Friday, September 21, 2018

The Ergonomic 3 Mile Hex

So if my blog numbers are correct, everybody loves the six mile hex. It has the top number of posts with the most comments. All in all the 6 mile hex is handy for marking continuous Cartesian travel. However, while the 6 mile hex is computationally handy and conforms to base horizon calculations, my third point in that post is total bunk: the sub-hexes are far to numerous to streamline things and actually undermine the core feature of the 6 mile hex which is easy distance measurement. When you add the sub-hexes, you have stopped using the handy distances of the 6-mile hex and actually switched to a discrete model.

Early versions of the game are somewhat undecided on how hexes get used. On one level the hexes are discrete units with contents like spaces on a game board. Reaching a hex more often then not grants access to the contents. The other paradigm is where hexes are used for measurement of distance. The 6-mile hex falls squarely in the second which is great if you are tracking travel in a continuous Cartesian method.

However human beings generally don't think about travel in a continuous Cartesian way. We think of it in a discrete linear way. That is as lines between origins and destinations. The rivers, roads, passes, trails, and other linear routes that we use to navigate about our day are really just lines connecting origins and destinations with sequences of landmarks we are familiar with. This is why the point crawl is such a powerful and familiar idea. The most important thing we ask ourselves about these lines is not the question "How far?" but rather "How long?" And this question should drive how we determine hex size.

Lets take a page from Delta's book and look at the ergonomic and mathematical factors we are dealing with again with the idea that we want to keep the hex as a discrete object:
  • Humans leisurely walk  about 3 miles in an hour. 
  • Humans can see 3 miles to the horizon on a completely fictional smooth side of a sphere approximating the size of the Earth with a completely clear atmosphere.  
  • People think about travel in lines and landmarks rather than areas of Cartesian space.
These factors indicate a 3-mile hex is the superior measurement and here is why:
  1. Travel from the middle of one hex to that of the next takes 1 hour over open terrain. This makes counting time easier. Time to cross can be adjusted to allow for various terrain features.
  2. The center of the next hex can be viewed form the current hex rather than the edge as is the case in the 6 mile hex.
  3. This allows for all movement to be discrete and informed - we no longer need measurements.
  4. A smaller size (approximate to 1/4 of the 6 mile hex) allows for a better focus for what is in the hex and thus a better discrete location. 
  5. A 3 mile hex is still easily converted to metric and this is advantageous if you are using metric as your standard of measurement. There will be another post about why metric is superior for measurement later.
 In conclusion I would suggest the 6 mile hex if you were using continuous Cartesian movement. The 6 mile hex is large enough to have the positions of its contents mapped and then use the hex as a measurement tool for continuous Cartesian movement. If your game is not that detailed I would suggest the discrete movement offered by the 3 mile hex for wilderness travel.

4 comments:

Gabe said...

Curious to hear the metric hex benefits. Toying with this currently and would love to hear your thoughts

wreckage said...

http://mathster.com/graphpaper/graphpaperjs/
Sorry to be a bit spammy, but ADHD demands i post this while I remember it exists. Linked is a graph paper generator. Being Metricated, I set the generator to 3cm hexes, default everything, A4 paper, portrait, and got a .PDF that should print the biggest hexes you can fit 6 across of for the aforementioned parameters.

Tipi said...

Well, I, for one, hope to see the follow-up to this one some day. Especially the superiority of the metric system intrigues me.

Petrov said...

I did something similar, only went with 2.5 miles (4 km) per hex instead. Average cross-country hiking speed is around 2.5 miles / hour, so this seemed a good number to go with. I assume a well rested, unencumbered, healthy person can hike 10 hours a day across open terrain (25 miles, 40 km). The circumference of the earth is 24,901 miles (lets round up to 25,000 miles) or approx 40,000 km. This equates to 1000 days of walking 10 hours a day (if everything was just open terrain). Those units are too convenient to ignore...