Установить Steam
войти
|
язык
简体中文 (упрощенный китайский)
繁體中文 (традиционный китайский)
日本語 (японский)
한국어 (корейский)
ไทย (тайский)
Български (болгарский)
Čeština (чешский)
Dansk (датский)
Deutsch (немецкий)
English (английский)
Español - España (испанский — Испания)
Español - Latinoamérica (испанский — Латинская Америка)
Ελληνικά (греческий)
Français (французский)
Italiano (итальянский)
Bahasa Indonesia (индонезийский)
Magyar (венгерский)
Nederlands (нидерландский)
Norsk (норвежский)
Polski (польский)
Português (португальский — Португалия)
Português-Brasil (португальский — Бразилия)
Română (румынский)
Suomi (финский)
Svenska (шведский)
Türkçe (турецкий)
Tiếng Việt (вьетнамский)
Українська (украинский)
Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
No, no XML. It's all in C#.
Ultimate question is: how are you controlling the values? Is it via xml?
what if the ranges slightly overlapped, so the upermost part of the range for"normal" is the same as the lowermost for "good", the idea being the outliers which are sorta "quality wise not "good", but it's practicly "good".
so, at the most basic:
• Awful: 0.5 to 0.71
• Poor: 0.70 to 0.91
• Normal: 0.9 to 1.15
• Good: 1.14 to 1.31
• Excellent: 1.3 to 1.56
• Masterwork: 1.55 to 2.01
• Legendary: 2.00 to 5.0
of course, the overlap could use some work, and should have a fall off (so it's a lower chance than just a linear range suggests)
We have created a new Discord server. Suggestions, feedback and input on future new features etc all welcome!
https://discord.gg/xWadkMZn35
@Redrum: That's not a bad idea! Added to The List!
@Rtepper: Right?! (But yeah, it's probably a pretty easy fix to make a setting for some of it, and then why not do it...)