Maken Tosch
DUST University Ivy League
3437
|
Posted - 2013.07.22 12:48:00 -
[1] - Quote
For the time being, Foxfour, I would start with allowing only DUST players to place bounties until the market balances out.
I would recommend at least copying the exact same bounty system from Eve and porting it over to DUST.
Also, make it so that we can try to follow the bounties into the matches they are in so we can have a better chance of collecting bounties. |
Maken Tosch
DUST University Ivy League
3438
|
Posted - 2013.07.22 17:53:00 -
[2] - Quote
Overall, a proper bounty system is a better way of encouraging more aggressive strategies.
Source: https://forums.dust514.com/default.aspx?g=posts&m=1009788#post1009788
The following is a reply I made suggesting a proper alternative to the OP's idea of a bounty.
Maken Tosch wrote: I like the idea as it at least gives players something else to aim for (get it?).
However, I like to recommend an alternative in an effort to mitigate abuse of the system since New Eden is full of players who are really sneaky and smart enough to try to game the system.
Currently, in Eve Online, you are able to freely choose any player in the system, right-click their name and select "place bounty". You can then put in whatever amount you want into the bounty pool. Many players can still add to the pool by doing the same thing you just did to the same player.
Now, let's say that the player's bounty pool is 100,000,000 ISK and they are flying a ship that is worth 100,000,000 ISK (fully fitted). Someone with a taste for cash comes in and jumps on the player in low-sec and managed to destroy the player's 100 million ISK ship. The bounty system then subtracts 20% of the value of the wrecked from the player's bounty pool and adds it to the hunter who successfully killed him. The hunter earned 20,000,000 ISK. As a result, the target player now has an 80,000,000 ISK bounty on his head.
Dust can borrow from this from Eve Online and have the same thing apply to dropsuit values. If I placed a 10 million ISK bounty on your head right now, and you lose a dropsuit worth 200,000 ISK, then 40,000 ISK is deducted from the 10 million ISK bounty pool and then given to the hunter. The hunter earns 40,000 ISK in addition to the regular match rewards.
The reason CCP implemented the 20% factor is because back in the old days of Eve, it was possible to have a friend kill you to clear a 100 million ISK bounty on your head on the first death alone. Therefore, you and your friend split the money 50-50 and go home without having to worry about losing anything. Keep in mind that you were flying an rookie ship at the time of death. Nowadays, you have to suffer death by a thousand cuts in order to clear the bounty and you are no longer able to use rookie ships to clear your bounty as they are no longer counted.
On more thing, in Eve Online, the value of the implants you had (if you get podded in space) is also factored in at 20% of the value in addition to 20% of the value of your ship's wreck taken from your bounty pool.
Now let's spice things up here and say for example that a group of bounty hunters teamed up against a player with a high bounty on him. In Eve Online, bounty payouts are shared and thus spread evenly across all bounty hunters involved in the destruction of the target's ship, pod, and respective implants while the hunter that dealt the most amount of damage gets the kill mail. Bounty sharing (or splitting the spoils) should be implemented in Dust 514 so that a heavy HMG user won't feel cheated out of his prize when a scout comes in and stabs the target for the final kill. |