Languages



  • I'd like to think the RP nature would trump anything else, and no-one is entitled to anything, it has to justifiable IC.
    There are very clear points in the FR literature regarding elven for example. The nuance of the language and its complexity etc; as in all things, making everything equal in value, diminishes the rare. That is what I feel has happened in Narfell to some extent. You pay your points, learn your language and half the background, rarity and interest of Realms lore flies out the window in a soulless way.



  • @0b06208c71=EodenValmer:

    As for everyone knowing elven and dwarven, that is one of my pet hates…
    Which elf sat for decades trying to teach the most nuance filled of languages knowing that a) Your PC doesn’t give a crap about the Seldarine b) Mocks elves etc. The same goes for dwarven, it’s a racial language that they cherish not taught to random idiots.

    I would asking for a detailed background on why half the folk I have seen understanding these languages know them, and if it didn’t measure up ask them to choose something else. Which would eliminate the issue of every half-orc and its cousin knowing elven/dwarven

    Thing is Eoden, if you put ingame language tokens at 2 skill point cost (as per PnP) you can't really ask people more background than you ask someone for having 12 Discipline or 9 Hide.

    As far as I know if they paid the 2 skill points you automatically assume that they went to an elf/dwarf/gnome/orc/bear/duck school and learned the language. And rightly so, as they paid for it, the same way you pay for any other skill, feat or perk. For example, while I do have background stories about it, I've had nobody ever ask me IC or OOC why Rith can turn demons, or why she has high persuade score. Everyone assumes I took the feats and skills for it, so it's fair game.

    Most PCs also have at least one elven friend that would teach it if asked. And in the worst case what's to stop anyone from saying "I took a trip to the Great Dale, made friends with an elf and he taught me the language".

    Back to the main topic, that tokens add flavour, I won't discuss, though I don't like the way tokens exclude players OOCly, and to me personally typing <e>or <d>adds the flavour alright. But in the end it becomes tons of dev work and DM rulings to change something that has never been an issue. When people want to say something they don't want others to understand, they talk in private. Unless one can find appealing the fact that their characters could insult others in their face without them knowing OOCly (because ICly they still don't nowadays).

    And as someone has mentioned before, sure unconscious metagame exists, but there you are to put stop to it, by being a self-respecting roleplayer. I can tell how Vash and Horlamin not very long ago spent once around 20 minutes badmouthing Rith in some language just in front of her, and she still got along with them afterwards. Even after she had been whispering Ronan about how she didn't trust them (her name was said a few times, and names don't translate from one language to other, which is another fault of the language tokens, that DO tranlsate into gibberish names of people and places).

    And as Rico brilliantly put, anyone with more than one active character is not forced a memory wipe when switching to avoid subconscious metagame. We just trust that if we have a C-token, is because we are all self-respecting roleplayers that will be fair game about all the aspects of RP.</d></e>



  • I'd be in favour of a token if it was a) easy to implement and b) easy to use. I'm a bit of a slow typer, so the latter would definitely matter in how or if I used the language token myself. Where my bard character's concerned, I like to imagine she has a certain understanding of the written form of several languages, while not necessarily mastering the spoken version (except partially), as I've not actually spent skillpoints on languages for her part.



  • As for everyone knowing elven and dwarven, that is one of my pet hates…
    Which elf sat for decades trying to teach the most nuance filled of languages knowing that a) Your PC doesn’t give a crap about the Seldarine b) Mocks elves etc. The same goes for dwarven, it’s a racial language that they cherish not taught to random idiots.

    I would asking for a detailed background on why half the folk I have seen understanding these languages know them, and if it didn’t measure up ask them to choose something else. Which would eliminate the issue of every half-orc and its cousin knowing elven/dwarven



  • @c74899b022=rei_jin:

    Personally? I don't care either way. I think it could lead to more conflict though, as people are (generally speaking) careful about insulting or degrading others when they can hear them. At the moment, even if you're talking in another language about someone, they can read it, so most people tend to be polite..

    Careful about insulting people in another language? Heh, the only reason people switch to another language is to insult someone. It's the only reason I've ever seen. To my characters, to other's characters. I've seen people insulting someone else in another language for nearly half an hour, not stopping. This is especially true if the other character they're insulting is a higher level, or would do something about being insulted if they understood.

    I dont mind this, to an extent. And honestly, I'd -much- rather not know what they're saying about someone… positive or negative (But moreso negative). It's really difficult not to react when you, the player, know exactly what they're saying. It could lead to accidental metagaming, which includes: Not involving yourself with the character that's insulting on a constant basis, your character (which technically didnt understand) would suddenly not like the insulting character, and so on..

    I've even seen insults in another language in public forum RP, where pretty much no one else but the poster and one or two others knew what they were talking about. That really gets on my nerves, since it's just a waste. You want to say something to someone privately, whether it be insult or otherwise, dont put it up publicly, both in the forums or in game. Have some OOC consideration, because OOCly, I know what you're saying. Whisper it, use tells. Yes, it's fine if you say some insulting remark in another language once or twice publicly as your character's show of annoyance to another character... but doing it constantly is just poor form in my opinion.

    An example: When people insulted Jay out loud in other languages, because they knew he didn't understand... and this was done on a constant basis. Sure, you hate Jay, great.. dont expect you to like him. But I'd much rather you whisper your thoughts, then emote something along the lines of: speaks in dwarven (or undercommon, or whatever) to his companion, chuckling as he does so. That way, I know you're speaking dwarven, or whatever, and if my character knew the language, I could send a tell and ask what was said... if not, then I dont ask, and I've no clue what they just said... which is what I'd prefer as a player

    My two cents. Hope it didn't go too off topic, if so I apologise. My opinion is that we dont really need language tokens, or to give devs some other project. All it takes is a bit of consideration, finding ways to make metagaming less possible via whisper or tell, and so on and so forth.



  • Personally? I don't care either way. I think it could lead to more conflict though, as people are (generally speaking) careful about insulting or degrading others when they can hear them. At the moment, even if you're talking in another language about someone, they can read it, so most people tend to be polite.

    Some RPers on the server just act IC, regardless of the circumstances, and the way that other players may view it. This is great, and what I'd love to see. That said though, I can see it leading to much hilarity around gnomes and such.



  • I find it very surprising that people would have a problem with the language cipher. I for one always thought it was a very cool idea…the feel of a couple of elves talking in elven to one another would suddenly have a much greater impact. Knowing unusual languages would suddenly make so much more of an impact on your character, and would make roleplaying with other races much more rewarding as it adds to the feel of the differences between the races (one of my favourite aspects of the Forgotten Realms setting). Its not that I'm obsessed with realism, I just love the fantasy setting and this would add to that atmosphere greatly.

    If the technical barrier of implementing such a system is no longer an issue (the spamming the DM channel thing), then I would be very eager to get it ingame.



  • We are more than the sum of our skill points.

    We share a common love of the world, not just our own artificial egos. As a player, not as Rico the Knight of Sune, or Ethan the Storyteller, or any of my others, I would resent such a barrier (which is not the same as resenting the players who prefer the realism; I do not). We make allowances and capitulations in the name of the narrative all the time, and compartmentalize data which our other egos are incapable of having. I don't need a memory wipe to keep information from one character spilling over to the other, and I don't need a script widget to keep me from reading things my character doesn't understand.

    I don't mean to sound harsh on the subject, but those are my feelings in a nutshell.


  • Legion

    Having an on/off language switch in the inventory would be problematic for me because my PC often switches between languages mid sentence.

    Doing it the other way where it garbles text that is tagged as a different language works fine for me though. 🙂

    Another aspect that this could affect is the roleplay of learning languages. It's difficult for a player to roleplay a partial understanding of a language if all they see of the language is garbled text.

    I wouldn't mind it though. I think it's more fun not understanding. 🙂



  • There are diferent versions, but that's pretty much it, Benji.


  • Legion

    How does a system like this work?

    Do you get a useable item in your inventory that you 'turn on' when you're speaking the different language?

    Does it filter tagged text (<g>, <e>, etc) that you read based on whether or not you have the token in inventory?</e></g>



  • I find a few posts borderline insulting, let's try to keep it civil, please. Trying to make others seem inferior because of their opinion about what is fun and what is not leads nowhere.

    To reiterate myself: Language token, yes - when there's Tongues spell. It's only fair.

    And even then you risk 100% of the Narfell population having the elven token for no reason at all - just because annoying elves for life just costs at worst 2 points in Craft Armor - most cases it's just free through Int score.



  • The Narfell playerbase never ceases to amaze me. I can't believe how outspokenly against language tokens/ciphers some people are.

    If your character doesn't know and understand the language anyways, what is the big deal if you can't read it? Do you not want to lose the ability to "subconsciously" metagame? That's what it sounds like to me. I for one love this idea and have always wanted to see it implemented in Narfell. I completely agree with Zyphlin's points. I think it would only enhance roleplaying situations between GOOD roleplayers. Saying you are going to just log off sounds pouty and whiny if you ask me. Roll with it, RP it! It's what you're here for, am I right?



  • One doesn't log out now when they see 'garbled' speech because it doesn't happen very often. But if those 'uber geek's as Zyph put it were the majority, and you very frequently saw that (and thus, did not see what they were saying), one would become fairly irritated and annoyed. But I've played Tales of the Silver Marches, and from experience, I do not like language garbling tokens.

    Yes, we DO go to 'place x' where others are complaining about the people who are unable to understand the garble go, but we end up *****ing and moaning about 'those damn Elves,' and alienating people spectacularly.

    You think the fact that everybody and their mother in Narfell ICly knows Elven is odd? Wait for language garbling tokens. The whole family tree will have a token for Elven.



  • As I said myself, I'll be fine with language tokens. Just give us Tongues spell too, it's only fair. The result will be that you'll have people feeling even less exclussive as they do now about their languages. Because you can bet I'll personally cast "Tongues" around anything I don't remotely understand, while right now I just play nice and pretend I actually can't understand it, and RP it that way.

    You can't want to have langauge tokens, but not give people their rightful ways to counter them.

    Specially as some people mention, text based communicating in foreign languages doesn't portray in any way real communication due to gesturing, tones of voice and many other circumstances. People can type out of the gibberish text how their characters are acting, but that's as prone to metagaming as it is not having the tokens in the first place(dwarf might choose to not make visible gestures so others don't suspect what he's doing/talking about), so I don't see anything gained in that aspect. If people don't trust possible metagaming listeners, I don't trust possible metagaming speakers.



  • One way to fix that would be to ungarble anything between braces, parenthesis or brackets.

    Gol darrin sool! sly look Kin a nar varkalen…. wink



  • When someone is speaking a different language, you can often tell what they are on about through their inflexion and tone.
    Communication in NWN is largely through text. To gauge the nature of how words would be pronounced we have to rely on the words themselves, combined with emotes and punctuation.

    Using language tokens leaves you with just punctuation and emotes. I hate to hark on but a lot of people's use of punctuation can be pretty suspect (including mine) at the best of times, and emoting the tone of your speech would mean switching the token off and on again.

    This means that someone might be shouting at you in Elven or even asking a question, and you would have no idea. In real life, you can draw a lot of information from the way that things are said without knowing the language. In NWN you cannot do this as our communication in the game is so heavily dependant on text. To take away word content would disable someone's ability to really appreciate how characters are communicating.



  • I have to chuckle a bit about people saying they’d log out, because when it actually occurred, no one did. Just the opposite really.

    I had an entire prayer sequence in Uthgardt for Maya. She would sit in prayer by the monument to the fallen soldiers near where the Hoarans are now, and pray.

    “Vaa si kar, naerva annis, var Tempus….”

    And so on. I made it all up. No one could possibly understand it in real life.

    You know what? When the Nars was busy back then, she often gathered a crowd. People would actually stop by, listen, and wait for her to finish.



  • However you're viewing it only one way. Could it not instead create interesting RP in and of itself?

    Right now people rarely seem annoyed with various races talking non-stop in their racial tongue because OOCly we can still read and understand so its not like there's dead silence even though ICLy there would be.

    With the garble, would you log out? Why? Because you don't want to RP anymore? Or would you act IC concerning two people that are just yapping away in an ununderstandable language in a common public place while completely ignoring you?

    Or perhaps you RP your curiosity to the strange or beautiful or harsh sounding language, leading them to take notice to you and change the conversation or emote their action and body language more so you can pick up from that.

    Or perhaps you start speaking in a language you don't think they know, proving a poitn as you attempt to make them look at you as if you're rude talking to yourself in a way they can't understand.

    Perhaps you turn around and look for someone else, or perhaps you talk to the one other person at the fire ignoring or even complaining about those yacking away in an unfamiliar tongue.

    I understand a bit of the frustration and such with not being able to read it and seeing garble, but I think some are so steadfastly against it that they won't stop a moment and think "If I wasn't opposed to this or unopposed, if I just ran into it, what would I do?"

    For example, what if you had two people who were UBER geeky and actually KNEW elven (or hell, was using Klingon as Orcish 😉 ) and was speaking it in game. Would you just log out upon seeing it or would your character interact with that strangeness?

    To me, I like the notion, because rather than helping me OOCly by giving me something to read it helps me ICly by giving me a more accurate situation to react and RP against in more interesting ways imho.



  • As Rith said earlier, I think I'd rather just log out if I came to the gate and saw two Elves speaking in Elven, and could hear only garbles. Considering how OFTEN this is the case, I'd be against language tokens with garbling. I know it helps with subconscious metagaming (believe me, I avoid that like a plague), but most people would say that speaking aloud, even if it's in an obscure tongue, is not a reliable method of concealing your message. Assume anyone can understand you anyway.

    I like to read the conversations too, if only oocly, though for the most part, my character will understand because the language in question is Elven and Havon is an Elf.

    I'm too tired to go on, but I'll just reiterate that I'm wholly against garbling.