Epic aims to make Paragon feel more like a MOBA
Epic is looking at making some big changes to its MOBA Paragon, to address what Lead Hero Designer Cameron Winston described as shortcomings in some of the game's “key areas.” The problem, he said in a blog post entitled “Committing to Change: The Future of our Meta,” is that Paragon doesn't have the “core 'feeling'” of a MOBA, and the reason for that is mainly that it doesn't require players to commit to their actions.
“Those things that MOBA players know: understanding how, and when, to trade map position for objectives; how to capitalize on a team wipe; how to rotate; where to be safe and where you’re at risk. We want more of all of this! Everything comes down to one core concept: commitment,” he wrote. “Commitment means making meaningful choices that matter. Choices that have pros and cons and beget consequences. This is the soul of what makes MOBAs tick, and it’s what we’re trying to improve most right now.”
One of the biggest changes will be to the way players get around the map. Currently, the Travel Mode speeds mean “lane commitments are not meaningful, fight commitments are not as significant as they should be, and lane rotations happen too quickly without consequence.” Players can move too quickly, which diminishes the game's strategic element and can cause matches to run too long. To address the problem, Epic will do away with Travel Mode, “or any other version of on-demand dynamic player movement that does not stem from specific hero kit or card abilities,” entirely.
Instead of Travel Mode, Paragon players will be able to teleport directly to where they need to be. The tradeoff is that the teleport ability will have a cooldown, so you'll want to be sure about where you're going before you make the trip. “That all goes back to the original goal: commitment,” Winston wrote. “This is important for fight engagements and for a lot of the other things we need to fix. These changes mean that fights will actually happen and that players don’t have a free escape (aka Travel Mode) making heroes that have an escape ability more meaningful.”
There will also be changes to Card Power sharing, set to roll out next week, that will discourage the tendency of players to roam around in large groups, and Jungle kill CP awards will go entirely to the final hitter, with no credit for assists, to emphasize that “the Jungle is intended to be a solo-person operation.” The number of minions in lane is being reduced to four, and their movement speed is being cut as well. Changes to shorten match length and address vision control are also in the works.
Winston warned that some of the changes he talked about may not make it into the game precisely as he described. “Game development is a messy iterative process in which the best laid plans of mice and men often get checked in at 3 a.m. by some guy whose Perforce name you can’t quite recognize,” he wrote.
They really have a design problem in just about every game they are making, at least at HQ. Fortnite has been improving slightly, but I know that is still an outside influence that triggered that. Hopefully Fortnite will get even better. It might actually make it to a releasable state going on 6 years after it was announced.I really think Epic are way behind the curve in game development these days.
I think Epic realised that all their money is in UE licensing. It's a shame considering the tradition of gaming the company was founded on.They really have a design problem in just about every game they are making, at least at HQ.
I think they want their other games to succeed but they are really struggling with this right now.I think Epic realised that all their money is in UE licensing. It's a shame considering the tradition of gaming the company was founded on.