem’ of what to do with the spare/excess funds in the event donations continue to significantly outpace such costs).
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Paid tutorials and how to's, we are severely lacking
Small bonuses for the dev team, $10 is better than nothing.
More tournaments. We need a very good spread so all players can play not just the super good ones.
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I dint read the whole thread before I wrote this so apologies if its been covered already.
I think funds should be used to fund any infrastructure improvements that are deemed to be currently inadequate or that could be considerably improved, as an example the servers themselves (not sure if FAF owns them but if it does then perhaps a nice upgrade or if we rent a hosted server then improving our service provider or moving it to a better location ect)
I'm just a dumb carpenter so I don't know the ins and outs off all this stuff but you see the point. I am in the early stages of making a tutorial and would never want to be paid for something like that...I think when a game like this is kept going by volunteers then more people have to be willing to volunteer to make it better without the expectation of getting money. The best FPS game in the history of the world was BF 2142 and it was kept alive for a while but it soon died (after bf3 released) because so few in the community were willing to donate their time to play/promote/develop it... We are lucky that FAF is still so strong and better than ever (despite what the haters say when they cant find a lobby) and the best way to keep it alive is for the people who love this game to help out where and when they can and to have as good of an infrastructure platform as we possibly can. If the development team is aware of a glaring need that would be solved with financial investments than that should be the focus imo.
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@matches said in What would be an efficient use of FAF's funds to improve FAF?:
I think funds should be used to fund any infrastructure improvements that are deemed to be currently inadequate or that could be considerably improved, as an example the servers themselves (not sure if FAF owns them but if it does then perhaps a nice upgrade or if we rent a hosted server then improving our service provider or moving it to a better location ect)
The Servce we have and are looking to upgrade too we have more than enough funds in the bank to cover it for a whole year.
I'm just a dumb carpenter so I don't know the ins and outs off all this stuff but you see the point. I am in the early stages of making a tutorial and would never want to be paid for something like that...I think when a game like this is kept going by volunteers then more people have to be willing to volunteer to make it better without the expectation of getting money. The best FPS game in the history of the world was BF 2142 and it was kept alive for a while but it soon died (after bf3 released) because so few in the community were willing to donate their time to play/promote/develop it... We are lucky that FAF is still so strong and better than ever (despite what the haters say when they cant find a lobby) and the best way to keep it alive is for the people who love this game to help out where and when they can and to have as good of an infrastructure platform as we possibly can.
If the development team is aware of a glaring need that would be solved with financial investments than that should be the focus imo.
Money wont be spent on dev time how can you give X dev money when Y dev did Z for free
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@rowey Like I said dude Im a dumb carpenter...in my mind the "dev team" is anyone who does anything official with FAF. I dont know how all this works and what each specific team is called and who does what...I kinda said that in my OP...dont overthink it. My point is just that I think the money should be spent on physical things and not time doing things people in a volunteer community should do anyway such as tutorials or advertising.