Project Eternity Post-funding Update #44

It’s time to tune in for update #44 over at the Project Eternity Kickstarter campaign, and this time project director and lead designer Josh Sawyer tackles “The Rules of (Melee) Engagement” with both a five-minute video and lengthy mechanic explanation. This is a great step forward for fixing the melee vs. ranged disparity, no question:

And a snip from the text, just as you expected:

Melee engagement is a solution to two common problems in the Infinity Engine games: melee characters’ inability to control an area and ranged characters’ ability to “kite” melee characters. In the Infinity Engine games, melee characters could be quite powerful in toe-to-toe combat, but many opponents found ways to foil those characters with little difficulty. Fast characters could easily rush around a slower melee character with impunity and ranged characters could backpedal perpetually out of reach.

If you’re familiar with D&D 3E/3.5/4E/Pathfinder’s attack of opportunity mechanics, Project Eternity’s melee engagement fills a similar role by making melee combatants “sticky”. Coming near a melee combatant means being drawn into Engagement with him or her, a state that can be risky to get out of.

Here’s how it works: when two opposed combatants come near each other and one of them a) has a melee weapon equipped b) is not moving and c) is not currently at his or her maximum limit of engagement targets (the standard is 1), the other character will be Engaged.

When an opponent is Engaged by an attacker, moving any significant distance away from the attacker will provoke a Disengagement Attack. A Disengagement Attack has an inherent Accuracy bonus, does significantly more damage than a standard attack, and will call a hit reaction animation while momentarily stopping the character’s movement.

When it’s initiated, a Disengagement Attack automatically breaks Engagement on the target, but if the target is also the attacker’s current melee target, the attacker will typically be able to re-establish Engagement before the target can move farther away. In this manner, melee combatants, especially ones that have high Accuracy and damage per hit, have a solid mechanic for keeping enemies close to them — or making the cost of escape extremely expensive.

Of course, there are other ways to end Engagement. If the attacker switches to a non-melee weapon or performs a non-melee-based action, Engagement immediately ends. If the attacker moves away from their Engagement targets, is paralyzed, knocked down, or otherwise prevented from maintaining a threat, Engagement will also immediately end. If the attacker has a limited number of Engagement targets (as most do) and switches his or her attack focus to a different character, Engagement immediately ends.

Share this article:
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments