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resolved No Title Videogame
Tropers help me here.
So I just updated to v. 8.6 of Puzzle & Dragons and tried multiplayerco-op mode. The music style is noticeably different. Instead of "Orb Festival", it's a completely new soundtrack that sounds like a mix of the bg for the Final Fantasy collaboration and the overall soundtrack of PADZ. Would you classify this music shift as a subset of Art Shift? I don't know the name of the trope of it. Or is it a completely new trope?
For reference, here's the normal and boss soundtracks. And here's the video of the co-op mode with the new soundtrack in question (I haven't found a yt video of the bgm separately).
Edited by edararesolved Figure out the which player is secretly the monster game Videogame
There a few recent games like Deceit or the Secret Neighbor Spin-Off of Hello Neighbor were players play as a group trying to complete tasks to escape but some players are secretly a monster trying to pick the others off one by one
Is there a name for this genre?
Edited by jormis29resolved Sequel has Inverted Themes or Characters Videogame
Is there a trope describing a sequel that's thematically, a 180 degrees turn from the previous work? Like, if the first movie's about ice, the sequel's about fire, if the first movie has the character become super rich, the sequel's about him becoming super poor.
I've also seen this working with sequel villains being the antithesis of their predecessors - if the villain of the first movie's a nazi, the sequel has a communist. If the first movie has a big muscular bad guy, the sequel has a Lean and Mean one who uses his brain, or something...
resolved Secondary Characters that are only silhouettes Videogame
A visual novel in which all the secondary characters are only silhouettes/shadows, with no expressions. What is the trope for this? It isn't an animation, so Faceless Masses doesn't seems right.
resolved Credits for extra-official work? Videogame
So, some videogames have the main character being member of some organization, like a school or military body, and stuff like Experience Points and scores have in-universe explanation. Thing is, the character is still rewarded even if he's acting outside the organization knowledge or control - or somtimes even going against it.
For instance, in a Harry Potter game, the player is awarded house points for stuff the characters are forbidden to do, like going into the forbidden 3rd floor hallway.
resolved Everything is a Robot Videogame
In the Mega Man series, not only are there humanoid and industrial robots, which makes sense, but also animal robots, plant robots, robot rocks, robot trees, robot clouds... even mountains in the background have exposed circuitry for some reason. Is there a trope for that?
Edited by Mac_Rresolved Sudden video game action sequence Videogame
An Adventure Game or something similarly slow suddenly turns into an action game for one sequence, like the river rafting in The Oregon Trail. Can overlap with Press X to Not Die.
Edited by Madison14resolved Cowardly Boss Videogame
Is there a trope for a videogame boss that's considered hard or annoying not because he's deadly, but because he runs/teleports so often it's almost impossible to land a hit on him? So the difficulty for the player isn't really to avoid dying, but to beat him before running out of time or resources?
I mean 'cowardly' not as a characteristic of the character, but as something perceived by players.
resolved I also live in ANONYMOUS_PROXY Videogame
There's a thing I've seen in videogame RP Gs, where whatever name the player chooses turns out to be relevant to the plot, or whatever random sequence a player chooses means the character has some hidden knowledge.
For instance, an intro to a game:
- King: what's your name, young man?Hero: My name is...(player is taken to the name choice menu)Hero: Dickbutt420.King: Dickbutt420? Our oldest legends tell a hero with that name will come to deliver us from our opressors!
And so on...
Edited by Mac_Rresolved Hivemind Damage Boss Videogame
A videogame boss made of multiple parts, where hurting enough of one part makes the entire boss die, even if there's no plot explanation for it.
resolved Fine-tuned Difficulty Adjustment Videogame
While some games have difficulty levels, others are more fine-tuned such that you can customize specific aspects of a game to suit your preferred difficulty level. For example, To the Rescue! lets you adjust the speed of the In-Universe Game Clock and the rate at which diseases spread across dogs. Is there are specific subtrope for this since Idiosyncratic Difficulty Levels are for difficulty levels with different names from the standard?
resolved What is this gambit trope? Videogame
So when playing The Room VR: A Dark Matter, one plot point had a gambit. Let me explain: [[spoiler the detective (aka. the player character) stumbles across the Hedgewitch's hut and has to solve all the puzzles. After that's done, the Hedgewitch deliberately traps her own soul in an artefact that the Craftsman wants to collect. After placing all of the artefacts on an altar that the Craftsman presented and he remarks in a note that it was foolish for the Hedgewitch to make use of the artefact and betrays the Detective. The Hedgewitch's soul breaks out of one of the artefacts and guides the detective to an Egyptian temple where they can trap the Craftsman and trap his soul in an artefact]].
resolved Games that are usually played with mods Videogame
Is there an Audience Reaction for games where playing them without GameMods is relatively uncommon? Or at least ones with a particularly expensive modding community? I can think of off three examples off the top of my head: Cities: Skylines, Kerbal Space Program, and Neverending Legacynote made by Orteil of Cookie Clicker fame. A lot of the time when you see someone playing these games fully vanilla, it's because they just started out and therefore either aren't aware of or are overwhelmed by how many mods are available.
resolved About... pets that have various effects Videogame
Castle Crashers have Animal Orbs, which are the pet companion system of the game, and there are various type of effects for these, however based on a topic I asked in Ask the Tropers, It cannot be classified under Fighter, Mage, Thief, let alone as Character Class System due to no proper classifications for those animals. However I doubt it might be still possibly another trope due to each animal orb giving various type of effects ranging from simply stat changes, utility or even help attacking enemies. How should we properly describe this one?
Edited by JustNormalMusicLoverresolved Help on redefining character trait for Medicine. Videogame
Touhou Kaeidzuka ~ Phantasmagoria of Flower View might have a problem with defining a character's violent reaction to humans in general, and currently it is listed as Straw Nihilist but I'm not sure if that's the correct trope.
Wouldn't this description would fit more in bills of Fantastic Racism?
Or does it fit in another trope instead of either of these two?
Edited by JustNormalMusicLoverresolved Hunger meter Videogame
Is there a trope for when there's a bar that shows how hungry you are and fills back up when you eat food? I can't find it on the Stat Meters index. I have 3 examples so I could pitch it to TLP if it's not here already
Edited by moefoxesresolved Resource Cards Videogame
I am trying to find a trope about card games that have certain cards that are used as resources for casting spells, summoning monsters, etc. I can think of three examples:
- Magic The Gathering has Mana cards that need to be drawn from the deck and then tapped to cast a spell or summon a creature.
- Future Card Buddyfight has the Gauge where players can charge it with one card per turn so they can play spell cards.
- Force Of Will used Magic Stone cards that are drawn from a separate deck to make Will and Will is used for summoning a Resonator, playing a Chant, playing an Addition, or activating an ability.
resolved Enemy in the wrong place Videogame
What's the trope name for where a Roaming Enemy or Mook in a video game, ends up in a location where it shouldn't be? For example, an aquatic monster appearing in a desert area. Sometimes this is Played for Laughs like the 'regretful eskimo' appearing inside a volcano stage in the Megaman Sprite Comic video game.
resolved Defib Debuff Videogame
When a character who has undergone Critical Existence Failure and subsequent Combat Resuscitation receives an indefinite debuff that can only be removed by going out of the player's way to address the issue (e.g. Medical Attention, resting out of combat, expending resources). Serves as a mitigation to Critical Existence Failure - the character fights at full effectiveness down to their last hit point, but losing that hit point represents a major injury that impedes their effectiveness.
Examples:
- In Pillars of Eternity characters have two health bars that simultaneously take damage from attacks: Health, representing overall bodily integrity that is the much larger of the two, but can only be restored with rare, limited abilities or by resting at an inn/campfire and Endurance, a smaller pool representing short-term fighting spirit which can be easily restored by consumables and abilities. If a character loses all their Endurance but has Health remaining then they will fall unconscious until either they are revived by a party member or when the current combat ends after which they will receive an Injury: a status condition that reduces their stats and/or defences and cannot be mitigated or removed until the party rests. Similarly, if a character loses all their Health, then they will revive after combat ends with a Mortal Wound, severely debuffing them, limiting their Health and Endurance to 1, and dying permanently if they go down again which can also only be removed via resting.
- In Darkest Dungeon Losing all a character's HP doesn't incapacitate them, but applies the Death's Door condition - severely reducing their stats and giving each subsequent attack a chance to kill them outright. Raising their HP back above 0 will replace the Death's Door condition with Death's Door Recovery, a less severe stat debuff that can only be removed by certain limited camping skills or between missions.
Is there a video game trope that covers a game feature that has a logic-type chart where you need to fill in the blanks regarding in-game character relationships?