Tin Star testing

your one of the lucky ones, it’s hard to live through the fights . the optin to go on a killling spree is just simply , ‘pull out your gun and get to work’ that makes the bodies start to pile up fast 8-X

Redgrave- That is a good point about skill development. I’ll work in a few ways to raise Engineering, Law and/or Survival with books brought out from California. Brawling… practice I suppose. Or drunken fisticuffs… Riding is easy. Stamina as well. Persuasion and intimidate? Sure, those follow. I just need to make the entries interesting.

I think I have also tracked down the ‘don’t meet Yiska in Chapter 3’ error. Apparently I didn’t copy a status variable in a few sections, possibly from before I thought such a variable would be needed. It should be fixed with the next update.

trollhunterthethird- And I intend to write it in eventually. Right now I am focused on finishing the main story. However, I should be able to shake some time loose to work in a basic Indian entry. Nothing fancy, just an acknowledgement of the possibility that will be expanded later on. I say expanded because to be honest, everyone is going to have some reaction to an Indian wearing a badge.

@AllenGies I love the way you pull off a Wild-west. Reminds me of all those corney movies of wild-west I watched with my dad when I was six.

wow Very good job!! There are so many paths I may have died a “few” times but it was amazing. :X

trollhunterthethird- Bad westerns can be the best westerns when you are young. It is the larger legend we see and it is also what we take to heart.

I can still remember watching the Lone Ranger and Bonanza with a kind of euphoric glee. Later on would come the Spaghetti westerns; Fistful of dollars or The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, and so on. But whenever I think of the Old West, the old shows are the first that come to mind.

Ada- Thank you. I always try and make certain to include a few ways to perish. After all, if there is no risk then there is no real reward. Did you have a favorite fatality? :slight_smile:

Red Dead redemption was epic…

@AllenGies probably getting killed by the bear I should have been more alert I did not see that coming.

@Ada
lol i just fired my gun in the air cause it was an option
never expected a bear to pop up was rather funny

Hmm, weird, I chose to set up camp and wait outside the valley and it acted like I rode in.

Got a suggestion. Why not make it such that if you ask someone about the town, the option to stop asking is the last option instead of the first option?

Oh and I find it a little weird, that you can be so famous that they make hollywood movies about you, but nobody notices their is no such person as marshall so and so?

That’s generations later. At the time of marshal Steele, you’re just another gunslinging marshal in the Wild West, and if you’re not very likable to the locals, why should they believe you instead of Steele?

It just easier to be feared than loved.oh and a steady supply of bullets helps too.

Yeah but according to the marshal you’re identity has an expiration date on it, because they aren’t that good.

So unless the end of the legend is that my bear killing chinese lawyer/doctor vanishes as mysteriously as he appears the secret should have come out, yet the ending implies it nobody notices there's no such person.

Ada- To be fair, I didn’t see the bear coming either when I wrote that part. It was just going to be a clump of thimble berries and then, well, the bear just rose up on me.

stsword- Which Chapter are you talking about concerning the valley? Chapter 4, the Golden Stagecoach?

Xt1000305- Are you referring to the ‘ask about town’ at the start of Chapter 2? Because I can see the ergonomics of such an alteration. Sometimes, the smallest changes make a big impact.

regarding the legend and notoriety, would it be possible to make it so for like every two or three legend points you get a notoriety point