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  1. #1
    Player
    Packetdancer's Avatar
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    I think I've expressed that I don't see the MSQ needing the base difficulty ramped up, though I do think it would be super great if it did a little more to teach players about other things, like "the white bar over an icon means you can Esuna a thing" and "if the cast bar is blinking, you can interrupt the cast".

    (I would, of course, be thrilled to have more higher-challenge content in the game overall; I just don't think it needs to be required content that blocks people from progressing the main story.)

    However...

    Quote Originally Posted by Eraden View Post
    You are an example of those who I mentioned who simply do not understand the situations of those of us who struggle from time to time on the MSQs because of our conditions. Please understand that for some of us, we really are at our physical limits when we have difficulties and it has very little to do with the game teaching us how to play.
    Do you mind if I ask what the specific limitation/struggle is? (If you've detailed it elsewhere in the thread, I may have missed it; this thread is 35 pages long and I suspect will hit 40 within the next day, so finding stuff on earlier pages is a bit of a mess.)

    Obviously, this is none of my business and you should feel free to tell me such. (Or note that you'd prefer to talk offline/outside of a public thread.)

    I ask mostly because, as detailed in a previous post, I do try to approach my own game design efforts in a way to make things accessible to people. And I do firmly believe that accessible content doesn't have to be easy content. (And that conflating "accessible gaming" with "people want easy mode on everything" does no favors to anyone.)

    For instance, I don't have to make a fight easier to make it friendly to both folks with visual impairment and hearing issues; I just need to make sure that every move where I want the players to pay attention to the telegraph has both a distinct visual cue (for those hard-of-hearing) and an audio cue (for those who have vision issues).

    For instance, if I were designing P4S, during the Pinax phase where you need to see whether the sword or the cape is glowing, to know whether it will be the cleave or the knockback... the visual cue (which thing is glowing) is already there, but I would make a distinct audio cue. It might be the sound of a sword being unsheathed (if the sword is glowing) or of a cape being unfurled (if the cape is glowing), or two voiced lines (one for sword, one for cape). It doesn't have to be obvious, but it should be there.

    Regardless, that audio cue would mean that someone with vision issues doesn't have to squint to see whether it's the sword or cape glowing -- or rely on me as a raid-caller in Discord -- as they could listen for the audio cue instead.

    Haptics, too, are a good way to offer subtle feedback. In the game I'm working on with a friend right now, I'm actually trying to use subtle controller vibration to telegraph if you're on unsteady ground; the texture of ground that might crumble will be visibly different, but as you step onto it the controller also starts a very, very faint vibration, just enough to pick up on almost unconsciously -- but certainly making it easier for folks who may not see fine details in texture (like crackled/crumbling masonry) to not plummet to their death.

    Jumping puzzles are a source of much fury and frustration even to people who don't figure they need accessibility options, much less people who have trouble being precise enough with a controller to make a particularly finicky jump; as a result, the movement system in the aforementioned game will also detect if you'd just barely miss a jump and has a "pity" mechanic (though I actually call it a "sympathy mechanic" in the code) where it will accelerate your character just slightly, enough to ensure you make the jump rather than falling short (and thus falling, period).

    (Frankly, that consideration is for me as much as anyone else, though literally no one I've shown the sympathy mechanic to has had any other response than abject relief. I think many of us have jumping puzzle trauma.)

    Stuff like that. Anyway...

    Since this is a thing I think about fairly often from a design standpoint, I find myself curious what part of this game you find yourself struggling with. Both because maybe there's a workaround present in the game already (just poorly documented, which is sure as heck a Thing), and because maybe it's an accessibility consideration I'm not already thinking about for my own game design stuff.

    Again, feel free to decline (or ask to take the answer private); I just always want more data on what people do find to be places where a game is unintentionally difficult to play due to poor choices... like, say, orange and red mechanics on an orange and yellow arena, with some extra orange and yellow and red thrown in for visual spice. (As opposed, obviously, to intentional difficulty, e.g. mechanics.)

    Of course, there are some challenges that are harder to tackle by just keeping accessibility in mind; for folks who have cognitive issues that make it hard to track mechanics and such, for instance, I have a lot of sympathy but few good fixes.
    (2)
    Last edited by Packetdancer; 08-11-2022 at 02:01 AM.
    Quote Originally Posted by Packetdancer
    The healer main's struggle for pants is both real, and unending. Be strong, sister. #GiveUsMorePants2k20 #HealersNotRevealers #RandomOtherSleepDeprivedHashtagsHere
    I aim to make my posts engaging and entertaining, even when you might not agree with me. And failing that, I'll just be very, VERY wordy.

  2. #2
    Player
    redheadturk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Packetdancer View Post
    snip
    For me personally I have the type of colorblindness where if it's two different shades of the same color and there isn't enough contrast between the two shades, I cannot differentiate them. Which is why Peacekeeper is so painful for me, and P3. Also, Ra La, gold on gold on cream yellow, spare me, please ><. I also have depth perception issues [which is why I hate jump puzzles and will never have flight in The Ruby Sea] and poor reaction times. So arena design that forces you to rely on fast reaction times and randomly placed mechanics are the bane of my existence. If it's something I can actually memorize I don't have a problem, though.
    (2)

  3. #3
    Player
    ZedxKayn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by redheadturk View Post
    For me personally I have the type of colorblindness where if it's two different shades of the same color and there isn't enough contrast between the two shades, I cannot differentiate them. Which is why Peacekeeper is so painful for me, and P3. Also, Ra La, gold on gold on cream yellow, spare me, please ><. I also have depth perception issues [which is why I hate jump puzzles and will never have flight in The Ruby Sea] and poor reaction times. So arena design that forces you to rely on fast reaction times and randomly placed mechanics are the bane of my existence. If it's something I can actually memorize I don't have a problem, though.
    tbf for the colorblind part its more of a clarity problem than difficulty problem if that makes sense

    even as someone with good sight p3 is an absolute pain im the ass. no clue how that made it thatway past testing phase even if all the testers have healthy sights
    (1)
    im baby

  4. #4
    Player
    Eraden's Avatar
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    Mao Xifeng
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    Quote Originally Posted by Packetdancer View Post
    Do you mind if I ask what the specific limitation/struggle is? (If you've detailed it elsewhere in the thread, I may have missed it; this thread is 35 pages long and I suspect will hit 40 within the next day, so finding stuff on earlier pages is a bit of a mess.)

    Obviously, this is none of my business and you should feel free to tell me such. (Or note that you'd prefer to talk offline/outside of a public thread.)
    THANK YOU for taking the time to ask what is causing me difficulties. It is so refreshing to see someone actually take the time to ask about something rather than throw out an uninformed opinion. I have no problem telling you about my condition. I have Parkinson's Disease. That coupled with me being elderly, makes it extremely difficult at times to complete content. My limbs, hands and even at times my whole body tend to shake if I get emotionally excited or engage in even minor physical activities (holding a full cup of water for example). Content that is even mildly complex or requires a somewhat significant amount of hand/eye coordination can be a daunting task for me at times. At the moment, the MSQs are tuned so that I am able to get through most of them without going to easy modes. For some I have to go to the easiest mode in order to complete them. For those who think I can get better at doing this I can guarantee that no amount of pushing or prodding me is going to make my condition magically disappear.

    I still fail to understand why people keep clamoring for making the MSQs harder for everyone. If the developers simply made a hard mode for those who want a real challenge, wouldn't that be good enough? Why are they so hell bent on forcing everyone else to have to conform to their standards?
    (8)

  5. #5
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    redheadturk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eraden View Post
    THANK YOU for taking the time to ask what is causing me difficulties. It is so refreshing to see someone actually take the time to ask about something rather than throw out an uninformed opinion. I have no problem telling you about my condition. I have Parkinson's Disease. That coupled with me being elderly, makes it extremely difficult at times to complete content. My limbs, hands and even at times my whole body tend to shake if I get emotionally excited or engage in even minor physical activities (holding a full cup of water for example). Content that is even mildly complex or requires a somewhat significant amount of hand/eye coordination can be a daunting task for me at times. At the moment, the MSQs are tuned so that I am able to get through most of them without going to easy modes. For some I have to go to the easiest mode in order to complete them. For those who think I can get better at doing this I can guarantee that no amount of pushing or prodding me is going to make my condition magically disappear.

    I still fail to understand why people keep clamoring for making the MSQs harder for everyone. If the developers simply made a hard mode for those who want a real challenge, wouldn't that be good enough? Why are they so hell bent on forcing everyone else to have to conform to their standards?
    My husband is also a Parky! I think his brain would explode if he tried to play this because flashing lights affect his Parkinsons.
    (3)

  6. #6
    Player
    Packetdancer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eraden View Post
    THANK YOU for taking the time to ask what is causing me difficulties. It is so refreshing to see someone actually take the time to ask about something rather than throw out an uninformed opinion. I have no problem telling you about my condition. I have Parkinson's Disease. That coupled with me being elderly, makes it extremely difficult at times to complete content.
    Ah, that's right! We did have this discussion earlier in the thread, I forgot; I mentioned that my father has Parkinson's -- progressed to the point that he's developing cognitive issues, which is depressing and terrifying -- and that I'm considered high-risk myself due to that family history.

    (Apologies for forgetting. My own challenge is chronic migraines, and while my medication works very well, it also is a once-a-month medication that lasts just over three weeks. I get to next take it on the 14th; as you might guess, my brain is presently reduced to tapioca and my world is pain for the next four days. Frankly, it's a miracle I can compose coherent posts; I'm functioning on caffeine, painkiller, and possibly spite.)

    Quote Originally Posted by Eraden View Post
    My limbs, hands and even at times my whole body tend to shake if I get emotionally excited or engage in even minor physical activities (holding a full cup of water for example). Content that is even mildly complex or requires a somewhat significant amount of hand/eye coordination can be a daunting task for me at times.
    Out of idle curiosity, do you play with a controller, or a keyboard/mouse?

    I know from helping my father that the tremors/shakes, at least as regards hands, are not actually that different in nature from the nerve damage my friend Bryan had; I thus wonder whether the issue you're having is similar -- e.g., not that you can't see what you need to do, just that it's really hard to hit the correct keys with a hand tremor -- and so whether the solution we worked on for him might not also help in your scenario.

    As I touched on in a past post, the solution we came up with in his case was a program that he could run that mapped multiple keys on the keyboard to a single key; for instance, taking 'Q', 'W', and 'E' and mapping all of them to 'W' so he could more reliably move forward, etc. We basically just made a keyboard map of regions of the keyboard, and mapped a given set of keys -- usually about six, two rows of three each -- to the keys he was likely to need to use.

    Now, we never got past the experimental phase before he died of flu complications (side note: get your flu shots, and if you run a high fever go to the damn hospital); I lacked the heart to finish the project after that, and tossed the code out there into the wild for someone else to use.

    Still, the early experiments had been promising, and now I wonder if the same sort of tool might not also help in the case of things like Parkinson's. Obviously it wouldn't be a perfect solution, but...

    Edit: Alas, the forum says I've posted enough for today and I'm being cut off. Guess I'll return tomorrow!
    (3)
    Last edited by Packetdancer; 08-11-2022 at 04:54 AM.
    Quote Originally Posted by Packetdancer
    The healer main's struggle for pants is both real, and unending. Be strong, sister. #GiveUsMorePants2k20 #HealersNotRevealers #RandomOtherSleepDeprivedHashtagsHere
    I aim to make my posts engaging and entertaining, even when you might not agree with me. And failing that, I'll just be very, VERY wordy.

  7. #7
    Player
    Eraden's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Packetdancer View Post
    Ah, that's right! We did have this discussion earlier in the thread, I forgot; I mentioned that my father has Parkinson's -- progressed to the point that he's developing cognitive issues, which is depressing and terrifying -- and that I'm considered high-risk myself due to that family history.

    (Apologies for forgetting. My own challenge is chronic migraines, and while my medication works very well, it also is a once-a-month medication that lasts just over three weeks. I get to next take it on the 14th; as you might guess, my brain is presently reduced to tapioca and my world is pain for the next four days. Frankly, it's a miracle I can compose coherent posts; I'm functioning on caffeine, painkiller, and possibly spite.)



    Out of idle curiosity, do you play with a controller, or a keyboard/mouse?

    I know from helping my father that the tremors/shakes, at least as regards hands, are not actually that different in nature from the nerve damage my friend Bryan had; I thus wonder whether the issue you're having is similar -- e.g., not that you can't see what you need to do, just that it's really hard to hit the correct keys with a hand tremor -- and so whether the solution we worked on for him might not also help in your scenario.

    As I touched on in a past post, the solution we came up with in his case was a program that he could run that mapped multiple keys on the keyboard to a single key; for instance, taking 'Q', 'W', and 'E' and mapping all of them to 'W' so he could more reliably move forward, etc. We basically just made a keyboard map of regions of the keyboard, and mapped a given set of keys -- usually about six, two rows of three each -- to the keys he was likely to need to use.

    Now, we never got past the experimental phase before he died of flu complications (side note: get your flu shots, and if you run a high fever go to the damn hospital); I lacked the heart to finish the project after that, and tossed the code out there into the wild for someone else to use.

    Still, the early experiments had been promising, and now I wonder if the same sort of tool might not also help in the case of things like Parkinson's. Obviously it wouldn't be a perfect solution, but...
    I play with a keyboard and mouse. My shaking, when it gets really bad, makes it so that pressing the proper key or mouse button becomes enormously difficult ( I either miss, press a nearby wrong key by mistake, or press the key/mouse button multiple times). The best option for me that I have found is to wait for a period where my condition is not flaring so bad and I have mentally prepared for each step. Extended periods of combat though, always tend to overwhelm me as there is just so much that I can handle before my brain begins to go haywire. This is why I rarely engage in raid content and I NEVER engage in Savage mode. I don't mind missing these however, as I still get to enjoy the storyline.

    Addendum: You need not apologize for forgetting. You were polite and asked for clarification. I really appreciate that. As for your descriptions of what you do as a game developer, I find that quite fascinating. It seems like a very complicated profession!
    (1)
    Last edited by Eraden; 08-11-2022 at 03:25 AM.

  8. #8
    Player
    ZedxKayn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eraden View Post
    I play with a keyboard and mouse. My shaking, when it gets really bad, makes it so that pressing the proper key or mouse button becomes enormously difficult ( I either miss, press a nearby wrong key by mistake, or press the key/mouse button multiple times). The best option for me that I have found is to wait for a period where my condition is not flaring so bad and I have mentally prepared for each step. Extended periods of combat though, always tend to overwhelm me as there is just so much that I can handle before my brain begins to go haywire. This is why I rarely engage in raid content and I NEVER engage in Savage mode. I don't mind missing these however, as I still get to enjoy the storyline.
    If you haven't tried a controller yet, it might be worth a shot, I think with the ergonomics and how spread apart the buttons tend to be, it might be easier.
    (0)
    im baby