Quote:
Original post by LorenzoGatti
As a player, I would find random variations annoying: tactics that work or fail with some specific units would have different outcomes with other units of the same type.
Variations would actively invalidate any experience the player accumulates, degrading the game: instead of applying reliable qualitative and quantitative rules, the player could only gamble on the stats of friendly and enemy units, without much skill.
The chance factor increases as described when the stat variations are hidden or not worth inspecting; if variations are evident a lot of micromanagement potential, as already noted by Kaze, is added to the gameplay, and there is a different negative impact on player learning: strength estimates depend on unit variations, not on units, wasting a complexity budget that most games prefer to spend on actually different units.
I don't agree with tstrimp on the incentives to the new types of micromanagement (sorting units by stats, getting rid of the weaker ones, etc): every remotely useful behaviour has a place in a winning player's repertoire, the game designer can only hope to make it a small place.
In this case, a computer AI completely oblivious to stat variations would reward any amount of micromanagement from the player and set up an interesting decision (should I micromanage these units by stats, or should I attack with a randomly composed force and micromanage something else like their targets?).
I think it would add more strategy to the game because you wouldn't necessarily be able to rely on the old rock, paper, scissors type of game play. Imagine your enemies surprise when his average horsemen don't completely slaughter the group of elite archers you put together. Or when he realizes he is cutting through the infantry you sent at him way to fast because you didn't want to waste your strong units on the diversion.
Traditional stats leave way too much predicability in the game. You know what units counter what units and at that point it just becomes a matter of applying the techniques in the right order.