Difference between revisions of "User talk:WinterBorn"

From Arcen Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(41 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
test area
 
test area
  
 +
[[Wiki Design Overview]]
  
testing{{TBD}}
+
[[Special:MostLinkedTemplates| link to templates list]]
  
 +
*templates use {{}}
  
 +
[[Special:MostLinkedCategories| link to categories list]]
  
*Starting A New Campaign
+
* Categories use [[]] and the word category:
 +
A category is created by creating a page in the Category: namespace.
 +
 
 +
A category page can be created the same way as other wiki pages (see Help:Starting a new page); just add "Category:" before the page title
 +
 
 +
To create a link to a category, use a leading colon before the category name (without this colon, the current page would be added to the category):
 +
 
 +
*[:Category:Help] → Category:Help    (one set braces removed)
 +
 
 +
To change the link text, write the text inside the link tag after a pipe:
 +
 
 +
*[:Category:Help|Help category] → Help category  (one set braces removed)
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[practice_area|Link to my practice area]]
 +
 
 +
[[Wiki_reduxarea|Link to wiki Redux]]
 +
 
 +
[[Wiki_prep area|Link to wiki Prep area]]
 +
 
 +
[[Wiki_Category area|Link to proposed categories]]
 +
 
 +
[[Wiki_Template_area|Link to proposed templates]]
 +
 
 +
[[Wiki_Standard_Page|Link to a standard page lay out sutable for cut and paste]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[AI War - Guardians]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== manual patch ==
 +
Meanwhile, if you want the raw zip files, you can get a list of them here: http://www.arcengames.com/dl/AIWarBetaUpdates2.xml
 +
 
 +
Simply unzipping them into your game folder in order would give the desired result if you want the betas that way.  Hope that helps
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== Hybrids Section ==
 +
 
 +
[[AI_War_-_Hybrid_Hives]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Various quotes on Hybrid development follow
 +
 
 +
CoN exp
 +
Added "Advanced Hybrids" AI Plot; if the base Hybrids plot is enabled and the Advanced one is not, then the highest tier of Hybrid classes will be disabled (including stuff like the re-colonizer, which is not quite implemented yet). Also slightly influences the tech level of equipment available to the lower classes, for instance the first Attacker type will only be able to get a mkI forcefield (instead of mkII) if Advanced Hybrids is off. If you select Advanced Hybrids and not the base Hybrids plot for an AI player, once you start the game it will act as if you had checked both.
 +
 
 +
Added 2 galaxy map display overlays: detected hybrids and detected hybrid facilities. Only displays info on planets that you current have visibility.
 +
 
 +
The following modules now use a new shot-movement mechanic to fire their multiple-shot bursts in a brief sequence rather than all at once, to give more of the desired visual effect (gameplay impact should be minimal) :
 +
Riot machine gun modules now fire 12 shots per salvo with a reload time of 4 seconds, instead of 3-shot salvos with a 1-second reload.
 +
Riot laser modules now fire 8 shots per salvo per 8 seconds instead of 4 shots per salvo per 4 seconds.
 +
Hybrid machine gun modules (I-IV) changed from firing 2/3/4/5 shots per 1-second reload to 10/15/20/25 shots per 5-second reload.
 +
Hybrid laser cannon modules (I-IV) changed from firing 1/2/2/3 shots per 4-second reload to 2/3/4/5 shots per 8-second reload.
 +
 
 +
Hybrid Hive (hull, not ff-module) armor from 500 to 1000, health from 1,500,000 to 2,000,000.
 +
Hybrid Hive forcefield generator hull type from (default) to Structural, the same as normal ff-generators (they used to be intentionally different, but with the simplification of damage bonuses there isn't room for that). Health from 500,000 per mark level to 600,000 per mark level.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Hybrid plot
 +
Difficulty scaling: the initial number of hybrid facilities (including hive spawners) and the maximum-hybrids-alive-at-once calculations (which is based on planet count and spawner count) are now scaled by the total number of human-players/human-homeworlds and the highest AI difficulty (facility count only scales by the former). A single player with one homeworld playing on difficulty 7 has a factor of 1.0; on difficulty 10, 3.0; two players on diff 7 have 2.0, etc.
 +
The maximum-hybrids-alive-at-once number is now capped at numberOfPlanets * difficultyFactor, which is 4 times the number of hybrids supported by just the planet count. This allows the number of spawners (each of which support an additional 2 hybrids, which is down from 4) to have a significant impact on hybrid population without it exploding into the 500s or crazy stuff like that (unless you're playing with a lot of players or homeworlds or high difficulty).
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== another section ==
 +
  Re: Returning to AI war, having a problem securing some planets
 +
« Reply #18 on: Today at 06:31:39 AM » Quote 
 +
 
 +
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 +
 
 +
Quote from: TheSilverHammer on Yesterday at 04:11:27 PM
 +
I thought border aggression needed a few 1000 ships to do that.  And the announced attack into the sector that was 3 hops from a red planet was caused by attacking a guard post?
 +
 
 +
Then a lot has changed since I played.  To bad the tutorial doesn't cover any of this.  Are there any rules for cross planet attacks that have changed?  It used to be, that they would only attack sectors where there were warp gates.  Now it seems they will attack planets bordering even neutered planets.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Border Aggression & Cross Planet Attacks aren't the same thing.
 +
 
 +
First you need to understand that there's 3 "modes" for AI ships to be in. Guarding, Special Forces or "Free".
 +
Guarding ships sit in a system & wait for you to attack. Once you attack they switch to "Free". If you retreat out of the system they can & will counter-attack (which can be used to your advantage).
 +
Special Forces travel between Special Forces Guard Posts. If that puts them into one of your systems or you attack the system they are in they will switch to "Free".
 +
 
 +
Border Agression is the AI's releasing a build up of ships in a system to attack you by basically taking some ships that were on Guard duty & freeing them. It's mainly to stop you being complacent about defending your systems once you've gate raided and/or neutered a system. You can see how many "Free" ships there are at any time in the summary. Any "Free" ships on AI planets are shown under 'Threat', any on your planets are shown under 'Attack'. These ships can be of any level depending on the system they were freed from hence having a mark III or IV system bordering your core worlds & freeing ships periodically is likely not going to end well if you don't have adequate defences.
 +
 
 +
Cross Planet Attacks (CPAs) are announced like waves & you usually have between 5 & 15 minutes depending on the difficulty before they start. When a CPA is announced the AI's pick a number of ships from all of its planets & changes them from Guard to "Free". The AI's will only pick the same level of ships as the current waves would send (numeral in brackets under the AI Progress on the summary). These ships will group up to attack you & the AI's aren't dumb about where to attack, they will go for your most weakly defended systems where possible. It's not uncommon to have a few systems each being attacked by a few hundred ships simultaneously depending on how many ingress points the AI has to your systems.
 +
 
 +
All of this stuff is covered in the Wiki & the only change to any of the above between v3 & v4 is the lowering of the border agression cap to discourage blobbing by both players & the AI's.
 +
 
 +
Re: What attracts preservation wardens?
 +
« Reply #2 on: Today at 07:43:59 AM » Quote 
 +
 
 +
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 +
 
 +
Actually, do we know that they are attracted to nukes?
 +
 
 +
I wrote the favor text originally but that doesn't mean they were implemented exactly as I described them.
 +
 +
Report to moderator    Logged 
 
   
 
   
*Fast Facts: A Crash Course On AI War
 
 
   
 
   
*Your Home System And What's In It {{TBD}}
+
==preservation wardens==
 +
keith.lamothe
 +
Arcen Games Staff
 +
Administrator
 +
Zenith Council Member Mark II
 +
 
 +
Offline
 +
 
 +
Posts: 6,190
 +
 
 +
 
 +
    Re: What attracts preservation wardens?
 +
« Reply #3 on: Today at 10:05:20 AM » Quote 
 +
 
 +
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 +
 
 +
They don't actually respond to nukes at all but it was my intent to have them do so.  It's generally a rare enough case that it doesn't matter
 +
 
 +
Anyway, the spawn rate of wardens and each warden's internal spawn rate of drones is directly related to the number of metal and crystal harvesters in the galaxy.  Also, one of the triggers for releasing their drones is being on or adjacent to a planet with a harvester.
 +
== new page idea area==
 +
 
 +
[[AI War - Condensed AI Unit List]]
 +
 
 +
[[AI War - AI Unit - Raid Engine]]
 +
 
 +
[[AI War - AI Wave Size Calculations|AI Wave Size Calculations]]
 +
 
 +
==new template area==
 +
{{RefTabLnk}}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{{C AIWar All}}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{{C 4.400}}
 +
 
 +
==Fallen Spire==
 +
http://www.arcengames.com/forums/index.php/topic,7638.msg63889.html#msg63889
 +
 
 +
At the one-city and earlier phases it's supposed to be roughly break-even difficulty wise in that you get hit with extra attacks but you've got a no-other-strings-attached golem-esque ship to use as you please, 2 mini-golem-esque, ships, and 8 fairly long range continuous-photon-cannon-of-minor-doom ships.  If you keep adding cities after that, the difficulty shouldn't go up very much on paper (as you continue to get more and more of said ships) but in practice the AI attacks will get pretty intense so it will probably at least feel like the game is harder (and, probably it is).
 +
 
 +
The big thing in this is that you're basically pulling endgame difficulty into the midgame.  Many of you in the past have expressed a desire for a different kind of endgame challenge because the standard one felt grindy.  Of course, a lot of that has changed with other changes Chris has made, but this progression will provide another way of accomplishing that.
 +
 
 +
In short, it's not really supposed to be any easier or harder to win by following the Fallen-Spire progression than by not doing so.  But it tends towards a more intense (and more difficult) experience over a shorter time.
 +
 
 +
== blank section==
 +
 
 +
{{HOME}}
 +
 
 +
== Core Shield Generators ==
 +
 
 +
Five new types of Core Shield Generators have been added to the game: These must be destroyed before the AI Core Guard Posts and AI Home Command Station can be damaged. The planet on which this shield generator sits must be controlled by the humans before it can be damaged. These only get seeded on difficulty 4 and up.
 +
Group A-Prime
 +
One of these is seeded on every planet with an advanced research station.
 +
The A-Prime shield generators are linked into a very strong network. All but one of them must be destroyed before the last generator in the group will self-destruct.
 +
Group B-Secondary
 +
One of these is seeded on every planet with an advanced factory.
 +
The B-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct.
 +
Group C-Secondary
 +
One of these is seeded on every planet with a fabricator and without an advanced factory.
 +
The C-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct.
 +
Group D-Secondary
 +
One of these is seeded on every planet with a counterattack guard post, but with no other core shield generators already in place.
 +
The D-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct.
 +
Group E-Secondary
 +
These are scattered on some random planets that do not already have an existing shield generator.
 +
The E-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct.
 +
Thanks to Suzera for inspiring this new feature
 +
 
 +
== tractored ships ==
 +
 
 +
That's fairly hardcoded: ships that have mobility and an enemy ship in their tractors will usually make a beeline for the nearest special forces guard post. But it's very fun to run into.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==new cap planet mechanic==
 +
 
 +
1. It must require that players take a certain number of planets, at least probably 8 on the low side (on a 40/80 planet map), but more likely 10-12. 
 +
 
 +
2. It must prevent the player from having any hope whatsoever -- I mean black and white 0% chance -- of winning the game before #1 has come to pass.
 +
 
 +
3. It must not restrict players to taking a specific arbitrary set of planets.
 +
 
 +
Now THAT'S a horrible reduction in choice.  Having to take the two AI homeworlds is different and interesting, because they're special and built unlike other planets.  They're the final boss.  No problem.  Having your roadmap laid out for you on what exactly other planets you have to take on the way there is incredibly lame. 
 +
 
 +
That's why there are networks here.  Sure, it makes you take 4 out of the 5 ARS planets, but again you really ought to be doing that anyhow.  For the rest of the networks, it gives you a choice of at least two planets, and often quite more than that.  It covers enough territory that you can choose your various four secondary-group planets from half or more of the galaxy.  If you're telling me there aren't four planets in half the galaxy that you want... well, that comes back to being either a turtle or a rusher.  The mechanic is here to help.
 +
 
 +
4. It must not be ridiculously over-complex to play with, or to code.
  
*I'm Just Starting Out -- What Should I Do?
+
5. Players shouldn't be able to just turtle up in one corner with all their planets next to one another.
*How Do I Know What Difficulty Level To Play On?
 
Is The Difficulty Really Constant Throughout A Game Of AI War?
 
What Difference Does The Map Size Make? (Hint: Tiny Maps Are Harder)
 
What are suggestions for a good first AI opponent?
 
Video Tutorials (See An Expert Play)
 
[edit] General Gameplay
 
How Do I Get More Ships?
 
What Do I Do With My Older Ships?
 
What Technologies Should I Unlock If I'm New?
 
How Do I Use The Priority Buttons In The Galaxy Map?
 
Do Shots Miss Sometimes?
 
Should I Micromanage Ships In Battle?
 
Some Of My Ships Are Extra Slow, Or Won't Move At All. Why?
 
Are There Cheats In The Game?
 
When Should I Be Worried About The AI Progress Getting Too High?
 
How Do I Minimize Micromanagement?
 
Does The AI Progress Go Up When I Lose A Command Station?
 
Like Chess, A Game Of AI War Has Three Abstract "Phases"
 
[edit] Multiplayer Co-Op
 
What are the differences between solo and multiplayer?
 
How To Manage Player Drop-In and Drop-Out In Co-Op?
 
[edit] Expansions
 
Expansions Vs Free DLC -- What's The Difference?
 
What exactly are the features in the base game of AI War?
 
What exactly is added via The Zenith Remnant expansion?
 
What will be in the Children of Neinzul micro expansion?
 
When will the third expansion for AI War be coming out?
 
[edit] Interface
 
Keyboard: Where Are The Keyboard Controls For The Game Documented?
 
Keyboard: What Exactly Does X + Right Click Do?
 
What Does Flashing On The Galaxy Map Indicate?
 
How Do the Quick Buttons At The Bottom Of The Screen Work?
 
About The Planetary Summary
 
Is It Possible To Zoom All The Way Out?
 
Why Is Clicking The Minimap Imprecise When I Am Zoomed In?
 
Can I Queue Multiple Attack Orders And Movement Orders?
 
What Are The Rules For Gifting Ships Between Players?
 
Formation: How To Use Formation Move
 
Formation: How To Use Arc Move
 
How Do I Minimize Micromanagement?
 
How To Use Preferred Targets To Make Up For Deficiencies In Your Ship Mix
 
[edit] Defense
 
How Do I Barricade A Wormhole?
 
Gate Raids: How Do I Prevent Enemies From Sending Waves Against A Planet?
 
Gate Raids: What Does Gate Raiding Really Accomplish?
 
How Do I Defend My Ever-Expanding Fronts?
 
Why Would I Unlock Turrets Instead Of Mobile Ships?
 
How Do I Secure The Area Around My Planets?
 
How Do I Prepare For Cross-Planet Attacks?
 
What Is The Risk Of Not Destroying A High-Level AI Planet Next To My Home Planet?
 
Why Is There An Exo-Galaxy Wormhole On My Home Planet?
 
How Do I Defend Against Astro Trains?
 
How Do I Protect Myself While Expanding In The Early Game? (Whipping Boys)
 
How Do I Keep The Number Of Ingress Points Into My Territory Low?
 
Defending Against Border Aggression
 
[edit] Offense
 
How Does Supply Work?
 
How Do I Establish A Beachhead?
 
What's The Best Way To Handle Scouting?
 
Why Does An Enemy Planet Get Reinforcements After Its Warp Gate Is Gone?
 
Are The Capturable Enemy Ships Always Away From My Starting Position?
 
What Is The Risk Of Taking A Planet Next To High-Level AI Planets?
 
How Do I Take A High-Level AI Planet?
 
How Fast Should I Be Taking Planets?
 
How Do I Protect Myself While Expanding In The Early Game? (Whipping Boys)
 
Neutering AI Planets
 
Creating False Alarm Distractions On AI Planets
 
Why Not To Use FRD Mode Offensively
 
[edit] Economy
 
How Do I Get More Knowledge?
 
What Do I Do About Reduced Energy Reactor Efficiency?
 
Are There Resource Caps? What Happens When I Hit Them?
 
What To Do With Too Much Of One Resource, But Not Enough Of The Other?
 
[edit] Ship-Specific Game Mechanics
 
Cloaking: How Does Cloaking Work?
 
Cloaking: How Do I Prevent My Cloaked Ships From Auto-Attacking Enemies?
 
Cloaking: How Do Cloaking Boosters Work?
 
Why Can't I Repair Some Ships (Such As Forts/Warheads)?
 
Am I Ever Able To Build Core/Mark V Units?
 
Why Do Some Ships (Such As The Fortress) Have Two Range Circles?
 
[edit] Ship Strategies & Errata
 
Advanced Research Stations: Does Losing One Of These Matter After I've Held It Once?
 
Astro Trains: What Do These Do?
 
Astro Trains: How Do I Defend Against Astro Trains?
 
Captive Human Settlements: Do I Gain Anything From Holding These?
 
Command Posts: What Do These Do?
 
Counter-Dark-Matter Turrets: What Are These Good For?
 
Electric Shuttles: How Do I Effectively Attack Them?
 
Engineers: How Can I Best Use These?
 
Engineers: What Restrictions Are There On When An Engineer Can Repair Another Ship?
 
Force Fields: How Do I Kill Them?
 
Force Fields: How Much Of A Ship Needs To Be Covered By A Forcefield To Get Its Protection?
 
Force Fields: What Uses Are There For The Mobile Nature Of Force Field Generators?
 
Golems: What Are Golems?
 
Golems: What Are The Benefits And Risks Of Capturing Golems?
 
Golems: How Do I Kill A Mining Golem?
 
Golems: How Do I Work With A Zenith Trader?
 
Golems: How Do I Survive A Zenith Devourer?
 
Golems: How Do I Interact With A Dyson Sphere?
 
Guard Posts: What Do These Do?
 
Ion Cannons: What Do I Do About Them?
 
Lightning Turrets: How Do I Effectively Attack Them?
 
Mines: Are Ships Supposed To Be Able To Slip Past Mines?
 
Mines: How Do I Clear Enemy Mines?
 
Mines: What Is The Best Way To Clear The Remains Of Enemy Mines?
 
Mines: How To Kill PermaMines?
 
Missile Frigates: Are These Overpowered?
 
Orbital Mass Drivers: What Are Orbital Mass Drivers?
 
Parasites: What's The Best Way To Use Them?
 
Special Forces Guard Posts: What Do These Do?
 
Special Forces Guard Posts: How Do I Destroy Them?
 
Spiders And Weak Ships: What Are These(And Other Weaker Ships) Good For?
 
Starships: How Do I Best Use Them?
 
Starships: What Are Scout Starships Good For?
 
Starships: How Do I Use Riot Starships?
 
SuperFortresses: What Do I Do About Them?
 
Tachyon Beams: Why Do Yellow Beams Come Out Of Nowhere And Hit My Ships?
 
Warheads: How Do I Get EMPs, Nukes, And Other Warheads?
 
Warheads: How Do I Use Nukes?
 
Warheads: How Do I Use EMPs?
 
Warheads: How Do I Use Lightning Warheads?
 
Warheads: How Do I Use Armored Warheads?
 
Warp Gates: How Does A Warp Gate
 

Latest revision as of 22:23, 4 December 2010

test area

Wiki Design Overview

link to templates list

  • templates use {{}}

link to categories list

  • Categories use [[]] and the word category:

A category is created by creating a page in the Category: namespace.

A category page can be created the same way as other wiki pages (see Help:Starting a new page); just add "Category:" before the page title

To create a link to a category, use a leading colon before the category name (without this colon, the current page would be added to the category):

  • [:Category:Help] → Category:Help (one set braces removed)

To change the link text, write the text inside the link tag after a pipe:

  • [:Category:Help|Help category] → Help category (one set braces removed)


Link to my practice area

Link to wiki Redux

Link to wiki Prep area

Link to proposed categories

Link to proposed templates

Link to a standard page lay out sutable for cut and paste


AI War - Guardians


manual patch

Meanwhile, if you want the raw zip files, you can get a list of them here: http://www.arcengames.com/dl/AIWarBetaUpdates2.xml

Simply unzipping them into your game folder in order would give the desired result if you want the betas that way. Hope that helps


Hybrids Section

AI_War_-_Hybrid_Hives


Various quotes on Hybrid development follow

CoN exp Added "Advanced Hybrids" AI Plot; if the base Hybrids plot is enabled and the Advanced one is not, then the highest tier of Hybrid classes will be disabled (including stuff like the re-colonizer, which is not quite implemented yet). Also slightly influences the tech level of equipment available to the lower classes, for instance the first Attacker type will only be able to get a mkI forcefield (instead of mkII) if Advanced Hybrids is off. If you select Advanced Hybrids and not the base Hybrids plot for an AI player, once you start the game it will act as if you had checked both.

Added 2 galaxy map display overlays: detected hybrids and detected hybrid facilities. Only displays info on planets that you current have visibility.

The following modules now use a new shot-movement mechanic to fire their multiple-shot bursts in a brief sequence rather than all at once, to give more of the desired visual effect (gameplay impact should be minimal) : Riot machine gun modules now fire 12 shots per salvo with a reload time of 4 seconds, instead of 3-shot salvos with a 1-second reload. Riot laser modules now fire 8 shots per salvo per 8 seconds instead of 4 shots per salvo per 4 seconds. Hybrid machine gun modules (I-IV) changed from firing 2/3/4/5 shots per 1-second reload to 10/15/20/25 shots per 5-second reload. Hybrid laser cannon modules (I-IV) changed from firing 1/2/2/3 shots per 4-second reload to 2/3/4/5 shots per 8-second reload.

Hybrid Hive (hull, not ff-module) armor from 500 to 1000, health from 1,500,000 to 2,000,000. Hybrid Hive forcefield generator hull type from (default) to Structural, the same as normal ff-generators (they used to be intentionally different, but with the simplification of damage bonuses there isn't room for that). Health from 500,000 per mark level to 600,000 per mark level.


Hybrid plot Difficulty scaling: the initial number of hybrid facilities (including hive spawners) and the maximum-hybrids-alive-at-once calculations (which is based on planet count and spawner count) are now scaled by the total number of human-players/human-homeworlds and the highest AI difficulty (facility count only scales by the former). A single player with one homeworld playing on difficulty 7 has a factor of 1.0; on difficulty 10, 3.0; two players on diff 7 have 2.0, etc. The maximum-hybrids-alive-at-once number is now capped at numberOfPlanets * difficultyFactor, which is 4 times the number of hybrids supported by just the planet count. This allows the number of spawners (each of which support an additional 2 hybrids, which is down from 4) to have a significant impact on hybrid population without it exploding into the 500s or crazy stuff like that (unless you're playing with a lot of players or homeworlds or high difficulty).


another section

 Re: Returning to AI war, having a problem securing some planets 

« Reply #18 on: Today at 06:31:39 AM » Quote


Quote from: TheSilverHammer on Yesterday at 04:11:27 PM I thought border aggression needed a few 1000 ships to do that. And the announced attack into the sector that was 3 hops from a red planet was caused by attacking a guard post?

Then a lot has changed since I played. To bad the tutorial doesn't cover any of this. Are there any rules for cross planet attacks that have changed? It used to be, that they would only attack sectors where there were warp gates. Now it seems they will attack planets bordering even neutered planets.


Border Aggression & Cross Planet Attacks aren't the same thing.

First you need to understand that there's 3 "modes" for AI ships to be in. Guarding, Special Forces or "Free". Guarding ships sit in a system & wait for you to attack. Once you attack they switch to "Free". If you retreat out of the system they can & will counter-attack (which can be used to your advantage). Special Forces travel between Special Forces Guard Posts. If that puts them into one of your systems or you attack the system they are in they will switch to "Free".

Border Agression is the AI's releasing a build up of ships in a system to attack you by basically taking some ships that were on Guard duty & freeing them. It's mainly to stop you being complacent about defending your systems once you've gate raided and/or neutered a system. You can see how many "Free" ships there are at any time in the summary. Any "Free" ships on AI planets are shown under 'Threat', any on your planets are shown under 'Attack'. These ships can be of any level depending on the system they were freed from hence having a mark III or IV system bordering your core worlds & freeing ships periodically is likely not going to end well if you don't have adequate defences.

Cross Planet Attacks (CPAs) are announced like waves & you usually have between 5 & 15 minutes depending on the difficulty before they start. When a CPA is announced the AI's pick a number of ships from all of its planets & changes them from Guard to "Free". The AI's will only pick the same level of ships as the current waves would send (numeral in brackets under the AI Progress on the summary). These ships will group up to attack you & the AI's aren't dumb about where to attack, they will go for your most weakly defended systems where possible. It's not uncommon to have a few systems each being attacked by a few hundred ships simultaneously depending on how many ingress points the AI has to your systems.

All of this stuff is covered in the Wiki & the only change to any of the above between v3 & v4 is the lowering of the border agression cap to discourage blobbing by both players & the AI's.

Re: What attracts preservation wardens? 

« Reply #2 on: Today at 07:43:59 AM » Quote


Actually, do we know that they are attracted to nukes?

I wrote the favor text originally but that doesn't mean they were implemented exactly as I described them.

Report to moderator    Logged  


==preservation wardens==

keith.lamothe Arcen Games Staff Administrator Zenith Council Member Mark II

Offline

Posts: 6,190


   Re: What attracts preservation wardens? 

« Reply #3 on: Today at 10:05:20 AM » Quote


They don't actually respond to nukes at all but it was my intent to have them do so. It's generally a rare enough case that it doesn't matter

Anyway, the spawn rate of wardens and each warden's internal spawn rate of drones is directly related to the number of metal and crystal harvesters in the galaxy. Also, one of the triggers for releasing their drones is being on or adjacent to a planet with a harvester.

new page idea area

AI War - Condensed AI Unit List

AI War - AI Unit - Raid Engine

AI Wave Size Calculations

new template area

Template:RefTabLnk


Template:C AIWar All


Template:C 4.400

Fallen Spire

http://www.arcengames.com/forums/index.php/topic,7638.msg63889.html#msg63889

At the one-city and earlier phases it's supposed to be roughly break-even difficulty wise in that you get hit with extra attacks but you've got a no-other-strings-attached golem-esque ship to use as you please, 2 mini-golem-esque, ships, and 8 fairly long range continuous-photon-cannon-of-minor-doom ships. If you keep adding cities after that, the difficulty shouldn't go up very much on paper (as you continue to get more and more of said ships) but in practice the AI attacks will get pretty intense so it will probably at least feel like the game is harder (and, probably it is).

The big thing in this is that you're basically pulling endgame difficulty into the midgame. Many of you in the past have expressed a desire for a different kind of endgame challenge because the standard one felt grindy. Of course, a lot of that has changed with other changes Chris has made, but this progression will provide another way of accomplishing that.

In short, it's not really supposed to be any easier or harder to win by following the Fallen-Spire progression than by not doing so. But it tends towards a more intense (and more difficult) experience over a shorter time.

blank section

AI War:AI War


Core Shield Generators

Five new types of Core Shield Generators have been added to the game: These must be destroyed before the AI Core Guard Posts and AI Home Command Station can be damaged. The planet on which this shield generator sits must be controlled by the humans before it can be damaged. These only get seeded on difficulty 4 and up. Group A-Prime One of these is seeded on every planet with an advanced research station. The A-Prime shield generators are linked into a very strong network. All but one of them must be destroyed before the last generator in the group will self-destruct. Group B-Secondary One of these is seeded on every planet with an advanced factory. The B-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct. Group C-Secondary One of these is seeded on every planet with a fabricator and without an advanced factory. The C-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct. Group D-Secondary One of these is seeded on every planet with a counterattack guard post, but with no other core shield generators already in place. The D-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct. Group E-Secondary These are scattered on some random planets that do not already have an existing shield generator. The E-Secondary shield generators are linked into a weak network. Destroy any one of the generators in the group, and the rest will self-destruct. Thanks to Suzera for inspiring this new feature

tractored ships

That's fairly hardcoded: ships that have mobility and an enemy ship in their tractors will usually make a beeline for the nearest special forces guard post. But it's very fun to run into.


new cap planet mechanic

1. It must require that players take a certain number of planets, at least probably 8 on the low side (on a 40/80 planet map), but more likely 10-12.

2. It must prevent the player from having any hope whatsoever -- I mean black and white 0% chance -- of winning the game before #1 has come to pass.

3. It must not restrict players to taking a specific arbitrary set of planets.

Now THAT'S a horrible reduction in choice. Having to take the two AI homeworlds is different and interesting, because they're special and built unlike other planets. They're the final boss. No problem. Having your roadmap laid out for you on what exactly other planets you have to take on the way there is incredibly lame.

That's why there are networks here. Sure, it makes you take 4 out of the 5 ARS planets, but again you really ought to be doing that anyhow. For the rest of the networks, it gives you a choice of at least two planets, and often quite more than that. It covers enough territory that you can choose your various four secondary-group planets from half or more of the galaxy. If you're telling me there aren't four planets in half the galaxy that you want... well, that comes back to being either a turtle or a rusher. The mechanic is here to help.

4. It must not be ridiculously over-complex to play with, or to code.

5. Players shouldn't be able to just turtle up in one corner with all their planets next to one another.