Difference between revisions of "Quest"

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(Monsters: If single monsters are genocided, it falls through to the class.)
(Monsters: +Knight)
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Monster generation in the Quest is biased toward monsters that fit the theme of the Quest ("quest monster") -- undead for the Priest Quest, centaurs for the Ranger Quest, leprechauns and nymphs for the Rogue Quest, etc. There will still be randomly-generated monsters, however. Internally, every role has two enemy monsters, and two enemy classes. Typically theese enemy classes are the classes of the enemy monster, but that is not mandatory (for exmaple the [[Rogue quest]] has [[leprechaun]]s as first enemy, but [[nymph]]s as associated class).
 
Monster generation in the Quest is biased toward monsters that fit the theme of the Quest ("quest monster") -- undead for the Priest Quest, centaurs for the Ranger Quest, leprechauns and nymphs for the Rogue Quest, etc. There will still be randomly-generated monsters, however. Internally, every role has two enemy monsters, and two enemy classes. Typically theese enemy classes are the classes of the enemy monster, but that is not mandatory (for exmaple the [[Rogue quest]] has [[leprechaun]]s as first enemy, but [[nymph]]s as associated class).
  
This "biased" part of monster generation is not subject to extinction where it specifies an individual species, as opposed to a monster class. If an idividual moster is genocided, it will fall through to the associated class. If a class is genocided, the quest monsters will be replaced with ordinary random monsters.<ref>[[Makemon.c#line890]], [[Makemon.c#line1203]], [[Questpgr.c#qt_montype]], [[You.h#line76]], [[Role.c#line1388]], example: wizards [[Role.c#line368]]</ref> It is possible to make use of this, by genociding a quest enemy monster, to increase the number of the associated class. This is useful for [[Wizard]]s and [[Caveman|Cavemen]]. Wizards have [[xorn]]s as quest monster, and [[wraith]] as associted class, thus a genocide of xorns will increase the number of wraiths in the quest, who can be eaten for experience (at the price of making polymorphing into a xorn impossible). Cavemen have [[bugbear]]s as quest enemy, with the associated class [[dwarf]], thus a genocide of bugbears will increase the number of [[mind flayer]]s in the quest, who can be eaten for intelligence. This however makes the quest dungeon a very dangerous place.
+
This "biased" part of monster generation is not subject to extinction where it specifies an individual species, as opposed to a monster class. If an idividual moster is genocided, it will fall through to the associated class. If a class is genocided, the quest monsters will be replaced with ordinary random monsters.<ref>[[Makemon.c#line890]], [[Makemon.c#line1203]], [[Questpgr.c#qt_montype]], [[You.h#line76]], [[Role.c#line1388]], example: wizards [[Role.c#line368]]</ref> It is possible to make use of this, by genociding a quest enemy monster, to increase the number of the associated class. This is useful for [[Wizard]]s, [[Caveman|Cavemen]] and [[Knight]]s. Wizards have [[xorn]]s as quest monster, and [[wraith]] as associted class, thus a genocide of xorns will increase the number of wraiths in the quest, who can be eaten for experience (at the price of making polymorphing into a xorn impossible). Cavemen have [[bugbear]]s as quest enemy, with the associated class [[dwarf]], thus a genocide of bugbears will increase the number of [[mind flayer]]s in the quest, who can be eaten for intelligence. This however makes the quest dungeon a very dangerous place. Knights have [[quasit]]s as quest monster and [[imp]] as associated class, thus genociding quasits will increase the number of [[tengu]]s who can be eaten for [[teleport control]].
  
 
The locate and filler levels are eligible to leave [[bones]]; the home and goal levels are not.
 
The locate and filler levels are eligible to leave [[bones]]; the home and goal levels are not.

Revision as of 13:05, 1 May 2014

The Quest is a great journey upon which all must embark. Somewhere above the Castle, between the dungeon levels 11 and 16, 6 or 7 levels below the Oracle, you will receive a message from your quest leader, saying they need your help. Search the level, and you will find a magic portal to the start level of your quest. Assuming you are of at least 20 alignment and experience level 14, you will be allowed on the quest to recover a magic artifact stolen from your people. The entrance to the quest proper will be a down stair on the same level as your quest leader. The bottom level of the quest will hold your quest nemesis. Kill the quest nemesis, take the artifact and the silver bell back up to your quest leader, and continue onwards down the dungeon.

Quest structure

The exact composition and inhabitants of the Quest depend on your role, but some features are consistent for all of them.

  • The first level, also known as the "Home" level, is always the same for a given role. It contains your Quest leader and several Quest guardians -- friendlies to add flavor to the level. The only exits from the Home level are the portal back to the main dungeon and a down staircase. To go down the staircase, or proceed on the Quest in any way, you must receive permission from the Quest leader. If you meet the requirements, simply walk up to the leader and #chat if (s)he doesn't initiate conversation automatically. The level is no-teleport, and the walls and floor are un-diggable.
  • The second level is a randomly-generated filler level, and depending on your role could be a room-and-corridor level, a cavern, or a special type of level.
  • The third level is the "Locate" level. This level is always the same for a given role, and a message will be displayed each time you enter until the Quest nemesis is killed. The walls and floor are un-diggable. Other than that, there is nothing special about it.
  • Below the Locate level will be one to three more filler levels, which may be the same or a different type than the upper filler level.
  • The last level is the "Goal" level. It is always the same for a given role, and a message will be displayed each time you enter until the Quest nemesis is killed. The nemesis will be generated asleep and meditating, carrying the Bell of Opening and with the Quest artifact on the floor on their space. The walls and floor are un-diggable, and on the Rogue and Samurai Quests, the level is no-teleport.

Every time you enter the quest portal level, you'll get a purely cosmetic message about your leader needing your help. If you want to switch it off, #chat with your quest leader while you are carrying the silver bell and the quest artifact.

Monsters

Monster generation in the Quest is biased toward monsters that fit the theme of the Quest ("quest monster") -- undead for the Priest Quest, centaurs for the Ranger Quest, leprechauns and nymphs for the Rogue Quest, etc. There will still be randomly-generated monsters, however. Internally, every role has two enemy monsters, and two enemy classes. Typically theese enemy classes are the classes of the enemy monster, but that is not mandatory (for exmaple the Rogue quest has leprechauns as first enemy, but nymphs as associated class).

This "biased" part of monster generation is not subject to extinction where it specifies an individual species, as opposed to a monster class. If an idividual moster is genocided, it will fall through to the associated class. If a class is genocided, the quest monsters will be replaced with ordinary random monsters.[1] It is possible to make use of this, by genociding a quest enemy monster, to increase the number of the associated class. This is useful for Wizards, Cavemen and Knights. Wizards have xorns as quest monster, and wraith as associted class, thus a genocide of xorns will increase the number of wraiths in the quest, who can be eaten for experience (at the price of making polymorphing into a xorn impossible). Cavemen have bugbears as quest enemy, with the associated class dwarf, thus a genocide of bugbears will increase the number of mind flayers in the quest, who can be eaten for intelligence. This however makes the quest dungeon a very dangerous place. Knights have quasits as quest monster and imp as associated class, thus genociding quasits will increase the number of tengus who can be eaten for teleport control.

The locate and filler levels are eligible to leave bones; the home and goal levels are not.


Quest leaders and nemeses

A quest leader is the one who verifies that you are ready to go to the quest and assigns you the mission. If you attack the quest leader or fail the alignment test more than seven times, you will be expelled from the quest and the magic portal will be removed. Only if you can branchport back in, you can still pacify him and obtain permission to do the quest; otherwise, the game is unwinnable.

A quest nemesis is the one who you must defeat to reclaim your quest artifact and the Bell of Opening. It's possible to ascend without killing your quest nemesis, but this is exceedingly rare.

Every quest nemesis resists stoning, but nemeses follow the usual rules of respecting Elbereth (nevertheless nemeses symbolized by @ ignore Elbereth).

All quest leaders are generated meditating, and those of some roles sit on a throne. To make them move away before you can get permission, you need to become at least fast, move next to them on a free turn, and either #chat to them or say no at the prompt whether to melee them.

Role Leader Nemesis
Archeologist @ Lord Carnarvon & The Minion of Huhetotl
Barbarian @ Pelias @ Thoth Amon
Caveman @ Shaman Karnov D The Chromatic Dragon
Healer @ Hippocrates H The Cyclops
Knight @ King Arthur D Ixoth
Monk @ The Grand Master @ Master Kaen
Priest @ The Arch Priest & Nalzok
Ranger @ Orion s Scorpius
Rogue @ The Master of Thieves @ The Master Assassin
Samurai @ Lord Sato @ Ashikaga Takauji
Tourist @ Twoflower @ The Master of Thieves
Valkyrie @ The Norn H Lord Surtur
Wizard @ Neferet the Green @ The Dark One

Quest difficulty statistics

The following table is an attempt to quantify quest difficulty by role based on statistics from nethack.alt.org, as of June 21, 2013. The count of players who died in the quest does not include players who completed the quest first.

Role Completed quest Died in quest Total Completion rate (%)
Wizard 3941 323 4264 92.42
Knight 765 80 845 90.53
Tourist 1110 129 1239 89.59
Caveman 604 78 682 88.56
Archeologist 806 122 928 86.85
Rogue 646 99 745 86.71
Ranger 772 176 948 81.43
Priest 920 213 1133 81.20
Samurai 1155 296 1451 79.60
Healer 736 242 978 75.26
Valkyrie 2822 941 3763 74.99
Barbarian 1022 471 1493 68.45
Monk 849 549 1398 60.73


SLASH'EM

In addition to the quests above, SLASH'EM also has quests for the new roles of SLASH'EM and for the different alignments. For a general overview, see SLASH'EM quests and alignment quest. For individual quests, see:

Also, the quest entry level can be deeper.

Encyclopaedia entry

Many, possibly most, Tours are organized as a Quest. This
is like a large-scale treasure hunt, with clues scattered
all over the continent, a few false leads, Mystical Masters
as game-show hosts, and the Dark Lord and the Terrain to
make the Quest interestingly difficult. [...]
In order to be assured of your future custom, the Management
has a further Rule: Tourists, far from being rewarded for
achieving their Quest Object, must then go on to conquer
the Dark Lord or set about Saving the World, or both. And
why not? By then you will have had a lot of practice in
that sort of thing and, besides, the Quest Object is usually
designed to help you do it.

[ The Tough Guide to Fantasyland, by Diana Wynne Jones ]