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Events
Subject

Regarding Durability, Repairing Item, Dropped Hole Index

Date Jun 29, 2005 Views 6,494
1.Understanding Durability and Repairing Item
All items have their own durability factor. When durability decreases to 0, the item becomes unusable. However, there is another number in the image of the item (right bottom), and that is the quantity of the item number. For example, golf ball has durability of 4 and quantity of 100. Thus, when you hit it one time, durability decreases to 3; when you hit it again, durability decreases to 2; and so forth, until durability eventually becomes 0. When durability becomes 0, the quantity of the golf ball decreases from 100 to 99. In the case of golf clubs, if my sand wedge has a durability of 500, I will be able to use my sand wedge 500 times.
Functional items, such as Mageia or Mopsos, have quantity of 100 with durability of 1, and their quantity number decreases by 1 as they are used.

2. Repairing Items
Golf balls and other similar items cannot be repaired. Only golf clubs can be repaired. Let's say a particular driver has a durability of 100 and the repair cost is 10,000 NG. If the durability of this driver decreased to 50 and you went to the shop to have your driver repaired, total repair cost would be 5,000 NG, not 10,000 NG. In other words, the repair cost listed for any specific item indicates the cost of repair only when its durability has decreased to 0. There is a simple equation that will determine repair cost:

Repair Cost / Durability = Actual Repair Cost


3. Dropped Hole Index and Experience Points
When using DHI (dropped hole index) as a determiner instead of etiquette index, having low DHI is critical to receive experience points. Maximum allowable DHI is 200. Here is a simple equation to determine DHI:

Experience Points = Original Experience Points x
[(200 - Current DHI) / 200]

In other words, no matter how well you play, if DHI is 200, you will receive 0 experience points. Here is how you calculate dropped holes:

Dropped Holes = Number of Set Holes (at the beginning of game) -
Number of Played Holes

For example, if you started a round of 18 holes but you left the game at the end of the third hole, your DHI would increase by 15. And if you complete the number of holes you intended to play at the start of the game, your DHI will decrease. For example, if you choose to play a three-hole game and finish the game, your DHI will decrease by 3.