Recoil (no ontology)

From Mazeworld

Revision as of 20:33, 30 December 2012 by SU Tempest (Talk | contribs)

This article is about a game feature that is not implemented yet, and is only planned for a future update. What you are reading here can be modified in the future.

The basic premise of the recoil system is to simulate the increasing spread and loss of accuracy as one fires more rounds. It is primarily intended to be a balancing mechanic, to avoid the phenomenon of "lucky mag dumps" which has been observed in the past (and has been universally admitted to sound ridiculous especially with high-capacity firearms).

NOTE: This mechanic evidently does NOT affect melee weapons, certain special weapons (Golden Gun...) due to their nature, or heavy weapons such as grenade launchers and rocket launchers; only conventional personal firearms. It also will not apply to the equipment used by certain enemies despite they are firearms as their users are non-human (or less-than-human), such as the Failed, the various drones, etc. (a notable exception being the Duplica Bot, naturally).

The recoil system

After one has decided the weapon, fire mode, amount of shots and target, then made their attack roll, the score is observed, and depending on the caliber fired and the fire mode chosen, as well as certain equipped accessories, the amount of shots that hit may be different from the amount of shots intended.

Statistically speaking, depending on the fire mode used and the amounts of shots fired, the dice score is affected by a dropoff after every Xth amount of shots; for every theshold of X shots passed, the score is considered to be decreased by 1.

  • Example with Normal recoil (see below for Recoil Levels)
    • For a score = A ; Shots 1-4: Score is considered to be A. Shots 5-8: A-1. Shots 9-12: A-2. Shots 13-16: A-3, and so on.

Five different Recoil Levels (RLs) will be observed, in which the concerned firearm calibers are classed into; while most affect full-auto and burst fire, the heaviest of recoil levels also have an impact on semi-automatic fire.

  • Heavy recoil: Full-auto dropoff at every 3rd shot / Burst dropoff at every 2nd burst (FA: 1-2, 3-4... / B: B1-B2, B3-B4, B5)
  • Normal recoil: Full-auto dropoff at every 5th shot / Burst dropoff at every 3rd burst (FA: 1-4, 5-8... / B: B1-B2-B3, B4-B5)
  • Light recoil: Full-auto dropoff at every 7th shot / Burst dropoff at every 4th burst (FA: 1-6, 7-12... / B: B1-B2-B3-B4, B5)

And additionally:

  • Punishing recoil is similar Heavy, but adds drop-off at every 3rd shot fired in Semi-auto. (1-2, 3-4...)
  • No recoil is similar to Light, but Full-auto dropoff is at every 14th shot, and there no dropoff for bursts at all. (FA: 1-13, 14-26...)
Example

One example: Weapons chambered in 5.56x45mm NATO are considered to have a RL 3 (Normal).

  • The user has a weapon that fires this round
  • This weapon is capable of fully-automatic fire, and is used in that mode
  • The user attempts firing 11 shots.
  • The user is aiming at a target that causes no penalty to accuracy, and nothing is further affecting the user's accuracy (no accessories, no meds, etc.)
  • The user rolls their attack dice, and rolls a 7.

Then, the following happens:

  • Shots 1-4 = Score is considered to be 7. Shots 1-4 hit.
  • Shots 5-8 = Score is considered to be 6. Shots 5-8 hit.
  • Shots 9-11 = Score is considered to be 5. Shots 9-11 miss.

Table of recoil levels

Recoil None Light Normal Heavy Punishing
Rank 1 2 3 4 5

Accessories and recoil

New accessory types have been introduced in Mazeworld 2.3 alongside the very recoil system, to help contestants fight recoil and allowing more, or better-controlled shots. These are bipods, foregrips and muzzle brakes. All of those accessories are passive; when one is equipped, its effects are always applied. Please check the Weapon accessory page for more information on these accessories.

See also