PC Do you hate crafting?

Have tier 6 craftable but tier 7 being unique to hard late-game stuff like boss loot (slayers), top tier quest rewards (questers), or extra-diffiocult PoI's (looters) would allow multiple methods of getting them (as opposed to needing to loot to get them from any compatible loot container).

But then there's no reason for tier 6 to be uncraftable untill the tier 7's get added in. It was a mistake to take away something to give the "feel good when looting great items" when adding a unique tier for loot (or even just unique variants of existing tiers) provides that at no loss to other playstyles.

Looters used to have an advantage with random stats on loot. This was a good way to do it. You could craft great things, but looters could find ones that were better but not by a huge margin. The best stuff looters had was fairly close to the best stuff crafters has (random stats). Now with random stats on crafted stuff but no T6 craftable, there is a much higher difference between the best stuff available to each playstyle.

Sure, you can randomly craft a T5 better than a crappy T6, but looters can still not only get an average T6 that's better, but they can also find a T6 that's got high random stats.

 
I still can’t wrap my head around this attitude that some of you seem to have that blue level gear isn’t high level crafting. It’s almost like you think 2-5 is crap and only 6 is good.

I get being disappointed that something you used to be able to do is now something you can’t do but can we at least stop with the comments that we can’t craft high level gear any more?

Yes we can. Tier 5 is awesome.

 
Yes, getting level 10 in an attribute and 5 in a skill is consistent, compared to the RNG of finding the level 6 item in loot...
but you still need to find the schematic. Yes it's more common than actually finding a given level 6 item...
It's just pure balancing of chances. Imagine they want 1 in 400 looted items (of the same type) to be quality 6 with perfect stats. Then they could actually just increase the material costs (item parts) for crafting to an amount that you need to find and scrap 400 items to have the same chance of getting a q6 items with perfect stats. Now both are on par and you won't come far without looting.

Just leave the opportunity to also craft q5 items as well with the amount of materials needed right now.

Of course that doubles the chance of getting a q6 item, but just for the slots you are specialized in and I don't see anything wrong in having a higher chance to get a good item of the type you are spezialized in than of any other type.

I wouldn't mind if q5 items need 15 parts and q6 items need 40 parts, as long as looting a quality 6 item is equally rare.

Crafting items being too consistent is just a matter of tweaking numbers.

 
What this does (and what it has done since A18 released....there was significant pushback against the lack of impressiveness of crafting since A18 dropped) is devalue specialization.
I think this pretty much hit the nail on the head for my perspective. I'm not sure why Roland is saying this is a sudden thing, we had some discussion back after the drop regarding uncraftable bow parts and all the same complaints were being brought forward.

But this is the biggest point of the change overall imho. Your specialization is not really up to you. In my case in the old thread, I wanted to make an archer, but couldn't find a wooden bow if my life depended on it (I think it was something like day 32, still no wooden bow?).

"Crafting is useless now" - This isn't 100% true, and we all know it. I mean, you still need wooden frames and barbed wire. So I just did a playthrough actually to try to feel the impact of crafting in A18. I allowed myself to craft on day 1 for basic necessities, axe, club, wood frames, some storage chests and a barbed wire stockpile. After day 1, I was not allowed to craft *anything*, not a wood frame, not a barbed wire, nothing at all. So my horde base needed to be built on day 1, or use an existing PoI and modify it only by destroying blocks.

I played as a perception build, with rifles penetration ability to take advantage of the style of base I could build in a day 1 build rush, and of course lucky looter. The run finally died on horde night day 35, when I had finally run out of barbed wire, and they managed to get to my fight cage.

Honestly through this playthrough, I never really missed crafting. Had I allowed myself to continue crafting the basic necessities such as more wood frames, smelt iron/concrete, and barbed wire to keep the BM base at full operation, it would have been easy to continue.

That is how much impact crafting has now.

 
It'd be really REALLY nice if someone could tell us, officially, WHY?!?
The official reason is that there are several very successful games that have set a precedent for the top tier level of gear being loot only. Given that the devs want this and have other games that are wildly successful that they can point to as justification you have your why.

A17 was the “everything is craftable” version and the devs agreed with a lot of feedback out there that it made the world not worth exploring. By making purple the loot only tier they solved this issue. Because it is a design already tested and found to be successful in other games they felt secure in the decision.

I can assure you that players new to the game who never crafted purples in the past won’t even blink an eye. They’ll have fun crafting up to blue and finding their purples. It is only those who know what used to be (and care) that feel the pinch and for them there are sure to be mods.

The design has proven to be good so why wouldn’t TFP utilize it if it goes along with their preferences as well?

This isn’t even the first time. In the past purples were not craftable. You could only attain them by combining dupes on a workbench.

At other times weapons were not craftable at all. In fact for most of this game’s lifetime (after molds went away) you couldn’t craft guns — only find them or find parts to assemble. Somehow, this game was able to advertise itself as a crafting game through all those changes and it is still a crafting game now.

 
I still can’t wrap my head around this attitude that some of you seem to have that blue level gear isn’t high level crafting. It’s almost like you think 2-5 is crap and only 6 is good.
I get being disappointed that something you used to be able to do is now something you can’t do but can we at least stop with the comments that we can’t craft high level gear any more?

Yes we can. Tier 5 is awesome.
I think it's a combination of:

  1. Loot-Gating the Highest Tier
  2. Forcing your specialization/character development's best equipment to rely on RNGeezus instead of player choice
  3. The ridiculously slowed progression rate, combined with smaller reward for that dedicated time


I believe it takes 17 points to max an attribute. Plus 5 points for maxing the specific weapon/tool skill. At absolute bare minimum, that's 18 levels - if you don't spend a single point in anything else. Given the changes to the leveling rate, that's at least ~20% more exp than was required in A17. Add to that the increased tankiness of zombies,etc., and what you have is multiple in-game weeks of effort (a part-time job's worth of hours in real life)... and you still are at the mercy of RNG as to whether you get the item that your entire time has been dedicated to specializing in.

All in all, I think that leaves a salty taste in most peoples' mouths.

- - - Updated - - -

The official reason is that there are several very successful games that have set a precedent for the top tier level of gear being loot only. Given that the devs want this and have other games that are wildly successful that they can point to as justification you have your why.
Don't those other wildly successful games generally give some sort of additional incentive/explanation for those items being loot-gated, in the form of additional functionality and/or increased statistical bonus?

I could be off here, but I feel like generally, "high-level, normal, mundane gear" generally isn't loot-gated.

 
I'm not really a fan of taking something away from the player that we already had, especially if you dangle it in front of us for a few days but this is a far cry from the biggest problem with the game lol

 
I still can’t wrap my head around this attitude that some of you seem to have that blue level gear isn’t high level crafting. It’s almost like you think 2-5 is crap and only 6 is good.
- Needing 3 hits to destroy a stone block takes 50% longer than needing 2 hits. That's not just a bit weaker, that's a whole lot weaker. If you balance the block damage so that q5 items need the same amount of hits as q6 items, then there is absolutely no reason to restrict players from crafting q6 items. If you don't balance it that way, the difference is huge and crafting is more or less useless, since most players probably will find q5 items, before they are even able to craft them and no matter if they craft additional q5 pickaxes or not, they will stay at 3 hits at best.

- In both A18 games I played, I found q2 items (of the type I specialized in) before I could craft q2 items. I also found q3 items before I could craft them. The same with q4 and q5. So even if TFP reduces the chance of finding q6 items in early game, there is no point in crafting items. It isn't that I think q2-5 is completely crap, but looting even without lucky looter is way too strong. Of course you could nerf looting to the ground, but does it really make sense to use crafting potential as a base for loot chances/quality, rather than using intented progression rate as a base?

- I still can't wrap my head around the attitude that some of you seem to have that it's a bad thing, if ~2 out of ~10 slots (those you are specialized in) are competitive in crafting, while every other slot isn't. Aren't you specialized in those slots for a reason? Looting still is the most important part of progress, since you need the materials from looting and you need loot for the other ~10 slots.

I get being disappointed that something you used to be able to do is now something you can’t do
But that's absolutely not my reason, as I explained in my wall of text some posts prior. And as far as I understood the other only a few of them have this particular problem.

Just one of the reasons I mentioned before (and it isn't the most important one): With looting being stronger than crafting and lucky looter being a thing, there is like no reason to not spend your first 21 (I guess) points into perception and lucky looter, before you go for the skill tree you actually want to play with. That's clearly bad game design. Also since you asked in your first post of this thread, why there is suddenly such an outrage, as far as I remember people already commented on lucky looter being too strong before the streaming event, when madmole uploaded videos for the different skill trees. Since the dev diary has a (let's say) decent size, I sadly won't be able to find those comments .

 
I think this pretty much hit the nail on the head for my perspective. I'm not sure why Roland is saying this is a sudden thing, we had some discussion back after the drop regarding uncraftable bow parts and all the same complaints were being brought forward.
I remember those conversations and they were limited to the catch22 of needing parts to craft weapons you already had at a tier that was higher or the same as what you could craft. I’m sorry I don’t remember the “OMG we can only craft to blue quality” piece of those conversations.

TFP is dealing with that other issue by making weapons and tools drop as brown and orange much more often for much longer. The higher quality finds will be much rarer as they should be and players will have more time and parts to craft higher tier items before they can find them anyway.

None of this has anything to do with the complaint that tier 5 counts as garbage for crafting and players MUST be able to craft tier 6 or they can’t thrive or be a specialist. Getting to tier 5 is specialist level and soon the world will support that when most everything is brown or orange in loot and at the trader.

But this is the biggest point of the change overall imho. Your specialization is not really up to you. In my case in the old thread, I wanted to make an archer, but couldn't find a wooden bow if my life depended on it (I think it was something like day 32, still no wooden bow?).
That has been fixed by changing parts to groups of weapons rather than specific weapons. And you can still specialize. T5 is the new cap for specialization. Choosing what to specialize in at 7am of Day One is simply a strategic error in my opinion. If you wait to decide what to specialize in until after the first horde night you will have a clearer picture of the best choice to make— even then you can go against what fate decrees during your first week and make it more of a challenge for yourself.

 
I still can’t wrap my head around this attitude that some of you seem to have that blue level gear isn’t high level crafting. It’s almost like you think 2-5 is crap and only 6 is good.
I get being disappointed that something you used to be able to do is now something you can’t do but can we at least stop with the comments that we can’t craft high level gear any more?

Yes we can. Tier 5 is awesome.
No one is saying T5 isn't awesome, but if you're specializing in something, your goal is to eventually make it to the pinnacle of that specialization, and that work/effort for reward has been devalued GREATLY....sure, we can still work towards a T5 item, and yeah, that's awesome...it's enough....EXCEPT that T6 items exist and are available to anyone, at any time, with complete random equality.

The argument that T5 MIGHT be better than T6...maybe....if RNG hits a certain way, is bulls*** pure and simple.

Allow me to tell a story...

You work in a business. You bust your a** every day and work hard to climb the ladder in your department, because the way your business is set up, you get paid more the more time and effort you've put in and the salary can be anywhere from 10 to 50k per year for these hard workers. Your company does something weird though...It hires people from other businesses for 10 to 60k per year...seemingly at random. You just got word, as you've been busting your butt and climbing the ladder, that the salary cap just rose from 50k per year to 60k per year for longtime employees, in addition, all employees will now get paid 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60k per year, but that can fluctuate by up to 6k in either direction.

Awesome! It feels like it's about time...I mean. Nothing against those other business hires...there's a lot of risk there after all, they might get paid only 10 or 20k! It just felt odd that you put so much effort in, and focused so hard on getting ahead in YOUR department, and every now and again, someone would get hired out of the blue for more than you could ever even HOPE to achieve.....But that's all over now, right?! I mean, you'll still have to work hard and keep at it to get to that level, but at least now you can get to it. 50k was enough, but it always seemed such an odd choice to randomly bestow an even higher salary on people no matter what they were doing.

But 4 days later, they announce "whoops, we're removing the 60k cap for longtime employees...it will again be exclusively available to outside hires." You're upset. Yeah, it's the same situation as before, but briefly, it felt like they'd actually listened to your previous complaints and were finally starting to value the time and effort you put in.

You complain about the recent change and the Human Resources representative says "cheer up! I don't understand what the problem is! It's the same thing you had and you weren't complaining then! In fact, it's even better...with that 6k fluctuation, it's actually possible for you to make MORE than someone on the 60k tier!"

You'd be pretty upset....feel like you're being ignored. What's the point of working so hard when the company just doesn't value it? The company insists that all ways of working are equal...but you just think to yourself "yeah, but some are more equal than others."

 
- Needing 3 hits to destroy a stone block takes 50% longer than needing 2 hits. That's not just a bit weaker, that's a whole lot weaker. If you balance the block damage so that q5 items need the same amount of hits as q6 items, then there is absolutely no reason to restrict players from crafting q6 items. If you don't balance it that way, the difference is huge and crafting is more or less useless, since most players probably will find q5 items, before they are even able to craft them and no matter if they craft additional q5 pickaxes or not, they will stay at 3 hits at best.
- In both A18 games I played, I found q2 items (of the type I specialized in) before I could craft q2 items. I also found q3 items before I could craft them. The same with q4 and q5. So even if TFP reduces the chance of finding q6 items in early game, there is no point in crafting items. It isn't that I think q2-5 is completely crap, but looting even without lucky looter is way too strong. Of course you could nerf looting to the ground, but does it really make sense to use crafting potential as a base for loot chances/quality, rather than using intented progression rate as a base?

- I still can't wrap my head around the attitude that some of you seem to have that it's a bad thing, if ~2 out of ~10 slots (those you are specialized in) are competitive in crafting, while every other slot isn't. Aren't you specialized in those slots for a reason? Looting still is the most important part of progress, since you need the materials from looting and you need loot for the other ~10 slots.
You are assuming the future will be the same as the past. Once TFP is done (probably by next week) you will not be finding or buying gear that is better than what you can craft. They recognize the glut of higher tier loot at the trader and in loot and how that makes crafting meaningless. All looting needs to keep it exciting is a chance to find high tier loot. This will also help specialization because the gear you didn’t specialize in will all mostly be lower level stuff but the things you can craft will be higher— especially now that stats are random now for crafted items.

But that's absolutely not my reason, as I explained in my wall of text some posts prior. And as far as I understood the other only a few of them have this particular problem.

Just one of the reasons I mentioned before (and it isn't the most important one): With looting being stronger than crafting and lucky looter being a thing, there is like no reason to not spend your first 21 (I guess) points into perception and lucky looter, before you go for the skill tree you actually want to play with. That's clearly bad game design. Also since you asked in your first post of this thread, why there is suddenly such an outrage, as far as I remember people already commented on lucky looter being too strong before the streaming event, when madmole uploaded videos for the different skill trees. Since the dev diary has a (let's say) decent size, I sadly won't be able to find those comments .
You don’t need to find those quotes because I remember them—but again while being a related issue it was not the same issue as what is being complained about specifically now: Not being able to craft purple tier gear.

I agree that TFP needs to find a happy medium between looting and crafting. I think they are on the right track. Absolutely, lucky looter needs to be looked at and tweaked and in a post apocalyptic world most of the loot found needs to be the mundane stuff with the rare gem to be found and treasured while those who develop skills in crafting can make really high quality stuff— you know, like green and blue.

 
No one is saying T5 isn't awesome, but if you're specializing in something, your goal is to eventually make it to the pinnacle of that specialization, and that work/effort for reward has been devalued GREATLY....sure, we can still work towards a T5 item, and yeah, that's awesome...it's enough....EXCEPT that T6 items exist and are available to anyone, at any time, with complete random equality.
The argument that T5 MIGHT be better than T6...maybe....if RNG hits a certain way, is bulls*** pure and simple.

Allow me to tell a story...

You work in a business. You bust your a** every day and work hard to climb the ladder in your department, because the way your business is set up, you get paid more the more time and effort you've put in and the salary can be anywhere from 10 to 50k per year for these hard workers. Your company does something weird though...It hires people from other businesses for 10 to 60k per year...seemingly at random. You just got word, as you've been busting your butt and climbing the ladder, that the salary cap just rose from 50k per year to 60k per year for longtime employees, in addition, all employees will now get paid 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60k per year, but that can fluctuate by up to 6k in either direction.

Awesome! It feels like it's about time...I mean. Nothing against those other business hires...there's a lot of risk there after all, they might get paid only 10 or 20k! It just felt odd that you put so much effort in, and focused so hard on getting ahead in YOUR department, and every now and again, someone would get hired out of the blue for more than you could ever even HOPE to achieve.....But that's all over now, right?! I mean, you'll still have to work hard and keep at it to get to that level, but at least now you can get to it. 50k was enough, but it always seemed such an odd choice to randomly bestow an even higher salary on people no matter what they were doing.

But 4 days later, they announce "whoops, we're removing the 60k cap for longtime employees...it will again be exclusively available to outside hires." You're upset. Yeah, it's the same situation as before, but briefly, it felt like they'd actually listened to your previous complaints and were finally starting to value the time and effort you put in.

You complain about the recent change and the Human Resources representative says "cheer up! I don't understand what the problem is! It's the same thing you had and you weren't complaining then! In fact, it's even better...with that 6k fluctuation, it's actually possible for you to make MORE than someone on the 60k tier!"

You'd be pretty upset....feel like you're being ignored. What's the point of working so hard when the company just doesn't value it? The company insists that all ways of working are equal...but you just think to yourself "yeah, but some are more equal than others."
Let me tell a shorter story that actually relates to the game instead of the ups and downs of an opt-in experimental build:

You wake up in a hellish post apocalyptic world where a nuclear war has been waged and monsters roam the earth. All pre war fabrication and manufacturing is gone. There is no longer any possible way to recreate the technology that yielded the best gear that people enjoyed in the old world. You do the best you can with the limited forge and workbench you’ve pieced together and using all your skill and knowledge you have been able to craft some amazing gear but every once in awhile you get lucky and find of some of that pre-war stuff that is just impossible to replicate with post-war technology.

No doubt Society will rise again and old technologies will be reclaimed but probably not in your lifetime.

 
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So I'm trying to get all the eggs in one basket.

Players:

- Want specialization to allow them to specialize in item power

Developers:

- Want loot to be the single source of end game items

What if specialization impacted looting? Drop lucky looter, and each point you put into something increased the chances of finding its related item(s), with Q6 items locked behind a5 points. This completely eliminates finding Q6 items early, allows only those specialized into a class of items to get the best of those items, and is completely loot driven. Then we can get rid of crafting outside of building components, and just make base crafting into a quick wheel, and boom, we're done! We've matched the criteria requested and implemented several successful proven techniques in other games!

Ok, maybe a bit hostile at the end there, I'll admit. But one of the things I was enjoying about 7dtd was that it was more complex and in depth than other games. You had to get to know your recipies, know what to gather and where, know what steps to take to build something better. Now... I mean, I just completed a day 35 run without opening any crafting menu after the first night. Literally thinking about nothing but kill zombies, and run with what you get. Making the game completely loot based makes it... a lot more mindless. And while that mindless approach has certainly proved successful in other games, its not what attracted me to 7dtd.

When your fate is completely at the hands of RNG, why should you really care about any particular action you would take. It's just about if you get lucky or not anyways. I used to like to stealth my way through PoI's, clearing them out. doing 3-4 a day. And I could do that, because all that little loot I picked up clearing the PoI I could craft into something. Now, all that matters is the big loot boxes at the end of dungeon, so you just bash your way to it doing 10+PoI's per day, ignore the rest of the PoI and cross your fingers. I have less interaction with PoI's outside of my base in A18 than I did in A17, because I don't ever need to worry about picking up small loot found throughout PoI's.

 
Let me tell a shorter story that actually relates to the game instead of the ups and downs of an opt-in experimental build:
You wake up in a hellish post apocalyptic world where a nuclear war has been waged and monsters roam the earth. All pre war fabrication and manufacturing is gone. There is no longer any possible way to recreate the technology that yielded the best gear that people enjoyed in the old world. You do the best you can with the limited forge and workbench you’ve pieced together and using all your skill and knowledge you have been able to craft some amazing gear but every once in awhile you get lucky and find of some of that pre-war stuff that is just impossible to replicate with post-war technology.

No doubt Society will rise again and old technologies will be reclaimed but probably not in your lifetime.
^This is both so, so fun to read, as that is what would actually happen, and saddening because finding said items would show just how far we would have fallen

 
The official reason is that there are several very successful games that have set a precedent for the top tier level of gear being loot only. Given that the devs want this and have other games that are wildly successful that they can point to as justification you have your why.
Your first argument is "because someone else did it and it worked." but in the past you've argued that 7dtd isn't exactly like any other game. In fact, in months of history on the forums, you tend to shoot down the comparisons of 7dtd to other games REPEATEDLY with "7dtd isn't other games, so what works in those games doesn't really mean much of anything regarding 7dtd." This seems just a BIT of a flip-flop on that position...

A17 was the “everything is craftable” version and the devs agreed with a lot of feedback out there that it made the world not worth exploring. By making purple the loot only tier they solved this issue. Because it is a design already tested and found to be successful in other games they felt secure in the decision.
The devs countered this argument when they released A18....you HAVE to explore to craft 3rd tier items at any quality. There is NO WAY to get enough parts AND the schematic without extensive exploration. You guys had a problem, and implemented a wonderful solution (item parts and non-skill, looted-only schematics). It solved the problem perfectly. You could craft top end Tier 2 items, but to get Tier 3 items, you HAD to explore. But then you resolved the problem, quite unnecessarily by just flat out removing what the hermits in A17 even wanted. Adding the Q6 craftable back in, and then making randomized crafted items, it seemed that TFP finally realized that they had already HAD the perfect solution in place...craftable T6 means you could search for it OR make it (after extensive searching for marginally less rare items and time and effort for the perks). Using parts and loot-only schematics meant you couldn't just hide in a mine and level up, then come out decked out in full Q6 steel armor with a Q6 sledge and machinegun. Finally, adding the randomization meant that all those parts you looted didn't become completely useless the moment you found or crafted a Q6.
B149 SOLVED the problem, using the reasoning you're giving, B152 OVER-SOLVED the problem, and created a new (old) one.

I can assure you that players new to the game who never crafted purples in the past won’t even blink an eye. They’ll have fun crafting up to blue and finding their purples. It is only those who know what used to be (and care) that feel the pinch and for them there are sure to be mods.
Really? you think that someone new to the game won't give themselves a goal of getting a cool item (I hear the M60 is quite sought-after) and then wonder WTF they were saving up all those parts for when they find a Q5 or Q6 version of it in a gun box? Sure, there will be some elation at first "yay I found this amazeballs item!" but then they get back to base and look at the machinegun parts in their chest, and then open their skills and see those points they put into all the endurance and intelligence perks to get the ability to eventually craft one and wonder...why? I mean the skill still gives them some benefits, but like half of it just got erased.



This isn’t even the first time. In the past purples were not craftable. You could only attain them by combining dupes on a workbench.
which, despite any quibbling that "that wasn't technically 'crafting' per se"....was still craftin Q6 items.
 
What I understood from all that ♥♥♥♥ing nonsense was that devs want us to craft higher tier loot, and not leave our base, so in order to do that are going to nerf loot that you find to the ♥♥♥♥ing ground so that we only find Q1 and Q2. Doesn't that incentivize us doing the complete opposite? Can't find better than orange so ♥♥♥♥ it, I'll just stay in my mine and craft my own Q3-Q5.

 
What I understood from all that ♥♥♥♥ing nonsense was that devs want us to craft higher tier loot, and not leave our base, so in order to do that are going to nerf loot that you find to the ♥♥♥♥ing ground so that we only find Q1 and Q2. Doesn't that incentivize us doing the complete opposite? Can't find better than orange so ♥♥♥♥ it, I'll just stay in my mine and craft my own Q3-Q5.
you'd still need to loot the Q1-4s for parts to make a Q5

 
Ok, I think TFP should really sit up and take notice of this whole thread. Not only is it a popular subject, but it's a controversial one with most people sitting on one side or the other. When the change was introduced to allow T6 quality, what happened? Not much... most people figured since the gun parts still needed to be looted it wouldn't be a repeat of previous alphas. It was a fair change, and it wasn't even given a chance: removed a couple of days after. I'd say maybe 1% of players have enough free-time during the working week to spend that much time on the game and see what the actual impact on the game would be.

The annoying thing is that the most popular playstyle (shooter/looter) would have seen ZERO change. Those people that play that way exclusively seem to be taking issue with it cheapening the way they play the game and FALSELY claming the only people that support T6 crafting want to hide away in their base like a little b*tch. Complete straw-man argument and completely unfounded in reality and I hate seeing it; crafters still need to go out and find the raw materials and invest alot of their points for the privilege- foregoing other skills.

Consider the player that puts all their time and points into crafting... what's left for him mid/end game? Will they bother crafting another T5 again once they've found a T6 (or had one gifted to them when in a group with a looter who finds them literally littering the world).

The fundamental point of this argument is that half of us are trying to highlight an inbalance in the game and the other half just want their way of playing to be the only way of playing; like going into a twitch stream and screaming instructions at them. The odd few are rational.

TFP; I hope you read through this thread and didn't roll your eyes too much. I hope you realise a good chunk of your audience passionately hates the decision you've made and want to feed that back without arguing with anyone. You have a playerbase in which some people love looting, some people like crafting, some people like mining and you know what? That's what makes this game awesome. If you want to jump on the loot-box bandwagon and feed the endorphines of a lucky loot to a growing number of fortnite and mobile gamers, then that's your prerogative. That may sound melodramatic, but I honestly can't see any reason why you'd pull a change without backlash and/or ignore the fact you didn't think that would annoy a significant portion of your audience. Rapidly throwing changes in and out is just giving me whiplash and less certain of the direction this game is going in.

A18 was an absolutely amazing update, and I simply wouldn't be here if we were still on A17 (I'd be playing something else). I suspect the same is true for people that read about crafting T6. A portion of your playerbase became excited about the game again, came back, and this is why it's an issue 'all of a sudden'....

 
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What I understood from all that ♥♥♥♥ing nonsense was that devs want us to craft higher tier loot, and not leave our base, so in order to do that are going to nerf loot that you find to the ♥♥♥♥ing ground so that we only find Q1 and Q2. Doesn't that incentivize us doing the complete opposite? Can't find better than orange so ♥♥♥♥ it, I'll just stay in my mine and craft my own Q3-Q5.
One question, have you ever tried to build tier 3 weapons or tools?

If so, you should have noticed that you need parts like tool parts. However, if you look up what you need to make tool parts, you will find that there is no recipe at all to make the tool parts. You may wonder how you want to get the tool parts. You have to go out and find or buy tools and scrap them. Since more and more parts are needed with each quality level, you will also have to find more tools to scrap to get enough parts.

 
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