Kaios wrote:jorb wrote:Nothing random about it.
Definitely overwhelming though and also tedious in the sense that most people will want to find out what the best combinations are for a particular stat and only collect the specific meats/vegetables for those combinations. Not saying it's a bad thing but I don't think it's doing one of its jobs correctly which I think was to give some of the less used animal meats (rabbit, squirrel, hedgehog, chicken, fox, badger, lynx) more use.
sabinati wrote:Kaios wrote:jorb wrote:Nothing random about it.
Definitely overwhelming though and also tedious in the sense that most people will want to find out what the best combinations are for a particular stat and only collect the specific meats/vegetables for those combinations. Not saying it's a bad thing but I don't think it's doing one of its jobs correctly which I think was to give some of the less used animal meats (rabbit, squirrel, hedgehog, chicken, fox, badger, lynx) more use.
i think jorb's points are
- blueberry pie wasn't changed in this update
- there isn't anything "random" about the influences of one ingredient vs another on the FEP outcome of the food, they are basically all working as expected, and consistent across the few type of "variety input" foods e.g. beef has similar effect when used in meat pie and steak and tuber.
with regard to your point regarding it not providing a use for some of the less used animal meats, i mean, it doesn't really give them more use, because you could use any generic meat in those recipes before, but it makes what you use matter, which sort of has a side effect of making them more useful, since now i can make meat pies out of some of the random shit like that and get int/per/agi/dex in a meat pie or whatever
tyrtix wrote:
So wrong: having 0.5 fep over an item with a total of 15 or 20 fep points is 2.5% chances of getting that fep (this happens with chicken, for example, i already wrote about that), making irrelevant to have that "bonus", and instead driving these points to the main fep you often want to raise, in the case of meat pie, was str, so the more you remove from str, the worse the recipe is, unless the main fep become another in total (like: i use chicken, meat pie will have main fep in dex).
Also, some meat types are NOT consistent in different recipes, try them as i've and you'll see: for example chicken and squirrel does change in effect between recipes, and squirrel is the worst, beign that roasted gives int, but in most other recipes gives cha or dex, for a really weird effect of not knowing wich fep the meat gives, while the fastest to address the thing should be that fep given while roasted are the same the meat gives when used in recipes.
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