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Difference between revisions of "User:Tut"
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− | This is a work in progress and will be uploaded to the acro page when completed. | + | This page is a work in progress and will be uploaded to the acro page when completed. |
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==The Basics== | ==The Basics== | ||
+ | |||
+ | This section is geared towards those who are brand new to the Test of the Acrobat, or are looking for the bare minimum knowledge of how to do the test without understanding most of the mechanics behind it. Please see the Advanced Mechanics section if you're looking for a detailed explanation of everything happening behind the scenes. | ||
+ | |||
===University Text=== | ===University Text=== | ||
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When you start the Test of the Acrobat, you will be taught four acrobatic moves. | When you start the Test of the Acrobat, you will be taught four acrobatic moves. | ||
− | Acrobats may attempt to teach each other by standing near each other and performing their moves | + | Acrobats may attempt to teach each other by standing near each other and performing their moves which is best done by clicking the person you want to acro with and selecting "Ask to acro" from the tests menu. If other people stand too close to the acrobats (within about 5 coords), they will be unable to teach each other and are given a message about needing to perform acro in solitude. You must have performed an acro move in the last 3 minutes in order to be able to learn or the teacher will get a "student isn't paying attention" message, which will stop appearing as soon as the student next performs a move. A person can be both a teacher and a student at the same time if both people are performing their moves simultaneously. There is no penalty for this and it is the recommended approach as it saves time over one person performing moves at a time. |
− | After performing an acro move in solitude and with the student paying attention as detailed above, the teacher gets an "'''ACR'''" timer in the top left of the window and must wait until that timer ends to perform another move or will be told | + | After performing an acro move in solitude and with the student paying attention as detailed above, the teacher gets an "'''ACR'''" timer in the top left of the ATITD game window and must wait until that timer ends to perform another move or will be told "''You are going too fast!''" and that attempt won't count. Each time an acro move is performed, there are (3) possible outcomes determined by several factors and some random chance. Both the teacher and the student receive messages in their '''Main''' chat detailing the outcome. The (3) outcomes, their associated messages, and their result are shown below: |
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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! Outcome !! Teacher's Message !! Student's Message !! Result | ! Outcome !! Teacher's Message !! Student's Message !! Result | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | '''Unsuccessful''' | + | | align="center" | '''Unsuccessful''' |
+ | | "Your student doesn't follow your move." || A message detailing how good of a teacher the other person is, and also says you don't follow the move. || Nothing happens, keep trying? | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | '''Success!!''' | + | | align="center" | '''Success!!''' |
+ | | "You successfully teach a new facet. You have now taught ____ facets total!" || "You have learned a new facet of ____!" || Student learns (1) facet in the move being taught and teacher gains (1) facet taught. | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | '''Followed''' | + | | align="center" | '''Followed''' |
+ | | "Your student follows your move." || "Although you don't pick up anything new, you do follow the move: ____." || No facet learnt / taught, and for now the student can't learn any more facets in that move from that teacher. Move on to another move. | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | It is polite and best-practice as the student to let the teacher know via '''Main''' chat or a private chat, what teacher type they are. This lets them know how much of a chance they have to try and teach facets, which helps inform decisions of how much time to invest in the acro encounter. Here are the (5) different teacher types along with their | + | |
+ | It is polite and best-practice as the student to let the teacher know via '''Main''' chat or a private chat, what teacher type they are. This lets them know how much of a chance they have to try and teach facets, which helps inform decisions of how much time to invest in the acro encounter. Here are the (5) different teacher types along with their commonly used descriptors and % chance of being able to teach a facet in a move: | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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|} | |} | ||
+ | Please note that teacher type is initially randomly assigned but is specific to teaching that one person, and remains the same for the entirety of the tale. So if someone is a Perfect teacher for you, they will always be a perfect teacher and you may want to record their name to try again later if they learn more moves or you gain the ability to learn more facets / move (see below). | ||
− | + | During an acro session it is common practice to try teaching each move 4-5 times since a majority of the time, that is enough repetitions to overcome the odds and teach the facet if you are able to. Please note, however, that you are not guaranteed to be able to teach a facet in each move (unless you are a perfect teacher) and sometimes even if you tried 100 times you wouldn't teach a facet. | |
− | + | The number of facets of each move that a student may learn from a given teacher is based on the total number of facets that the '''student''' has taught to other acrobats. See below: | |
− | |||
− | The number of facets of each move that a student may learn from a given teacher is based on the total number of facets that the student has taught to other acrobats. See below: | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
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+ | So, as seen in the table, a student who goes from 13 facets taught to 14 facets taught would suddenly have the possibility of learning a second facet / teacher in every move. Please also note that crossing these facets taught thresholds is the only time that you might be able to learn another facet in a move where you had previously gotten the "follow" message from a teacher (more details in Advanced Mechanics section). | ||
− | + | ===Stat Bonuses=== | |
− | ===Bonuses=== | ||
As you master new moves, you gain permanent increases to your [[Dexterity]]. | As you master new moves, you gain permanent increases to your [[Dexterity]]. | ||
Revision as of 04:17, 29 March 2018
This page is a work in progress and will be uploaded to the acro page when completed.
The Basics
This section is geared towards those who are brand new to the Test of the Acrobat, or are looking for the bare minimum knowledge of how to do the test without understanding most of the mechanics behind it. Please see the Advanced Mechanics section if you're looking for a detailed explanation of everything happening behind the scenes.
University Text
<Needs to be updated>
Overview
The Test of the Acrobat is one of the first tests available in the discipline of Body. You must be level 2 to begin it.
Each of the 28 acrobatic moves has 7 facets which must be learned in order to master the move. Your Tests menu will allow you to track your progress in various moves as well as perform your moves if needed.
After mastering all 28 moves, the acrobat passes the test.
When you pass the test you will get a new option on your emote menu: Demonstrate Masterful Dexterity.
Performing acrobatic moves with another person is often referred to as "acro" or "acro'ing".
Teaching and Learning Facets
When you start the Test of the Acrobat, you will be taught four acrobatic moves.
Acrobats may attempt to teach each other by standing near each other and performing their moves which is best done by clicking the person you want to acro with and selecting "Ask to acro" from the tests menu. If other people stand too close to the acrobats (within about 5 coords), they will be unable to teach each other and are given a message about needing to perform acro in solitude. You must have performed an acro move in the last 3 minutes in order to be able to learn or the teacher will get a "student isn't paying attention" message, which will stop appearing as soon as the student next performs a move. A person can be both a teacher and a student at the same time if both people are performing their moves simultaneously. There is no penalty for this and it is the recommended approach as it saves time over one person performing moves at a time.
After performing an acro move in solitude and with the student paying attention as detailed above, the teacher gets an "ACR" timer in the top left of the ATITD game window and must wait until that timer ends to perform another move or will be told "You are going too fast!" and that attempt won't count. Each time an acro move is performed, there are (3) possible outcomes determined by several factors and some random chance. Both the teacher and the student receive messages in their Main chat detailing the outcome. The (3) outcomes, their associated messages, and their result are shown below:
Outcome | Teacher's Message | Student's Message | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Unsuccessful | "Your student doesn't follow your move." | A message detailing how good of a teacher the other person is, and also says you don't follow the move. | Nothing happens, keep trying? |
Success!! | "You successfully teach a new facet. You have now taught ____ facets total!" | "You have learned a new facet of ____!" | Student learns (1) facet in the move being taught and teacher gains (1) facet taught. |
Followed | "Your student follows your move." | "Although you don't pick up anything new, you do follow the move: ____." | No facet learnt / taught, and for now the student can't learn any more facets in that move from that teacher. Move on to another move. |
It is polite and best-practice as the student to let the teacher know via Main chat or a private chat, what teacher type they are. This lets them know how much of a chance they have to try and teach facets, which helps inform decisions of how much time to invest in the acro encounter. Here are the (5) different teacher types along with their commonly used descriptors and % chance of being able to teach a facet in a move:
Teacher Type | Descriptor Used | Chance of Success |
---|---|---|
Perfect Master | "Perfect" or "Master" | 100% |
Great Teacher | "GT" | 50% |
Pretty Good Teacher | "PGT" | 25% |
Last Resort | "LR" | 6.25% |
Blur | "Blur" | 1.5625% |
Please note that teacher type is initially randomly assigned but is specific to teaching that one person, and remains the same for the entirety of the tale. So if someone is a Perfect teacher for you, they will always be a perfect teacher and you may want to record their name to try again later if they learn more moves or you gain the ability to learn more facets / move (see below).
During an acro session it is common practice to try teaching each move 4-5 times since a majority of the time, that is enough repetitions to overcome the odds and teach the facet if you are able to. Please note, however, that you are not guaranteed to be able to teach a facet in each move (unless you are a perfect teacher) and sometimes even if you tried 100 times you wouldn't teach a facet.
The number of facets of each move that a student may learn from a given teacher is based on the total number of facets that the student has taught to other acrobats. See below:
Student's Facets Taught | # of Possible Facets Learnt / Move / Teacher |
---|---|
0-13 | 1 |
14-979 | 2 |
980+ | 3 |
So, as seen in the table, a student who goes from 13 facets taught to 14 facets taught would suddenly have the possibility of learning a second facet / teacher in every move. Please also note that crossing these facets taught thresholds is the only time that you might be able to learn another facet in a move where you had previously gotten the "follow" message from a teacher (more details in Advanced Mechanics section).
Stat Bonuses
As you master new moves, you gain permanent increases to your Dexterity.
Total Moves Mastered | 4 | 5 | 6 | 8 | 10 | 15 | 21 | 28 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Permanent Dexterity | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
The more dexterity you have, the more bulk you can carry and the faster you can run off-road.
7 Dexterity makes your off-road travel speed equal to an on-road travel at speed 0.
Passing the Principle
<Needs updating>
When a teacher performs a move before a student, the chance that the student will learn a facet is determined as follows (checked in order):
- There is a 50% chance that the student will not follow the move on any given attempt, regardless of other factors.
- There is a fixed chance that this teacher can teach this move to this student, based on how good the teacher is for this student. This chance does not vary with repeated attempts at teaching--either the teacher can teach this move, or he cannot. The chances are:
- Perfect master - 100% - (see comments below if this seems weird to you)
- Great teacher - 50% (1 in 2 chance)
- Pretty good teacher - 25% (1 in 4 chance)
- Last resort - 6.25% (1 in 16 chance)
- Blur - 1.5625% (1 in 64 chance) There is some debate whether the percentages for complete blur and last resort are switched, but the above percentages are what Teppy said they were.
- If the student can learn multiple facets, subsequent facets will be available only if the previous ones were.
- If the above checks succeed, the student will learn a facet if one he doesn't already know is available to be taught by this teacher. The facets available are based on the combination of student, teacher, and move- and will not change with successive attempts at teaching. For each facet per move a given student can potentially learn as above, one of the seven facets of the move is chosen randomly (with replacement - the same facet may have been chosen more than once)
- If one or more of the chosen facets are not already known to the student, the student learns one.
- If the student already knows all the available facets, then he cannot learn any additional facets from this teacher, and teacher and student receive a message "follows the move". This message means that it's impossible to learn more of this move from this teacher, unless after seeing this message the student teaches a 14th or 980th facet and gains the ability to learn an additional facet per teacher.
NOTE:
Notes
- The message "Although you don't pick up anything new, you do follow the move: ABC" means that this teacher has already taught you move ABC as many times as you can currently learn from that person.
- Acronyms such as "AI" for "Asian Influence" are almost always used for acro moves - see the table below for the standard names.
- A player's Info box now contains a list of all acro moves, and how many facets are known. The colour changes, and the move becomes a clickable box once learnt. To access this, click the Acro tab at the top of the Information Box. If there is no Acro box, the player has not yet started the Test of the Acrobat
Common Acronyms
Move | Acronym | Move | Acronym | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Asian Influence | AI | Lunge | LU | |
Broad Jump | BJ | Pinwheel | PW | |
Cartwheels | CW | Push-Ups | PU | |
Cat Stretch | CS | Rear Squat | RS | |
Clapping Push-ups | CPU | Roundoff | RO | |
Crunches | CR | Run in Place | RIP | |
Front Tuck | FT | Side Bends | SB | |
Handplant | HP | Somersault | SS | |
Handstand | HS | Spin Flip | SF | |
Inverted Push-ups | IP | Squat Thrust | ST | |
Jump Split | JS | Squats | SQ | |
Jumping Jacks | JJ | Toe Touches | TT | |
Kick-Up | KU | Wide Squat | WS | |
Leg Stretch | LS | Windmill | WM |