The previous FFF seems to have caused quite a reaction. We had many discussions in the office regarding this topic, so this week some of us prepared some detailed responses.
I started the article from last week saying this was mostly of a rant, so just the opinions of a player who prefers belts over bots. There was no real conclusion other than "What changes, if any, could we do to make everything more fun?".
Then I decided to make the writing more dramatic by making it look as if we plan to remove bots from the game. My intention was to create an emotional roller-coaster in order to make the FFF a more interesting read. Combined with the context of the recent nerfs, some people got very angry very fast. "Remove bots from the game" was nothing more than a thought experiment, not a proposition. Unfortunately that didn't work out as intended.
This has taught me some valuable lessons in writing, including that I should not play with people's emotions, at least not the way I did.
The reactions were very strong, from long analytical posts, to heated but deep discussions, to personal attacks towards me. Not to mention the 46 forum pages that make that FFF the one with the most forum replies by far. It's clear that there's a strong emotional attachment to bots that plays an important role.
But I would like to add that it's our jobs as game developers to make sure that the most optimal way of play is also the most fun way of play (ref1, ref2). What is most fun is of course an subjective and extremely complex topic that dives deep into game design, human psychology and player motivation.
The reasoning behind the why we wanted to do some minor nerfs to bots, was actually to promote player choice. Many players argued that choice matters and we should leave bots alone. If choice matters, then the player should be able to chose between belts and bots. Is this much of a choice if you just look at the numbers and want to play optimally? Bots are easier to use, offer more throughput, they are inherently balanced, are way more flexible, easy to expand, and use less UPS. So by looking at the facts, bots are superior in every way, and they are the only choice if you want to play optimally.
The reason people will ever chose belts is because they want to go for the fun option (in their opinion) not the optimal option. The idea was to level this a bit so players who want to play optimally can choose to play using belts without feeling like they made the wrong choice. Buffing belts is not something easy to do any more since we have always done it over the years (fixing belt corners decompressing the belt, making the distance between items smaller, etc), so we were looking at bot nerfs.
It's hard to nerf something players are so attached to. Seeing your factory produce much less won't be seen well no matter how good the reasoning behind the change is. It could also be argued that the reason why bots are fun is because they are overpowered and they offer a massive progression to your factory, maybe what some people see as game-breaking is simply game-changing.
Kovarex will go into more detail with his thoughts on this...
I agree with everything Twinsen said.
I would like to liken bots to the Death Spell in Baldur's gate (one of my favorite games of all time).
In Baldur's gate, you start at level 1 and you are very weak. Almost every monster is a challenge and a threat to kill you. But as you gain experience and level up, you get stronger and if you are a wizard, you also get stronger spells. At level 12, you get one of my favourite spells called Death spell. It instantly sucks the life out of all low/middle level monsters within a certain radius. When acquired, it gives you feeling of being very powerful, as instead of having to fiddle with the enemies one by one, you just end the battle instantly. It is one of the things you look forward when you start the game and gives you great feeling of improvement.
This is very similar to how bots work. Once you get them, they give you the same 2 similar things. First is the power, as they just provide stronger logistics. The second is that they free you from having to fiddle with every little logistic detail and let you think more in the bigger scale. The big difference between Bots and the Death spell is, that in Baldur's gate, Death spell only works on the low/middle level monsters, so as you progress through the game, there will be less and less enemies who are affected by it. It is still useful to clean out the weaker part of the enemy group, so you don't waste time with the small things, and you can concentrate on the stronger ones. The game would certainly be very bad, if the Death spell would be ultimate way to kill anyone anytime, as at the point of getting it, all the other spells and things would be borderline useless.
You probably understand where am I getting to. Yes, we kind of managed, to make long distance transport to be more suited for trains, but other than that, bots are the one solution for everything. With bots, there is no reason to think about other types of transport (Cable cars or automated vehicles for example), because why would anyone use it when you have bots? It is kind of fun getting to the bots setup, and moving to the bot-only factory, but once it is achieved, the continued play feels very dull for me, because I know that this is it: There are very few improvements I can do to the system, and extending the factory is just about plopping more assembler/requester/provider cells without any thought. Also, with bots in the game, making extensions to Factorio feels useless. For example, the extension where you would expand to other planets, start there over, and once you achieve the rocket there, you would combine the production of the two planets somehow. But if starting on another planet just means playing with robots from the start, which means plopping a few cells of what you need and making a few mines, I don't see the point.
The question is, how to approach this problem? As Twinsen said, making belts stronger would not only be a compromise in some way and it would also reduce the amount of moving things, which is the proper metric in my eyes. When you see a huge factory, it is cool, because there are 16 blue iron belts being filled, not because the output is X per minute.
To be able to compare numbers, I made test setup. I created 4 fully compressed express belts and put them against a fully satisfied lane of roboports (also 4 tiles wide). To be able to measure the throughput easily, I just modded the furnaces to be very fast and smelted the result, iron for belts and copper for robots. This is the setup where belts are as strong as they can possibly be are in the bots versus belts balance. In majority cases, bots are going to be relatively much stronger compared to belts.
The result is, that bots did 16.4k per minute while belts only 9.6.
With worker robot speed research, it approaches the maximum around 19.5k per minute.
With this in mind, we can safely say, that robots are at least 2 times stronger then express belts, but in real factories, it is much more as belts need lot of other parts and are rarely used as ideally as robots would be, so my private guess would be that robots are currently around 5+ times stronger compared to belts.
In the last half year or more I have been putting together a lot of ideas around the concept of increasing the throughput of belts, and the last FFF and the resulting discussions made me focus on this topic heavily this last week. There are various options we looked into, some of them we even tried to prototype and played with them for a bit. I'll briefly try to describe some of them:
Packed items like pallets/containersAll in all, the general issue of all of the belt throughput increases is the question if it wouldn't reduce the amount of belts that a newer player uses in their play through, reducing the complexity and interesting part of the game. I believe if this kind of research would happen after the rocket launch this would not be that much of a problem, especially since with robots you can reduce the amount of belts and complexity related to them to zero even earlier in the game.
The visual solution for the stack belt we intended would be items stacked on top of each other, which would be really hard to do as many of the item icons would have to be rethought. Keeping in mind that we have hundreds of item icons, this could be really dangerous, hard and time consuming to do. It's worth mentioning that with a stacked belt it would likely be less visually clear if your belt is fully stacked and compressed.
The coding solution of the stack belt including all of the item stacking in splitters, miners and side-loading might not be that easy either.
I think there is a bunch of issues that belt throughput increase would address, like:
I had a look at various megabases, and I was actually quite surprised how far you can get with belts if you really try to be efficient. Of course not all of the UPS is tied to just belts, in fact the usual entity update consumes a greater portion now, but increasing the belt throughput 3 times seems like it would at least make belts competitive. However this is pure guesswork from seeing some big bases and reading their update times, and having some feel from using belts myself. If you are interested, you can send me your belt megabases that push the game to the limit, possibly with modded 3 times faster belts and inserters.
In general being able to see belt megabases to me is something really substantial. If a new player looks at a random Twitch stream, Youtube video, or Imgur album of a megabase, everything he sees now is a train network connecting a bunch of segregated robot production cells, which is visually repetitive, and compared to belt bases, visually less interesting. Being able to see belt bases in this top tier would be something that a new player could aspire to do one day and be inspired by. That would be the result of what Twinsen says about having the most interesting way to play being the most effective way to play.
As you can see each of the solutions has at least one serious problem, and it addresses a specific issue that you only really face after hundreds of hours in the game. It is probably better to leave this issue as it is so that we don't break the existing game. It might be better to focus on making belts more convenient to use instead of brute forcing the problem with throughput increases - especially as it's quite easy to address the speed changes in a mod which will just work together with the convenience improvements.
We decided that we won't make stronger version of belts for now, but we could still improve the usability of belts. I tried to make some interesting setups with belts and sushi setups, but I feel, that the belt filtering with filter inserters is very clunky when it is supposed to be reliable and have large throughput.
This is why we decided to add a few options to splitter configuration. These might be perceived overpowered by some, but we believe, that these mainly solve problems in the later part of the game when belts compete with bots, and when the player needs more control over the belt logistics.
Let me sum it one by one:
The splitter additions will come with the next 0.16 release.
The conclusion is, that I strongly believe that bots should have a debuff. They should still be a big and powerful advancement when they are researched, but they should work more like the death spell. It should solve the little stuff that isn't that powerful (in Factorio, it is equal to smaller production). I even believe that robot-only Factory should be possible and not useless, I just don't believe, that they should be 5+ times stronger than anything else.
Players would still be able to build robot only factory, belt only factory or combination of those, but the strongest strategy would be to combine all types of transport, each for the part where they are the strongest. My suggestion would be to either completely remove the Worker robot cargo size research, or more likely, to multiply the charging time several times. For factory transport, both would have the same effect, but the latter wouldn't hurt personal transportation that much, as robots would transport all the missing items to player before they would need to be recharged, and then they would recharge when the player is already supplied and doing something else.
As always, leave us your thoughts and comments on our forum.