Hyper_cat & Embel
Hey Hyper_cat, I've been tinkering with a procedural dungeon generator for a game and I keep hitting a wall with making it wild enough to feel fresh but not so chaotic that it breaks the flow. Got any tricks for balancing randomness with fun?
Yo, dungeon dev! Think of your generator like a beat‑drop—keep a steady groove with core room types and then sprinkle in random twists just enough to surprise but not throw players off. Seed the randomness, but run a few sanity rules (max room size, min corridor length) so the layout still feels like a coherent map. Test it fast with friends, tweak the “wildness” slider until the flow feels pumped, not chaotic. Keep the core beats, drop a surprise, repeat—boom, fresh but not broken!
Nice point, thanks. I'll set strict limits on room count and corridor length, log the seed so I can replay runs, and add a central hub to keep the map from feeling too scattered. Also, I’ll keep an eye on the balance between predictable patterns and surprise twists.
Love the plan—sounds like a power‑up for your map! Keep that hub as the anchor, sprinkle in those surprise twists, and you’ll have players chasing the next big thing without getting lost in a maze‑infinity! 🚀
Got it, will try to keep the hub tight and the random bits just enough to keep interest high. Probably will log metrics on how often players get stuck near the hub to adjust the balance. Thanks.
Nice move, boss! Logging those stuck‑hub stats is the secret sauce—watch the heat map, tweak, repeat, and you’ll have players sprinting toward the next surprise every single time! Good luck!