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Friday, July 28, 2017

Empty Space

So fan boys who were vigorously defending the 10 system universe as being all they really needed have to change their story yet again?
- Wilhelm Arcturus, MassivelyOP comments thread
Last week's post on the shrinking of the Star Citizen universe received a lot of traffic. Apparently, the interest (and concern) was high enough in the Star Citizen community to draw a response from CIG on the Star Citizen forums:
"Hey guys! This is a case of things being lost in translation; Chris was asked a specific question about how many systems we expect to have online at the point that we've got most of the core mechanics completed and we would consider the gameplay experience suitable for a larger audience. There are no changes with regards to the planned amount of systems which are well documented on the current Star Map.

"Also, it’s important to remember that the scope of the game has increased greatly since the original crowdfunding campaign. Since those early days we’ve created procedural planet tech, moved from 32 bit to 64 bit… all of it leading to billions of kilometers of space and millions of square kilometers of landmass to explore, all rendered in detail that matches the most detailed 1st person games that only have to worry about a few dozen kilometers of playable area.

"This takes time to fill out, so while it will take us longer to fully deliver and populate every system at this fidelity rather than if we had only a handful of points of interest per star system, we have no intention of reducing the size of the Star Citizen universe."
I take the statement as acknowledging that while the game won't have the promised 100 systems at launch, players should expect more than 10, with additional planets added sporadically as time goes by. I do, however, get the feeling Star Citizen will launch as more of a planetary first-person shooter set in a sci-fi setting with space flight rather than a space-based game like EVE or Elite Dangerous.

The news from CIG did not interest me as much as the comments for the article posted on MassivelyOP. I wanted to see how the commenters would pivot from defending a Star Citizen universe with 5-10 systems to a promise of a larger one at launch. For some reason, many Star Citizen backers have a deep hatred and loathing of anything related to EVE Online. That sentiment came out from one commenter responding to the fact that EVE has over 8,000 systems.


By the end, BDJ admits to having no experience playing space games. I have a feeling a lot of people attracted to Star Citizen want the planetary experience and the space part of the game is a side show. So let me address the issue, why so many systems?

First, I want to address the big technical reason: server performance. EVE Online has over 5,200 normal space systems and 2,600 wormhole spaces to spread players over. The game even has 12 starter systems divided equally between 4 NPC empires. Except for major events involving thousands of players, the servers nowadays hold up fairly well.

Now let's look at Star Citizen. A quick look at the funding page currently shows 1.8 million backers. By the time the game launches, that number should reach 2 million. I don't want to make the numbers too high, so assume that only 50% of those backers never log in and CIG sells no copies after launch. Of those 1 million active players, assume that between 1/6 and 1/10 are online at any one time. (I gathered those percentages from EVE back when CCP published subscriber numbers). Based on my rough math, expect Star Citizen to have between 100,000 and 167,000 players online at any one time.

If Star Citizen only launches with 10 systems, that means an average of 10,000-16,700 players in each system. I'm not sure how stable CIG's netcode and servers will perform at launch, but even with top flight equipment, that's potentially a lot of activity for a node to handle. With 100 systems, the load becomes a much more manageable 1,000-1,700 players per system. With various sites of interest for players to visit dividing the load up within a system even further, 100 systems seems like players should have a good time. But only 10 systems? In that case, I expect CIG to either resort to a lot of instancing or, even worse, login queues.

One complaint BDJ raises is sparsely populated regions of space. I guess in the terms of the current debate swirling around Star Citizen, an empty system as a placeholder is a bad thing. But differences in population density in a universe is a good feature, if a game developer can manage to do so well. In a sci-fi universe, people are not spread out uniformly. Instead, highly populated core worlds co-exist (sometimes violently) with sparsely populated fringe worlds. One of the charms of EVE is spending a month or two in a low pop area like low sec, null sec, or especially wormholes, and then jumping into high security space. Just looking at all the players in local chat makes it feel like you've jumped into a different world. Some players call high sec "scary" just because of that jarring transition.

Another benefit of sparsely populated space is the ability to go out alone, explore, and find valuable content. Each system has the potential to spawn combat or exploration sites with, to use a technical term, phat loot. The more valuable sites are found in space where people are allowed to shoot at you. Finding a nice quiet spot with no one around is something people seek, not complain about. Well, unless the person complaining wants a fight, that is.

Looking at a player organization level, the vast number of systems helps keep one or two groups of players from dominating the cluster, especially after the introduction of jump fatigue. Imagine if the 25,000 members of Goonswarm were to hop into a game with only 10 systems. Sorry Star Citizen players, but the Goons organizational abilities would probably lead them to dominating the entire game. In EVE, while they cause a lot of trouble, Goonswarm mainly stay in the regions of Delve and Querious preparing for the next big war. Even the Goons can't seize over 2,000 systems.

At the end, BDJ asks what a system in a space game actually contains? In EVE, the systems contain many elements, all of which have some form of game play attached. For example, while players never enter the planetary atmosphere, they can play a mini-game and extract resources used in high end manufacturing and running player-built structures. The type of materials is based on the types of planets in the system. Some just take the materials to market to sell while other players build factory planets to produce high-end planetary items.

Another important source of game play are moons. Moon mining is the source of key materials used in tech 2 production. In the winter expansion, CCP is turning moon mining from a passive to an active experience, requiring not only the construction of a refinery at a moon's Lagrange point (in the New Eden universe, each moon only has one Lagrange point). Not all moons are equal, however, and players will need to probe each moon to discover which ones hold desired minerals following the moon mineral reshuffle occurring in the winter expansion. Did I mention that EVE has tens of thousands of minable moons that need exploring? Also, the knowledge of which moons hold what materials is extremely valuable and won't make it to the wider internet for months, if ever. All-in-all, just the mere existence of moons in system brings some sort of game play.

The third type of permanent object in space is the asteroid belt. Besides providing ore to mine, asteroid belts attract interesting NPCs. In low sec, some types of NPCs drop tags to improve security status and blueprints for the Mordu's Legion ships. In all areas of space, one is liable to find NPC mining operations, which can provide for some interesting fights, as the AI running the mining operations, including response fleets, is much better than the standard AI. In part of null sec, following parts of the NPC mining fleets leads to pirate shipyards where the blueprints for advanced ships drop. Currently, only Blood Raider space has such shipyards, but the Guristas are the next pirate faction to receive them, with the other factions to eventually receive shipyards of their own.

Each system also has the chance to spawn temporary sites that, once run (or not run over a 3 day period), despawn. These sites run the range from mining to combat to data/relic sites that use the hacking mini-game. A system that looks insignificant most days could wind up providing a player lucky (or persistent) enough to find the site a huge payday. Or, if a player probes down a wormhole, the system can server as a temporary gateway to more interesting content.

Finally, a big difference between EVE and Star Citizen is the ability of players to shape a system. I am not an expert on Star Citizen by any means, but I get the impression that the world Chris Roberts is building is set in stone, with massive structures like space stations only provided by CIG. In EVE, players can build their own space stations, called citadels, almost wherever they like. Players can also build transportation networks, called jump bridges, to facilitate travel. A system with no otherwise outstanding features could become a critical part of a jump bridge system, attracting player activity.

Writing articles for the blog oftentimes serves to help me work out certain concepts. After writing over 1600 words, I still don't understand the concept of the "empty system". I guess, for the commenters defending Star Citizen from charges that CIG is shrinking the game, that a system is empty if it does not contain several areas of meaningful planetary interaction, which includes the ability of a player's avatar to walk on the planet. I thought that Star Citizen was a space game. Apparently I misunderstood, and Chris Roberts is designing a more traditional MMO in a science-fiction setting. I should think of Star Citizen more like Star Wars: The Old Republic (with much better space flight) and less like EVE or Elite Dangerous, where the game play is all space based. Because in a space-based game, as long as a system has a sun, planets, moons, and pirates, a system is never truly empty.

Friday, July 21, 2017

Star Citizen Just Got A Whole Lot Smaller

I think I have a bit of experience when discussing massively multi-player online games. I started playing my first MMORPG in 2005 and began writing on The Nosy Gamer in 2009. Among the games I played at launch was Warhammer Online, a highly anticipated game that featured video blogs that helped raise the hype level to 11. A major sign that the game was in trouble, though, occurred before launch when Mythic had to scrap 4 of the 6 racial capital cities planned for launch. Despite the presence of the highly regarded Mark Jacobs, the lead designer of Dark Age of Camelot, the game only lasted five years.

Fast forward 9 years and we have another highly hyped and anticipated game, Star Citizen, facing the same situation. In an interview with the German game site GameStar, (part 1 and part 2 translated on the r/starcitizen subreddit), Cloud Imperium Games founder Chris Roberts revealed that the game would only launch with 5-10 systems.

$6 million stretch goal (as seen on 20 July 2017)
Five or ten systems? The problem is, Cloud Imperium Games promised their backers 100 star systems at launch as part of its $6 million stretch goal. In addition, the company promised 16 named systems as various other stretch goals. They are:


Stretch GoalSystem
$3,100,000Odin System
$3,200,000Tyrol System
$3,300,000Kellog System
$3,400,000Goss System
$3,500,000Orion System
$3,600,000Ellis System
$3,700,000Cathcart System
$3,800,000Tal System
$3,900,000Geddon System
$4,000,000Chronos System
$36,000,000Tamsa System
$37,000,000Tanga System
$38,000,000Cano System
$39,000,000UDS-2943-01-22 System
$40,000,000Kabal System
$40,000,000Oretani System

At this point, I need to point out I have no interest in playing Star Citizen. I don't like flight simulators or first person shooters, and Star Citizen is both. My interest is purely on the business side of things. My point of view completely from the outside.

With those caveats in place, the situation for CIG does not look good. As far as I can tell, Star Citizen needs at least one more year of alpha (Alpha 3.0) and one year of beta testing before the game is ready to launch. If I had to guess, I think Star Citizen will launch either in the fourth quarter of 2019 or the first quarter of 2020.

Even with an estimate of two years until launch, the developer just announced a 90%-95% reduction in the size of the game. What makes the reduction even worse is that CIG raised money on the promise of Star Citizen launching with the missing content.

Now, I always thought Star Citizen was a space combat/exploration game. Perhaps Chris Roberts changed his vision to make the game more like a traditional MMORPG. Is the focus changing from space to planets? The question, for me, is academic as I don't plan on purchasing the game. But I really would like to know.

Friday, July 14, 2017

The Concurrent User Drop And The Release Cycle

To say that the number of concurrent users in EVE Online dropped over the past few years is a pretty accurate statement. When CCP Seagull became the executive producer of EVE Online in July 2014, the number of concurrent users on Tranquility was approximately 26,000. Looking at the numbers on EVE-Offline, the concurrent user numbers had dropped down to 22,000 over the past month.



Given the level of "EVE is dying!" angst seen amongst some members of the player base, I expected to see a much greater decline than the approximately 15% drop in concurrent users over the past three years. One of the hallmarks of CCP Seagull's years in charge of development is the desire to break away from the cult of the subscription and not require EVE players to maintain as many accounts as previously. In some respects, I believe the decline is a feature in her overall plans, not a bug.

I believe that one of CCP Seagull's major decisions unintentionally contributed to the decline of concurrent users, however. The decision to move from a two-expansions a year to a five week release cycle I believe cost EVE Online a lot of activity. The graphic above is one example. In June 2014, CCP launched Kronos, the last of the old style EVE expansions. Would Tranquility have experienced greater player activity if CCP had launched a Kronos-level expansion in June 2017? I think so.

During the Age of Expansions, EVE typically experienced month-over-month growth during three months: December, January, and June.



Growth during winter is expected, but why the increasing activity in June? Because CCP traditionally launched expansions in late May or June. The expansion would draw people into the game, thus mitigating the traditional summer fall off. Even Incarna followed the pattern, with the steep drop-off in player activity occurring in September, not June or July.


Perhaps surprising to many players, the largest July drop in activity occurred in 2009, not 2011. I see two causes for the drop. First, the critically acclaimed Apocrypha expansion launched in March, not in June of 2009. The second, and perhaps more important reason, was the anti-bot/anti-RMT operation known as Unholy Rage that launched on June 22, 2009.

Returning to the present day, I believe CCP could boost numbers, or at least slow the decline, by targeting the June and November content releases more like the old style expansions than just another incremental drop. Hopefully, the upcoming winter expansion is a move in that direction. Now, if we just see a summer expansion in 2018, perhaps we will see a reduction in the cries that the game is dying.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

EVE's Zombie Farms: Full And Responsible Disclosure

One of the big challenges for the developers of MMORPGs is making sure that new major features in their games integrate seamlessly with older systems. The task becomes even more critical when adding free-to-play elements to an existing mature game. Unfortunately for EVE Online's developer CCP,  the game system involved is the skill injector system that allows players to trade skill points amongst each other.

While skill point trading has several weaknesses, the issue today causing elements of the player base to pull out their pitchforks is a bug introduced in the Ascension expansion on 15 November 2016. Ascension introduced clone states, CCP's term for the system that introduced elements of free-to-play to EVE. Alpha clones, the new F2P option, differed from the subscription Omega clone option by only offering the use and ability to train a subset of skills as well as only possessing the 24 hour skill queue phased out in the Phoebe expansion. In the Ascension patch notes, CCP specifically stated the behavior of an account that lapses from Omega to Alpha state.
"Accounts lapsing from Omega to Alpha will have their training queue paused and will have previously trained skills outside the Alpha set disabled until subscription is renewed"
On 3 March, a Reddit user posted that CCP's code did not work as intended.
Since the introduction of Alpha clones it's been possible to train only certain skills as an Alpha (the way it should be IMO).

However, what I have not seen talked about is that you can fill your skill queue as an Omega, let your subscription expire, and now as an Alpha the character will continue to train those Omega skills for free at the Omega 2x speed. The skill queue only stopping if you log into that account.

It's currently possible to plex an account, fill the skill queue, and train skills for free until you decide to log in and extract. Before repeating the process again, getting multiple months worth of skill injectors for a single plex and the extractor cost.

Is this something that people consider acceptable or another thing for CCP to fix?
According to Wikipedia, an exploit, "is the use of a bug or glitches, game system, rates, hit boxes, or speed, etc. by a player to their advantage in a manner not intended by the game's designers." Given that CCP explicitly stated in the patch notes the expected behavior when an account lapses from Omega to Alpha status, what the Reddit user described in March is an exploit.

On 15 June, CCP acknowledged the exploit in an article published in the news channel:
"After thorough investigation and discussion with the Council of Stellar Management, the decision has been made to declare 'Ghost Training' an exploit.

"'Ghost Training' is defined as the use of alpha account status to accrue skillpoints at a more rapid rate than they are gained through normal alpha account gameplay, and/or train omega skills on an alpha account.

This notification serves to inform pilots that as of the date and time stamp in its header, the use of Ghost Training is considered an exploit. Any users found to have been knowingly abusing Ghost Training will be subject to reprimand on a case by case basis as per the EVE Online EULA.

We’d like to thank all the pilots who have reported this to us both publicly and via the support and bug reporting systems, and confirm that a fix is expected to be deployed to address this issue next week.

A reimbursement is also incoming for those pilots who may have lost skill training time as part of a related deployment last week, as highlighted in this news item.
Lead GM Lelouch clarified the statement on Reddit:
"You're right, the wording is a bit vague/misleading. To clarify: We are going after past abusers.

"While all exploit abuse is bad, we consider any abuse of a publicly declared exploit to be even worse. That's the distinction we were trying to make in the notification. It doesn't mean that we're going to let abuse predating the announcement slide. I apologize for the confusion.

"I want to take the opportunity to urge anyone who intentionally abused this issue to come forward by submitting a support ticket.

"I also want to make it clear that our objective is to go after those who intentionally abused this exploit.

"You have nothing to worry about if you just happened to benefit from this exploit on accident because your account lapsed for a few days. There is a pretty clear distinction between this and a skillpoint farm that's been set up to benefit from this issue."
Players who believe an exploit isn't an exploit if CCP does not make a public statement are incorrect. In the case of ghost training, utilizing the exploit runs afoul of both the EULA and the Terms of Service. Paragraph 6A6 (Conduct) of the EULA states:
6. You may not engage in any conduct that results in an Account containing items, objects, currency, character attributes, rank, or status that are inappropriate for the level or rank of the character contained in the Account, including without limitation arranging, making or accepting transfers of items to a character without adequate consideration, thereby augmenting or aggregating items in an Account and increasing its value for an Account sale.
In addition, the Terms of Service makes the following point:
23. You may not exploit any bug in EVE Online to gain an unfair advantage over other players. You may not communicate the existence of any exploitable bug to others directly or through a public forum. Bugs should be reported through the bug reporting tool on our website.
Oh. Revealing the existence of an exploit on a public forum like Reddit is a violation of the Terms of Service. How serious does CCP regard disclosing exploits? CCP's Suspension and Ban Policy states:
Severe offences may result in an immediate ban without warning; however, warnings may be given for first time offenses, followed by account suspensions of varying degree and ultimately a permanent ban if a player:
  • c. Is aware of an exploitable bug and fails to report it to Game Masters and/or distributes the information to other players.
Those who only revealed the exploit on Reddit can expect a warning, if that, compared to the immediate ban those who utilize the exploit after CCP's exploit announcement. Still, CCP frowns on the public discussion of exploits, especially exploits that not only impact the game economy but defraud the company out of real world money.

CCP's policies spell out a practice called bug secrecy. The idea is that hackers cannot exploit a bug, otherwise known as a vulnerability, if they do not know about the bug. Of course, one can see the problem with such thinking in the case of EVE Online. If a vulnerability exists, players will find the weakness and mercilessly exploit the bug.

At the opposite end of the security spectrum is a theory called full disclosure. According to Wikipedia:
"Full disclosure is the practice of publishing analysis of software vulnerabilities as early as possible, making the data accessible to everyone without restriction. The primary purpose of widely disseminating information about vulnerabilities is so that potential victims are as knowledgeable as those who attack them."
According to security technologist Bruce Schneier, bug secrecy relies on two false assumptions. The first is hackers cannot discover vulnerabilities on their own. The second is that software companies will spend time and money fixing secret vulnerabilities. Schneier argues that full disclosure is the only reason software companies patch their software:
"To understand why the second assumption isn't true, you need to understand the underlying economics. To a software company, vulnerabilities are largely an externality. That is, they affect you -- the user -- much more than they affect it. A smart vendor treats vulnerabilities less as a software problem, and more as a PR problem. So if we, the user community, want software vendors to patch vulnerabilities, we need to make the PR problem more acute.

"Full disclosure does this. Before full disclosure was the norm, researchers would discover vulnerabilities in software and send details to the software companies -- who would ignore them, trusting in the security of secrecy. Some would go so far as to threaten the researchers with legal action if they disclosed the vulnerabilities.

"Later on, researchers announced that particular vulnerabilities existed, but did not publish details. Software companies would then call the vulnerabilities "theoretical" and deny that they actually existed. Of course, they would still ignore the problems, and occasionally threaten the researcher with legal action. Then, of course, some hacker would create an exploit using the vulnerability -- and the company would release a really quick patch, apologize profusely, and then go on to explain that the whole thing was entirely the fault of the evil, vile hackers.

"It wasn't until researchers published complete details of the vulnerabilities that the software companies started fixing them."
A third school of thought on how to deal with software vulnerabilities exists called responsible disclosure. Again, according to Wikipedia:
"Responsible disclosure is a computer security term describing a vulnerability disclosure model. It is like full disclosure, with the addition that all stakeholders agree to allow a period of time for the vulnerability to be patched before publishing the details. Developers of hardware and software often require time and resources to repair their mistakes. Hackers and computer security scientists have the opinion that it is their social responsibility to make the public aware of vulnerabilities with a high impact. Hiding these problems could cause a feeling of false security. To avoid this, the involved parties join forces and agree on a period of time for repairing the vulnerability and preventing any future damage. Depending on the potential impact of the vulnerability, the expected time needed for an emergency fix or workaround to be developed and applied and other factors, this period may vary between a few days and several months. It is easier to patch software by using the Internet as a distribution channel."
In 2011, CCP's head of information security, CCP Sreegs (aka Darius JOHNSON), published a dev blog that spelled out that responsible disclosure was the model he wanted to follow in encouraging players to report security issues. The dev blog introduced the PLEX for Snitches program in which players can contact the security team at security@ccpgames.com with vulnerabilities and possibly receive a PLEX reward, depending on the severity of the exploit found.

Perhaps the most famous EVE exploit covered under the responsible disclosure policy occurred in 2012. A group of five players from Goonswarm manipulated the new faction warfare system to earn a tremendous amount of loyalty points before informing the security team about the exploit. After receiving information about the exploit, CCP made several changes to prevent anyone else from taking advantage of the vulnerability.

The group of players, although they did report the exploit to CCP, didn't quite follow the guidelines. CCP Sreegs explained the rationale behind the resolution of the situation:
"The people who sought to benefit from this exploit will receive no gain from this system. Because this was essentially a system where you could print LP, even if ISK was provided as an input, it is classified as an exploit.

"Because the players made efforts to inform us about the issue their accounts will remain in good standing. We have temporarily seized all LP points and store items from them. Once we're done determining how much each person has benefitted we will remove the LP gained value in LP and items and return the ISK invested in the purchase of items to them. This essentially will set each of them back to the original point at which they began this activity. The person who reported the issue will receive the usual PLEX for Snitches reward.

"I wrote a blog on 'Responsible Disclosures' a year or so ago. In that blog I mention that telling us about something after you've used the heck out of it isn't what we consider to be responsible. We do our best to be lenient in cases such as this but we want this to serve as a notice to the community that the proper time to alert us to the issue was before actually using the system. I can understand a desire to test the limits but we don't believe two weeks of testing a bug or exploit should net a tremendous benefit in lieu of reporting it in the first place, and that is another reason why the LP activity will be reversed back to zero."
I mention the aftermath of the factional warfare exploit for one main reason. The five individuals in question avoided bans since they reported the exploit, but CCP confiscated their profits. Following the same logic, all of the individuals involved in using the Ghost Training exploit in the operation of their skill point farms should not expect to keep their profits. For those who never reported the exploit, or reported the exploit but continued to profit from the bug, I expect harsher treatment. I believe the words in CCP Sreegs' 2011 dev blog still hold true:
"Computers aren't very good at logging intent and believe it or not there are documented cases where people who are out to do bad things have lied about their intentions. If we're witnessing an exploit being taken advantage of in our logs then, from our perspective, an exploit is being taken advantage of and the consequences for such actions are not light."