For those that didn't play then, there were Table Top guys (the figures crowd) and then there were Pen and Paper Mechwarriors (the Dungeons and Dragons crowd), sometimes they converged, but rarely at a good mix. In order to run pure TT you had to cut the pilot down to just a few skills and a name.
Why are we piloting mechs and leveling those mechs? We raise our skills in piloting them, but that is all. Why aren't we actually playing the person we see at the start of every match? There are several things that could heighten the feel of playing the person and not the mech and many things that would help in the reduction of many of the playing styles that are dominating the game.
By changing the skills tree and allowing the characters to level up instead of the mechs, many checks and rolls that happened in the TT and Mechwarrior games could happen during play that seem lackluster when put into the game as it currently stands. Knockdowns? Dragon knocking down everything it touches?
By adding skills that you roll on when creating you, your character, you determine how well you can resist falling down in a collision, how well you can resist being knocked out of the air when JJ'ing. Overheating for too long in a mech can cause damage to the pilot.
- Pilot Skill rolls
- Pilot damage
- Stats determine piloting checks based on prime skills
Then, XP can be used to level the character with certain perks that unlock with a choice option, much like other games and their talent specs.
- Gunnery Skills tree
- Piloting Skills tree
- Information and Tactics tree
If someone wanted perfect convergence on their PPC's, they would be forced to max out Gunnery tree and then they would gimp themselves on making Piloting roll checks. If someone wanted to make all Piloting checks, their convergence wouldn't as good as a master gunner, and so on....
Bryan has already stated that the planned level pilots could reach will be 60, so from there we could go with a skill point system awarded every other level. So at max level 30 total skill points will have been earned. With the top slot in each tree being at 25 points. So if someone wanted all Gunnery you have to reduce the amount of Piloting skills you gain, or information skills.
I realize this is kind of a different direction than what we are currently headed towards, but, with the introduction of skill checks on a pilot to pilot basis, I believe that many of the current gripes and complaints about game play could be altered into a specialist role and made feasible.
If the person wants to Poptart, go for it, but it has downsides. If the person wants to snipe, do it, but by reducing pilot checks. If the person is a dedicated light mech pilot, they have their own skill tree as well that ties directly into and LRM support tree (Information and Tactics)
Ideas? Thoughts? Go to hell Ronyn?
I'll probably edit this later, it's early and still working on my first cup of coffee....
Edited by Ronyn, 09 July 2014 - 09:42 AM.