Death recaps might finally get an update

If you’ve ever looked at a death recap in game, you’ve no doubt noticed that the recap doesn’t show all of the damage that killed you. Hell, it rarely shows 30 percent of your terminal damage. The system may finally be catching an update next patch according to a red post made late last night.

Wiksy, an Associate Software Engineer for Riot, said this:

I have some death recap changes that should come out next patch.

The system itself was in a pretty bad place, so it required changes from both code and design (thanks to Coronach who did all design-related changes). For example it did not have enough data to figure out where the damage actually came from, and the event array was not big enough so that it would be full before all relevant events were processed…

Anyway, please try death recap after next patch is out, and give me some feedback. It should at least make the damage source and numbers more accurate.

Let’s hope so. A big part of getting better with this game is being able to accurately assess what happened in a fight. I would love to see a WoW-style combat log implemented, but in the meantime a reworked death recap should do just fine.

  

Slowing feature releases hurt League of Legends

Magma Chamber boss camp.

I think it’s safe to say that the League of Legends community is as restless as it has ever been. It has been more than half a year since the last major feature release, and promised feature updates remain unreleased months after their announcements. Several high profile players have made long forum posts with titles like, “@Riot why I’m losing interest in your game,” and, “Riot’s downward spiral.”

The thing is, I still have a lot of fun with League of Legends. My personal beef with Riot is that a game that once had as active a development cycle as I’ve seen has grown stagnant, relying on bi-weekly champion releases to keep the game fresh. I started playing the game in December of 2009. Just three months later there was a new map, not just in development, but in the matchmaking rotation. Somewhere along the way there was a client revision. Four months after the Twisted Treeline release came Season One, complete with ranked matches and a new client experience.

It has been more than six months since Season One launched. In that time, there has not been one major feature release to the game (sorry, tutorial modes don’t count). Magma Chamber was announced in September, as was an upcoming graphical overhaul. Both features remain unreleased. There is still no team/clan support. We still don’t have normal stats available, despite the fact that they’re being recorded. The achievements pane, which was introduced last July along with the Season One release, remains unused.

In short, it’s time. In fact, it’s past time. A major content update is long overdue for the game. Riot has had a lot of opportunity to expand the game and stay at the forefront of MOBA design. Without a serious release in the near future, I think we can reasonably expect the game to start bleeding players, either to other MOBA franchises or to different games altogether.

  

Is there another LoL client update in the works?

Cooperative mode

Riot recently announced that summoners will soon be able to play co-op games against computer controlled champions for IP. It sounds like a cool system, at least for getting back into the mix if you’ve been away for a while or want to test a new champion. More interesting to me, though, is the screenshot that’s in the current client for the service.

As you can see above, the picture shows what appears to be an updated client with some new features. For starters, there is a ‘Game Mode’ field. This could mean very good things for players who, like myself, enjoy a little variety. I would love to see all-random deathmatch implemented, and it would be interested to have an All Random All Mid option as well. The bad news is that the field is blank other than ‘Classic.’ Granted, Riot probably doesn’t want to leak anything, but that could also be an indication of just how far off these new game modes might be.

It’s hard to see much else. The new format is much more conducive to multiple maps in a list format, instead of the current grid button system the client uses to select game types. Any guesses as to how far away this client is? I’ll say six months.

  

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