Difference between revisions of "HotM:Chapter Two Initial Set"

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== Reporting Bugs ==
 
  
* Any bugs or requests should go to our [https://bugtracker.arcengames.com/ mantis bugtracker]
+
== Next Release Notes ==
** If you need to submit log files, those can generally be found under your PlayerData/Logs folder in the folder your game is installed in.  The most relevant one is called HeartoftheMachineLog.txt.  You can send us the whole thing, or just strip out relevant parts.
+
[[HotM:Preparing For Launch|Preparing For Launch]]
** In rare cases, mainly if your entire game crashes (that almost never happens), we will need your unity player log.  That gets overwritten the next time you run the game after a crash, unlike the other log.  These can be found here:
 
*** Windows: C:\Users\username\AppData\LocalLow\Arcen Games, LLC\Heart of the Machine\Player.log
 
*** macOS: ~/Library/Logs/Arcen Games, LLC/Heart of the Machine/Player.log
 
*** Linux: ~/.config/unity3d/Arcen Games, LLC/Heart of the Machine/Player.log
 
  
== 0.595.5 ==
+
== 0.596.6 Launch Set ==
(Not Yet Released)
+
(Released December 1st, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* The way that "Abandoned Humans" are handled is fundamentally changed, and is now more visible.  They're now a resource, and they show up on the top bar if you have any.
 +
** In chapter one, you're potentially less likely to kill a bunch of people by negligence, now.  That wasn't really a goal of mine, but for later on in the game, it becomes an important thing where too much is going on to manage it, otherwise.
 +
 
 +
* Added nine new achievements, all related to "The Great And Terrible Protector" goal path.
 +
 
 +
* Added four more achievements relating to the Uplifted Minority path, bringing the total to 113.
 +
 
 +
* Two achievements relating to the cultist actions sidebar are now in place.
 +
** This brings the total up to 115, although two of the achievements are related to dogs, which are not yet in the game and won't be for launch, so the real number is 113.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* If you have built a Neural Bridge with the AGI Researchers (that thing that was mentioned as being dangerous and a bad idea), AND you have "solved homelessness," then immediately a new project starts, and your character is under a sort of obsession.
 +
** The project is called "An Inexplicable Compulsion."  You also get an insane 10 upgrades of both Steward and Cultivator, all at once, with this.
 +
 
 +
* In general, when your character is experiencing an obsession, no contemplations will be available unless specifically noted as such, and almost all of the StreetSense items also go away, except the super basics.
 +
** If you are in the middle of some existing project, then you can still work on that while in the obsession is there, but as soon as you run into a part that would require a contemplation, you're going to be stuck until you deal with the obsession.
 +
 
 +
* In general, the "Inexplicable Compulsion" is something that requires you to gather 9000 citizens from the slums using a new kind of drone, and you wind up seeing Slumlords as an actual unit on the map for the first time (as opposed to just something you sneak by during Slum Cats).
 +
** They have a weakness from above, making them interesting to engage with multiple vehicles.
 +
** At any rate, the slums are huge, and pulling out 9000 people just barely makes any visual change in the slums, which is an excellent message for the game to be sending about now.  The sense of utter futility is palpable in a mechanical sense.  Getting 9000 takes just a few turns, and is not that hard.  But doing the entire slums this way could take 6-12 hours of really boring work. The player is likely feeling this about the same time their character is, which is always nice to have in sync.
 +
 
 +
* As you get into the next phase of your mania, you're basically building a ton of huge buildings, as well as also having a lot of extra wind towers, and a new Paving Over Slums also becomes available.
 +
** In my particular  city, the slums have 1.6 million people in them, but it will vary from city to city, and organizing the robots to go out and take care of things is a pretty large task.
 +
 
 +
* The timeline goal "The Great And Terrible Protector" is now complete.
 +
** It has a new path for getting through without having a nervous breakdown -- very hard to do.
 +
** It also has a new path for getting through without having any deaths from exposure in that timeline (also fairly hard to do, and if you have prior deaths on your record in that timeline, then you can't get that path no matter how well you do in the goal itself.
 +
** I had been planning on having another set of events in the middle of this, and also stretching it out longer, but frankly I think it goes on long enough.  You get some interesting upgrades out of this, and are left in an interesting state.
 +
** At the end of this, you also find out what caused the problem, and are given a chance to rectify it (quite violently), or accept this as a learning opportunity.
 +
 
 +
* Once you have a shell company, and you have a bunch of pollinator bees (200k+) from having a single apiary, there is a new contemplation called Saber Bees.
 +
** This makes a much-more-powerful version of the Weaponized Bees, which can use bionic plasma cutters to slice through armor.  These are like the spiders, except even better.  You also need to have 350 engineering, and be in chapter two, so it's a while before you can get this unless you know the route.
 +
 
 +
* Both the "Pollinators" contemplation, and the "Saber Bees" contemplation, are considered part of the critical path for "Uplifted Minority."
 +
 
 +
* A new contemplation called "Nice Alterations" appears after you have done Saber Bees, and requires an unprecedented 430 engineering to pull off.  Raven should be able to easily have this, if you take a couple of routes.
 +
** This leads to a project called "Exciplex Lasers," which is mostly a way for you to choose from a bunch of exciting production chain upgrades.
 +
** Once this is complete, it unlocks the Hampson–Linde Cycler, and related jobs.
 +
 
 +
* There is explosive storage again, this time just for storing liquid oxygen.  Put it far away from your stuff.
 +
** You may notice that the numbers of amounts gathered from the atmosphere are absolutely insane, with like 8 million units of liquid air being gathered per turn, for example.  This means that the storage for some of this needs to be into the billions.
 +
*** This is not a case of me being whimsical.  The main things we're trying to get are argon and krypton, and in order to have these in the actual ratios that we have in the atmosphere, we need to process 8 million units of air to get... 10 units of krypton.  Argon is still quite rare, but a complete order of magnitude different, as we get 75k units of it.  I think this is a pretty awesome illustration of the sheer differences in scale of some things in our atmosphere.
 +
 
 +
* Added a new Science category on the build sidebar.  There was stuff that now just does not fit anywhere else.
 +
 
 +
* You can now get the krypton you need, and build an uplift chamber from the exalter designs mixed with your own awesome engineering.
 +
** This also uses the machine church structure type for itself, as I think that's very appropriate for the uplift chamber.  I don't plan on overusing the machine church, but this and the other use for it are both... exceedingly appropriate.
 +
 
 +
* After building the uplift chamber, there is a break-in, and unexpected things happen.
 +
** With thanks to Fluffiest for this twist.
 +
 
 +
* There is a codebreaker path here where you decode... some stuff... and then get some results that hint more toward the future than anything else.
 +
 
 +
* You can now complete the Uplifted Minority goal, after getting the population on the rise with a species you can't quite talk to, yet.
 +
** I really had to shorten this a lot in order to fit it into the word budget for now, but honestly I think this works out all right, mostly, as it sets up a more interesting tier 2 path that is now at the top of my list.
 +
** To some extent I feel like this goal path is a bit underwhelming, but you get a lot of really important goodies out of it, and it sets up exciting future things.
 +
 
 +
* Once you have a shell company set up in chapter two, you can now do a deal with one of the other cults in the city and buy toilet paper from them.  This actually came out pretty funny, in a good way.
 +
** The ability to make your own toilet paper and such needs to be introduced in a better way than I have words for.  And without this specific deal being present, you can't prevent having a nervous breakdown during the paperclip optimization path.  Now you can.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new Cult Actions Sidebar, which becomes available only when you have a machine cult.
 +
** This allows you to spend Cult Loyalty, which is a new strategic resource, to have them gather things, or do certain specific actions.
 +
** Please note that in this build, none of that actually works at all.  You don't gain loyalty points, can't see the prices, and the buttons do nothing.  This was put in place so that it could be localized in time.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for the awesome suggestions that make this come alive a lot more satisfyingly.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
=== Bugfixes ===
 +
 
 +
* Fixed the math behind how upgrades were being provided from buildings, so that the android, vehicle, and mech extenders now work properly, and also show what they will do.
 +
** These are also now in the Military tab, not the computing tab.
 +
** Thanks to MOREDAKKA for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* In general, after a project is started, or the number of projects has changed, it should automatically recalculate StreetSense and Contemplation options.
 +
** This may fix a few issues like "hey the steal vehicle option did not show up" sort of thing, but I have not tested it.
 +
 
 +
== 0.596.5 The Temple Of Minds ==
 +
(Released November 30th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* The "I Am Vorsiber Now" timeline goal is being cut for time and sanity at the moment.
 +
** I need time and wordcount to do it justice, and it needs enough testing, etc.  It's also the sort of thing that only a small number of people would ever see in reality, in general, just based on how most people play games like this.
 +
** So this remains a thing I want to do, but I will approach it in a more thoughtful way post-launch in some fashion, so that I can truly pay it off in the way it deserves. At the moment, I'm really concerned about the possibility of it seeming "too easy" or a letdown in some fashion.  The WW4 route lets you take down Vorsiber a different way, but it is a deeply pyrrhic victory, so for launch purposes I feel like that's appropriate.
 +
 
 +
* Six new achievements have been added related to the Willing Rejection Of Reality goal path.
 +
 
 +
* Five more achievements, all related to the Bionic Dues goal.
 +
** This brings the total to 100.
 +
 
 +
* The game now keeps track, both in one timeline and across timelines, how many soldiers and how many members of SecForce you have killed.  This is not retroactively counted, to it only applies to kills made beyond now in savegames.
 +
** To some extent this is a curiosity, but it's actually used in one of the goal states.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* The "Failure To Thrive" project is now complete, and uses a new kind of survey-style investigation which is a twist on the "needle in a haystack" style of looking around at things that so far is only used two other times.
 +
** Your units are going to other businesses and looking at their information to try to figure out why some succeed and others do not.
 +
 
 +
* After the failure-to-thrive project, there is now a marketing-related project that I'm not going to give the details of even in spoiler tags.
 +
** You have to go around and do 13 things, and eventually I was going to have you get small benefits from each one, but I decided to give you nothing, instead.  Trying to get a business off the ground in this way is a thankless job sometimes, and reflecting that felt more honest.  But I kept it to 13 so it is quick to do, rather than my original of 30 which is more realistic.
 +
** For completing the whole sequence, you do get some VERY attractive rewards, so there is that, but which of the options you choose for how you do your 13 things doesn't matter, unlike normal.
 +
 
 +
* After the marketing stage, there's an initial period of company growth.  This is something that causes extra aggression from the outside, and that's presuming that you've been able to muster the needed Protection and Deterrence in the right spots in order to keep things off your back in general.
 +
 
 +
* The Company Plateau project happens after you reach company growth.  You are still growing, but just very very slowly.
 +
** The things you will need to construct in order to produce enough food and water for a quarter million people in comas is absolutely intense, and surprised even me.  It's quite a sight to see, and just a result of working the problem.
 +
** I've introduced the ability to get some better water filtration, which is absolutely critical in order to make this feasible at all.  I've also rebalanced the use of Cultivators in your favor in general, so that you can actually get what you need.  This probably makes chapter one a bit easier, but I don't think that the balance of this for chapter one really was the part that made chapter one difficult.
 +
** At any rate, once you do all that construction and get things engineered the way you want, you just don't have much of a rise in clientele.  If you have the time, you can just wait between 100-300 turns, and you will limp along to the finish line.  But that is impossible on hard or extreme mode, and is very boring in general.  The game mentions there are two solutions to this problem, and this is neither of the ones it is referring to.
 +
 
 +
* You can now complete the "Company Plateau" project and win the "willing rejection of reality" goal, by using a coupon program.
 +
** Specifically, you have to "solve homelessness" first (and the "sheltered coordinators are slow" contemplation notes that alters the goal of "willing rejection of reality."
 +
** If you have done that, then a very high-intelligence android (Raven probably already qualifies if you even managed to start the full-time-VR-pods project at all) can have the idea for the coupon program.
 +
*** If you have at least 20k wealth, then it will be spent every turn, and a bunch of coupon-based middle class folks will be let in.  You can track how many in the city statistics history tab.
 +
*** IF on any turn you are short that amount, then you will progressively lose some folks as their coupons expire.
 +
*** You do not gain any income from the people there on a coupon, but the income from the non-coupon folks should typically cover the entire expense of the coupon folks, or very close, by the time you are in this part of the game.
 +
*** If you have a shortfall, the best thing to do is to sell some extra filtered water to the wealthy to make a quick buck, and/or rob some syndicates again.  When you start the coupon program, you're given one extra Cultivator upgrade, which can be used to generate water for wealth.
 +
 
 +
* You can now introduce nicotine to your mind farms to keep people coming back at an accelerated rate, allowing for you to get more out of the same number of customers, once you hit the plateau.
 +
** This is obviously very unethical, but it's the most easy and obvious solution presented to you, and it also only affects the upper classes.  The main hint that there's something better you should do is the "no nicotine" path noted on the goals page.
 +
** Fun side effect of this: compared to the coupon path, you make absolute BANK on this route, with just a huge amount of income.  You're going to be in the ballpark of 50k passive wealth generation per turn, which is interesting to explore later.
 +
 
 +
* If you have killed at least 500 SecForce people, then you can now start a deal with Hudson Donuts to buy bulk donuts for what is a large amount of wealth to them, but a trivial amount to you.
 +
** It seems to be thoroughly pointless, and the game mentions that. It does a bit of worldbuilding, though. It's also a way to get some extra engineering skill pretty cheaply, as far as wealth goes.
 +
** The same thing is also present with the military and Danver Donuts, and same benefits and everything.
 +
** These only are available starting in chapter two, and can be found in StreetSense, under a Deals category to filter to them more easily.  These are incredibly easy to miss, by design.
 +
 
 +
* If you have bought at least 5 million donuts from Danver (increase your deal with them to the maximum level to make this happen in about 20 turns or less), then a new contemplation opens up called "Old Donuts Are Gross"
 +
** If you have a very-smart android (probably Raven is the only option, but it varies, and will be late in a timeline) contemplate this, then they will have a cascade of epiphanies that lead to the Temple Of Minds building, and the "Mind Upload" resource.
 +
** This is incredibly obscure, but there are hints on the "Bionic Dues" goal that suggest messing with Danver and also getting an extreme amount of donuts, so it's not unreasonable to expect people to stumble into this, or have a semi-epiphany and go for this.
 +
 
 +
* Once you have built a Temple of Minds (which is hella expensive in Mind Annexes, so it's kind of tempting not to), a Sergeant Major will appear, wanting to speak with you, so long as you've never purchased a donut from Hudson in this timeline.
 +
** He has a very practical outlook on life and death, and paints a pretty bleak picture that recontextualizes even some of your "non-lethal" methods of fighting the military.  He also comes with an offer.  If you accept, then this leads into a Spreading The Word project.
 +
 
 +
* The Spreading The Word project is quite simple, just meeting with other NCOs, and then you're good to go.
 +
** Completing this completes the main path of Bionic Dues.
 +
** If you get 10 million donuts from them, either before or after completing this goal, then the path "Extra Sprinkles" is unlocked.
 +
** Overall, Bionic Dues is a very very short path, but it's one that is incredibly convoluted to find, and that you also have to get pretty far into chapter two to even attempt it.  This is a rare case of "finding the damn thing at all" being the main puzzle, rather than completing the thing.
 +
** This is probably not going to be as exciting as some people who want a cult are hoping for, but I think this is a good starting point to build more stories both with this emerging cult, and of course there are other possible cults that could pop up from a variety of sources in the current game -- the AGI Researchers are almost cultish about you, as it is.
 +
** During pickups, I'm thinking about adding a brainwash ability or similar, but I'm concerned about balance.  A bit of something else at the end of this project is needed to really make you feel like you "have a cult," I think, but it needs to be mechanical in nature, and have more testing, so it's something to figure out in December.  It shouldn't be some big thing that stresses out the translators.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
=== Bugfixes ===
 +
 
 +
* "Subnet Basics" handbook entry has been corrected to not reference outdated mechanics.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* "Support Jobs" as a handbook entry has been removed entirely, as it had nothing useful or correct to say anymore.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed some issues with the ScrapUnitList display that could cause exceptions in kind of a Russian-roulette style of bad luck.
 +
** This used to be limited to only bulk and captured androids, and Andyman119 and I had gone back and forth about it with it seeming to be a bad steam download (spoiler: it was not, I was wrong).
 +
** Now this is also present with main units and vehicles thanks to the changes in yesterday's build, and so I've realized what is up and have fixed it for all of the above cases.
 +
** Thanks to Irl_VriskaSerket for the latest report, and to Andyman119 for the others.
 +
 
 +
* Clarified the second kind of attacker of syndicates against your shell company, to note that they will come while your current project is active, even if you have full protection.
 +
** As an aside, this was also rebalanced in the new build to not be so relentlessly constant, as well. But it was going to be confusing, either way.
 +
** Thanks to Qwertyfizz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
== 0.596.4 Unit Cap Overhaul ==
 +
(Released November 29th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* The Bionic Secret goal is being cut for now.  It will likely return after launch in some fashion, but for now it doesn't fit with my schedule or goals.
 +
** This leaves us with 15 overall goals, which are now designed in-depth and planned to be the launch set.  5 left to implement.
 +
 
 +
* All of the "Uplifted Minority" main paths, aside from a new "Unexpected Guests," are cut for now.
 +
** They will return in some fashion, but for launch this is plenty and all I have the time to do full justice to.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed an issue where "Vessel Infections" could be softlocked if you were unlucky in RNG or had too many nuclear explosions prior to this.
 +
** Thanks to Irl_VriskaSerket for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* For a lot of the things that your scientists come up with, the source of inspiration is now noted as Research By Scientists rather than World Experience.
 +
 
 +
=== Unit Cap Rebalance ===
 +
 
 +
* Androids, mechs, and vehicles no longer have a flat cap of how many you can build.  They now work like bulk and captured units, where they have differing amounts you can construct.
 +
** The real nail in the coffin for the old system was what I need to do with the Telemech and Peacekeepers, but the Technician and Senior Technician were already stretching it.
 +
** Basically, the old system was impossible to balance with things like liquid metal dragons and telemechs counting equally, and it was annoying with technicians and predators counting equally, too.  Frankly it was annoying having delivery drones and mech carriers counting equally!
 +
** As I tend to, I'm using 12 as the base for this, since that divides nicely in many different useful ratios.
 +
** This was a LOT of code to change, and it wasn't on my radar at all to do this.  So if you see any strange errors relating to unit construction or cap type stuff, please let me know asap.
 +
 
 +
* Overall, you now start with the equivalent of 3x the amount of mech capacity that you used to, so that there can be more stratification in the existing mech deployment expenses.
 +
** The liquid metal dragons both cost 36 capacity, which is the new total you have to start with.  So it's basically like before, no change, for them.
 +
** However, the other less-overwhelmingly-useful mechs now tend to cost 12 on average, and some cost less.  The new shell company mechs will cost even less than that.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* You can now start the Commercial VR Pods project.
 +
** The first step is a new "Design Commercial VR Pods" project, which gets some medical professionals and similar involved in order to come up with something a lot better than TPN and the other horrors you get up to in the torment nexus path.
 +
** They also come up with Nutrition Blend, NMS, SCD, and Mind Farms themselves.
 +
 
 +
* A "Test Commercial VR Pods" project comes up next, which has you build some Nutrition Blend and the supply chain for that, as well as your first two actual Mind Farms.
 +
 
 +
* There is now a "Highest Protection" set of filters in the unit analysis screen.
 +
 
 +
* Any time after you have founded your shell company (and are in chapter two), there is now a contemplation that requires 340 engineering (you can get this reasonably rapidly if you know how, otherwise it may be a while).
 +
** This contemplation is called "Protection Required," and it unlocks both the SC-1 Telemech, and the Peacekeeper.  These units are both associated with your shell company, and are great at providing protection.  There is a bulk and regular version of Peacekeeper, incidentally.
 +
 
 +
* The telemech is a new mech in general, and the last one for the launch build of the game.
 +
** It looks bizzare, unlike any of your other mechs, and is essentially done this way so that nobody associates it with you or your tower.  It seems to be some funky invention of a random company, from the perspective of everyone else.  It is called the telemech because it's partly disguised as a telecommunications mech, but it's mainly there to scare criminals.
 +
 
 +
* At this point, it is now possible through regular gameplay to get every android model for the game, and every mech for the game, that are intended for launch.  Some of them only come up in very rare circumstances for now, but that's fine with me.
 +
** There are currently a couple of vehicles that are in the game and defined, but which cannot yet be unlocked.  I probably will not make them unlockable before launch, because I don't think there's a niche for them quite yet.  They will likely appear more around the tier 2 goal states, post-launch.  But we'll see.
 +
 
 +
* Criminal Syndicates now try to shake down your Mind Farms if you don't provide enough protection (which is the shell company version of deterrence).  That is all verified to be working now.
 +
 
 +
* An initial series of projects to improve your commercial vr pod designs, culminating in a grand opening for your grand opening, and then a failure to thrive, is now all in place.
 +
** You get harassed by the syndicates a lot during this period, and have to juggle your Protection, separately from deterrence.
 +
 
 +
* I did not have time/energy to finish the "failure to thrive" and onward parts of this goal state.  This is a fairly large goal state, which included more novel elements than I fully appreciated.  I'll finish it tomorrow.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.596.3 Oops I Built The Torment Nexus ==
 +
(Released November 28th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* 18cm Spiders have been added as a new form of internal robotics.
 +
** In general, this lets me improve the balance a bit. As with having two sizes of crabs, this allows for things to fit better in the future, while making it a bit easier in the early game.
 +
** One of the chief annoyances for me and I suspect others was trying to get any repair spiders, lately.
 +
** Thanks to Pingcode, Fluffiest, Mintdragon, and others for weighing in.
 +
 
 +
* Contraband Jammers and Scanner now use the 18cm Spiders rather than Network Attendants, putting them into proper tension that is a lot better.
 +
 
 +
* The game now always suggests you build all the wind generators and geothermal wells available to you on the suggested tab.
 +
** It also now suggests you build at least 2 repair spiders once you have those, 1 contraband jammer, and one scanner.
 +
 
 +
* The "Haven From Nukes" path to Budding Cybercrat has been cut, as that's the third meta-puzzle and I don't have time to do it justice.
 +
** It will return sometime post-launch.
 +
 
 +
* Added four achievements related to the nexus of torment vessels path.
 +
** 89 achievements now.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* The Religious Warrior and Religious Zealot units are now in place.
 +
** I will probably need to revisit their stats, and I will definitely need to revisit their attack visuals, but I'll do that after the crunch.
 +
 
 +
* "Aggressive Expansion" now involves a bunch of religious folks who are after you with new units, and then also some minor cult and anti-ai rebels who are also after you.
 +
** Also, the ability to automate the gathering of units for the torment nexus via a new Torment Processing Hub is now in place.  You can keep doing it manually as well, if that floats your boat, but you probably need your AP for combat.
 +
** In general, this whole thing requires quite a lot of deterrence, spread over an area that is moderately wide.  There are several ways to solve this, but it's a tricky challenge.  Otherwise you're really just going to get hit constantly with way too many units to deal with.
 +
 
 +
* When you do the Trial Nexus, you now get an extra mech cap upgrade, and when you do the Vessel Infections, you now get a Computing Client upgrade.
 +
** These are in addition to the other things you already got with them, and it simply means that you will be less reliant on doing other side content to complete this tier 1 goal.  I figure a lot of people will want to do this one, and having the tier 1 version be TOO hard is something that I think would be counterproductive to large-scale enjoyment.  It's still plenty challenging, I think.  But if not, it can be tuned in December.
 +
 
 +
* The "Nexus Of Torment Vessels" goal state is now fully complete.
 +
** I should note, the condition for it is a mild lie.  It won't actually complete when you reach that amount of neural expansion, which you may do at like 95% of the "Aggressive Expansion" project.  That would just be odd.  It doesn't trip until you actually finish "Aggressive Expansion."
 +
** But on the goal listing, it's easier to explain it with a big round number, so I'm leaving that alone.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
=== Bugfixes ===
 +
 
 +
* Removed some outdated notes on both Repair Spiders and Contraband Scanners about putting them on a different subnet to avoid stun, as these no longer get stunned.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed some issues with the corners of corrupted unit images (right now laser printers, and experimental monsters / homo grandien).
 +
 
 +
* Corrected the use of "homo sapien" to "homo sapiens."  Thanks to the german translators for correcting me.
 +
** Homo grandien should probably be "homo grandiens," but I prefer the sound of the former and how it flows, so I'm keeping it and am going to say TMI is rusty on their latin (like me!).
 +
 
 +
* Corrected the various handbook entries that used Slurry Spiders and Repair Spiders as an example case, to instead use Scanners and Repair Spiders as their example.
 +
 
 +
* Corrected the requirements for preventing the 10th doom, as they now only require two other timelines.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed an issue with some text referring to an event that did not happen, with meeting the lost kids not through the AGI researcher route.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a bug where the Workers tab was lit up and could be interacted-with from the start, rather than being something that only unlocked once you had worker units.
 +
** Now it properly shows the tab, but does not let you open it.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed an exception that happened when reaching intelligence class 5.
 +
 
 +
* Raised the bar for hitting intelligence class 5, as with torment vessels it was happening way too fast.
 +
 
 +
== 0.596.2 Planning ==
 +
(Released November 27th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* The hacking of enemy hackers no longer costs any strategic (non-renewable) resources, as that's not an exploit where people would hurt themselves by doing it too much.  It's the only option, and failing was leading to problems.
 +
** Thanks to Marcelo Mattioli and glencoe2004 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a bug where Worker Predator Factory cost slurry twice, rather than Neodymium for the second one.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* The icons for "angry at your mining" are now different from "angry at your slurry mine.
 +
 
 +
* The production and upgrade and usage balance of biomulch has been rebalanced a fair bit.  This makes it very much easier in the early game, which is fine.  But once you start getting into something like needing to produce TPN, it actually has a chance of doing so properly.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed an issue with minor events that have a secondary screen not being blocked properly.  This applied to mostly contemplations with multiple steps, like the black market people and the geothermal event.
 +
** Note for QLOC: I have not tested that this works, so please let me know if it does not.
 +
** Note for QLOC: Also, the PMC imposter version of the geothermal event should be tested to make sure that once that is done, you can still come back and do the technician route.  Otherwise that's a softlock.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a bug where you could not get the liquid metal android if you went to the "Is It Justice?" route via the evil dragon.
 +
** Thanks to glencoe2004 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed two bugs related to the first doom.  First of all, it was not killing the assistant, but instead was killing the merchandiser.
 +
** Secondly, I think there was a bug in a prior build where you could get past the first doom without anyone actually being killed.  It retroactively fixes this now after one turn.  If that bug were still extant, it would fix that for current builds, too.
 +
** Thanks to Waladil for reporting.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* You can now actually do "Design Full-Time VR Pods," and this takes you to one of two routes -- torment vessels, or a commercial product.
 +
 
 +
* If you go the torment vessels route, it first gets you to do an investigation to learn about TPN, which it explains as it does.
 +
** There is then a counterattack that is a fun one over time like the Yinish Wellness counterattack, but with a few twists to keep it fresh.
 +
 
 +
* After that, you unlock torment vessels themselves, TPN Refineries, and two new kinds of drones that the mindport can use to grab certain kinds of citizens.
 +
** The torment vessels require deterrence, and must be spaced a bit apart, but it's a pretty forgiving spacing.  If they are being attacked as an objectionable structure, they also have a different icon from the previous one that was used a lot.
 +
 
 +
* TPN is handled a lot like wages, which took a while to figure out.
 +
** In general, as your tormented humans consume it, it's drawn down, and if there is not enough for them, then they simply die.  This is not as visible in the resource screens (for either category) as I would like, and that will be a december thing.  But you can see the stats when hovering the expanded tooltip for TPN or wealth itself.
 +
 
 +
* The "trial nexus" project can now be completed, and then you have a "Vessel Infections" project to deal with.
 +
** The vessel infections project is overly simplistic, and normally there would be a thing you could do to end it quicker if you know how.  But I need to make some other adjustments, so that last part will come in December.  But the simplicity itself is by design.
 +
 
 +
* Aggressive Fungal Therapy" is a basic science project that is in there, and nothing too notable.  But if you don't have a shell company spun up fully, then do so, etc.
 +
 
 +
* "Aggressive Expansion" is where things are about to get more interesting again, and also introduce some automation to your vessel-filling needs.  But I have run out of energy for the day, and need to sleep, so I'm leaving this one incomplete.  It says both coming soon and 100% complete when you get here, so that's the clue that this is not done yet.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.596.1 Cyberocracy And World War 4 ==
 +
(Released November 26th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* The "Supervision" mechanic has been removed, at least for now.
 +
** I've just commented it out in the xml and such in case I find a use for it later.  But it turns out that I can do all the things I wanted to do with that, more cleanly, without need of that stat.
 +
 
 +
* On contemplations, the game now distinguishes between "part of the critical path for a goal" and "can lead to path start for goal," to aid in the fact that multiple things can lead to essentially the same area, but via different ways.
 +
** Aka, there are already two different things that lead to a place where you can start Altered Growth, and neither is truly part of the critical path for them.  That starts once you reach the starting line for it.
 +
** This will be more clear with the changes for "Is It Justice?" to have an alternative path to that.
 +
 
 +
* Added a new goal state, "The Great And Terrible Protector," which makes for a total of 16.
 +
** I know, I am certifiably a loon.  But I think I can pull it off.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed an issue where disabling shelter coordinators was applying across timelines, which was not appropriate.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a bug where war raptor deployment stations were increasing your cap of pet cats.
 +
 
 +
* General improvements have been made to the "waiting for NPCs to act" logic when there are a lot of NPCs active.
 +
** It was giving too much time between their actions, in a way that was utterly pointless, and was making you wait sometimes a couple of seconds because of it.  Now it's much more snappy.  It still staggers out weapons-fire a bit in order to keep the sound from overloading, but that's not the case I was referring to.
 +
 
 +
* Added the rest of the achievements for the "Escape the city" ending, and then the new set of achievements for the "Budding Cybercrat" ending.
 +
 
 +
* Added two new cheats for testing:
 +
** delay doom, which gives you 50 more turns on the current doom.
 +
** next doom, which jumps you right to the next doom.
 +
 
 +
* Added code that prevents the doom counters from being pushed to negative turns.  I've done limited testing of this, but it seems to work for the cases I've tested.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Four more achievements have been added, one relating to getting to chapter 4 in the game, and three related to the world war 4 goal state.
 +
** Up to 85 achievements, now.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* There is a new path to getting to the "Is It Justice?" set of things that involves taking the fell beast, and allows you to skip the entire AGI researcher line.  Turns out the kids just like your dragon.
 +
** This is a faster way to get to the prison break content, or at least an alternative way.  It also provides a faster way to get the thumpers you need, which happens to reduce the difficulty of "escape from the city" a lot, which is fine.
 +
** Thanks to Fluffiest suggesting something along these lines.
 +
 
 +
* You can now choose the other option with the AGI Researchers, which leads into Budding Cybercrat.
 +
** This starts a new project, and unlocks several new buildings.
 +
** The new Cyberocracy Hub, and then the three "Worker Factories" are a pretty notable set of new additions.
 +
 
 +
* The cyberocracy hub has building restrictions based on how many lower-class people are currently living or working in a cell, and how many upper class people are doing the same, and also that there are no prisoners in that cell.
 +
** This plays into the gameplay that follows from these.  When building these, it also shows you how many of the upper and lower classes there are in the cell where you are building.
 +
 
 +
* In general, there is now a less-than-bulk version of your androids -- just three models, though -- that you can have start doing various kinds of work.
 +
 
 +
* There is no traditional cap on these units.  They work a lot more like the War Raptors or similar.
 +
** You need to build up the frames to have them deploy from the Cyberocracy Hub, but beyond that they just kind of do what they do, again like the raptors.  The building they are spawning out of determines how they behave.  You can't adjust their equipment, or anything of that sort.  If there are unit-type upgrades that affect their general counterparts, then those are applied, but that's it.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new Workers tab in the command menu, which allows you to turn on and off your worker units of this sort.  So if you have built some, but don't want them deploying right now for whatever reason, you can turn them off.
 +
 
 +
* A bunch of stats and new mechanics now allow you to have your worker androids populate your cyberocracy, and it keeps track of how many dissidents you have either removed or murdered, as well as in general the number of citizens that have converted over.
 +
 
 +
* As soon as you have your six-site cyberocracy established, with all citizens converted and all dissidents removed, murderous predators or no, you get the "Ephemeral Haven" path completed.
 +
** The "Haven From Nukes" path is not possible yet, and is part of a larger meta puzzle.  That will be possible soon.
 +
 
 +
* The Black Market Assistant contemplation is now labeled properly as part of the critical path for World War 4.
 +
 
 +
* If the assistant is alive in the 9th doom, and you've prevented the assassination, then you can get some critical intel from them.
 +
** After you have that intel, assuming you've weathered the invasion before now, you can talk to the wastelanders again.  If you didn't do the invasion, then now you know the info, but you can't actually do anything with it, and you can't take it with you to other timelines, either.
 +
 
 +
* The timeline goal for "apocalypse happened anyway" for WW4 has been cut.  There were some extra steps involved in making sure that the apocalypse would be averted, and they involved another character that would recur in a fun way, but I don't have the time or word count to do that, and I think that it's exhaustingly long for players if I add that, too.
 +
** So that other cool idea I'll hang onto for something else, later.
 +
 
 +
* Once world war 4 starts, it is... very very intense. You also immediately gain access to four extremely powerful new mechs (all of which have gotten a balance pass in this build, but still have temporary attack animations and audio).
 +
** The fighting is incredibly intense, but you can also one-shot a lot of units from incredible range with the stalker -- even upgraded Convictors, it's amazing.
 +
** Even so, the sheer volume of the fighting is wearying, and if you start the war early into the "deep calm" period, then it's going to be a long war before you reach what would normally be the final doom.  Setting off a few nuclear power plants, if you still have them, is not a bad way to go.  Or just don't start it so early.  Or just enjoy the shooting, with your giant mech.
 +
 
 +
* For starting WW4, you get nothing, goal-wise. But along with those mechs, you also get a bunch of extra mech cap, and android cap, and vehicle cap.  You very much need them.
 +
 
 +
* The magic comes about when you reach the final doom.
 +
** The first thing you'll notice, most likely, is that you are suddenly catapulted into chapter 4: knowledge.  The only way that you wouldn't be is if you're already in chapter 4 because you completed a different meta puzzle prior to this one.
 +
** The next thing is that the timeline goal for World War 4 is completed, and instead of the final doom message, you get a note from liquid metal. It's a bit melancholy, but it's tempered by TMI's own personality, and looks toward the future.
 +
** In later builds, this will probably roll credits for people, optionally, but we'll see.  This is not "the end of the game," but it's certainly AN end to the game.
 +
** This timeline continues on without going into the apocalypse, and WW4 is intense, but you can do whatever else is still remaining and that doesn't get instantly bombed-out.  I am not sure I recommend that, but all sorts of people get into this sort of thing.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.596 Escaping The City ==
 +
(Released November 25th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* I've done some general editing of some of the recent text that has not yet been sent to translators, making sure I'm not wasting words where I don't need to be.  Shaved about 400 words off.
 +
 
 +
* Also did a pass on contemplations to make sure that they are all more accurate about the goal states that they can lead to, since some didn't mention things that actually are up their path.
 +
 
 +
* Two new achievements related to the new path for Altered Growth.
 +
 
 +
* There are two achievements related to the "escape the city" goal.
 +
** 74 total achievements now.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* During the "divorce" noticed from liquid metal, it now also has a line that notes "Also, all the experimental monsters you collected were killed or recaptured by the prison companies."
 +
** This was not evident that it was happening, prior to now.  You can either have monsters or get a divorce, but not both in the same timeline.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* If you have done the "Fertility Deity" contemplation, and have delivered the umbilicals, then at any time you can do a new "Uterine Replicators" contemplation.
 +
** You can do this without contacting an ExoCorp, and it's an early fork in the stuff to do with the wastelanders.
 +
** Doing this results in a different kind of hospital investigation against Dyad Instruments, with quite a combat scene happening.  This is a lot more like the above-ground portion of a prison break, but you get no warning it will be this way -- that's okay in this case, because you can try it as many times as you want, which is not true of the prison break. How much telegraphing of difficulty I do is often related to that.
 +
** If you do this, among other things you gain a MASSIVE boost to technician engineering, which restores them to their rightful place as by far the best engineer.  And for most players, this should also for the first time allow you to get to the long-needed 400 engineering threshold.
 +
 
 +
* There is now a "Homo Obscurus" contemplation that appears if you've done the uterine replicator project AND you still have a visible liquid metal great wyrm, AND you have a shell company with some forensic geneticists on staff.
 +
** In this situation, the wastelanders ask you for some genetic help.  This then leads into a three-project chain of science, and allows you to complete Altered Growth via the Homo Obscurus path.
 +
** Please note, they do not actually come visit the guest house yet, even though you're required to build it.  That's on my list for December.
 +
** There is a small initial set of visitors, but that's it.
 +
 
 +
* If somehow all of your Homo Grandien have disappeared (!?) before you complete their final project, then if it's been at least 5 seconds since the savegame was loaded, it makes sure that you have some (1000-1300).  I'm not sure how this happened in the first place, but at least it does not block you anymore.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a bug in the last couple of builds where the PMC Impostor was accidentally tied to your shell company, and the Female Mimic was not.
 +
** Thanks to Waladil for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* If you build the Fell Beast rather than the Great Wyrm, a new contemplation called "Rejection Of Temptation" pops up.
 +
** This gives you a bit more insight into the Wastelander mythology, and their attitude toward it.  It's likely not what you thought.
 +
** Additionally, this causes them to shut down contact with you to a moderate degree (but not enough that they won't help in the future with the Lost Kids if you were to meet with them that way), and spurs you to start a project of your own called "Organometallic Form"
 +
** They will only speak to a shell company operative, which is not an accident.  For one, this forces you to make sure you have a shell company, because otherwise the mimics don't make sense (as they are tied to the shell company). But for two, this is them flexing that they know you and your shell company are the same (nobody else in the city knows that at this point, only the wastelanders, who are just THAT good; and in another path, they mention it more directly that they figured it out -- the one with altered growth mentions it).
 +
 
 +
* During "Organometallic Form" you wind up learning about a variety of things related to organometallics, and it gives you some VERY powerful ways to upgrade some of your units and weapons.
 +
** Via this alone, you can get Raven well over 400 engineering, if you want to cross that bar pretty easily.
 +
** This also really allows you to kit out some shotguns and handguns for more fear-based effects if you want, among some other options.
 +
** When this project is completed, both the male and female mimic designs are unlocked.  Hope you have been stockpiling heavy metals; otherwise, get to doing that now.
 +
** These are both tied to your shell company, and so have very little general combat value in the standard pantheon... but that's also really not what they are for.  They do have an important role in the shell companies, and also start getting into some pretty amazing non-combat stuff before too long.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed the mouse colliders for the fell beast so that it does not overly block your cursor like it did before.  It's still not an exact match, because I'm using compound box colliders, but it's close enough to feel natural now.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Once you have mimics, AND you have thumpers from the Wastelanders if you know how to get that, then you can successfully get a mimic out of the city.
 +
** This completes the "Escape The City" goal, with the "At Least One Mimic Escaped" route.
 +
** This causes a huge amount of blowback from Vorsiber, as well as a very interesting message from the mimic back to you.
 +
** There is a new "Military Sweep" behavior that Vorsiber goes into, and it's extraordinarily dangerous. It's easy to ignore the sweep for a while, but then things just get worse and worse if you do, because of the nature of the sweep.  Clearing that out is its own kind of challenge, or just something to work around for the rest of this timeline, depending.
 +
 
 +
* In the event that you don't have the thumper designs (which you probably do not), there is a different contemplation for leading out of the city.  The trail goes overall cold on "escape the city," but from some telemetry from the lost mimic, it tells you what path to follow to find what you would need.
 +
** Or you can take your awesome mimics and your new engineering skill and do something else entirely, too.  Totally valid.
 +
 
 +
* While you are trying to establish your initial cyberocracy territory, you now pull quite a bit of aggro at all of those sites.
 +
** As far as a lot of conflicts go, this is not super hard because the enemies are often distracted tearing up your other stuff.  So you can kind of brute force through it, but you come out pretty banged-up if you do.
 +
** Regardless, it seems like enough to be interesting for now, without being super overly difficult at all times.  This is also a lot harder if you don't use the predators because you're trying to get the no-murders option, so that's a nice touch.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.595.9 Vorsiber Inquisitors ==
 +
(Released November 24th, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* When dragons fly through the air, if they touch any tall buildings while they do, they explode those buildings.  This was meant to be the case from the start, but I forgot to get it in place.
 +
 
 +
* Added a 15th goal (I know I'm insane) called Endless War Raptors, which is another full tier 1 goal.
 +
** Initially it was going to be a side goal, but dealing with this during the state of war, especially on hard or extreme mode, is a huge undertaking.  I thought that this was something that is too casual and quick for people to do, and if they're playing on normal mode and weather the invasion before they start working on this, maybe that's a bit true, but this seems worthy of being a tier 1 goal to me, regardless.
 +
 
 +
* A new handbook entry opens up, and is prominent on the screen, once you are in chapter two and at least 20 turns in, and have a shell company.
 +
** It basically explains that if you want to see all the various opportunities there, you need to have scientists of all the various disciplines on staff -- even if you are "something of a scientist, yourself."
 +
** It also has a suggestion about how to have a huge amount of money to make those salaries not soo stressful.
 +
 
 +
* Added a new cheat called "Toggle 'Delete All Attackers'"
 +
** This makes certain kinds of testing much faster, because rather than fighting a battle that may come and go, all of the aggressors can just be wiped with one keystroke.  With my schedule, and some of the more intense scenarios, this is a big help.
 +
 
 +
* The "Question Wastelanders" contemplation should no longer be after umbilicals but before the invasion, or after the invasion is completed.  Have not tested, but it should work.
 +
** Thanks to Waladil for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* The Swarms lens is back, because it turns out I AM going to use that prior to launch.  Just not the way I had thought I would.  Go figure.
 +
 
 +
* Rebalanced the number of lab operators and surgical suites required for the various scientific disciplines to be more consistent.  There are still salary differences, but that's much more minor of a concern; the lap operators in particular were causing wild swings in what was possible when you were doing a lot of science at once, not in a good way.
 +
 
 +
* Hiring and managing scientists was really pissing me off.  I think that the existing system is really good for introducing players to the system, and in cases like this, I think of Factorio and how you can chop wood with your character manually.  That's important before you get to automation, and should not be changed.  Otherwise the automation means nothing.
 +
** At any rate, after you have made two hires of any sort, I have a new contemplation that appears, called "Automated Personnel Management."
 +
*** Once you complete this, which is very simple, then all of the science buildings are unlocked immediately.  As they are built or destroyed or enabled or disabled, the game then automatically manages the hiring and firing of staff for you.  It gets rid of something that was otherwise quite tedious and opaque when you were trying to manage it in bulk.
 +
 
 +
* Added a new achievement related to baby raptors.
 +
 
 +
* Five more achievements relating to the new Endless War Raptors goal state are now in place.
 +
** Total is now up to 70.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* If you have the appropriate scientists on hand, and you've captured some war raptors, then a "Dromaeosaurid Breeding" contemplation becomes possible.  This then unlocks a new building.
 +
 
 +
* If you breed enough infant raptors, and again have a different set of correct scientists on hand, then "Dromaeosaurid Maturation" becomes possible.
 +
** This leads to yet another building, and now you can grow your own full-sized war raptors.
 +
 
 +
* If you have enough fully-grown war raptors, and again the right type of (yet another kind) of scientists on hand, then "More Than An Illusion" becomes possible.
 +
** This gives you another kind of building, and this one is quite aggressive.
 +
 
 +
* If you are in the middle of a war or invasion of some kind (this does include the space nation invasion doom, and any sort of ExoCorp invasion, but not things like angry cultists), then a new contemplation becomes available: "Design Wurtzite Armor"
 +
** This allows you to design, if you have at least 300 engineering (which you should in almost every case), Wurtzite Nanothread Weave armor.
 +
*** This armor is the same as Diamond Nanothread Weave, but the boron is in a different shape.  As in real life, the Wurtzite shape is 18% stronger, and also a dark color rather than being transparent.
 +
*** Because this "blacks out" your units from the perspective of enemies, they can't tell when your units are damaged, thematically speaking.  This means that deterrence is no longer based on CURRENT health, but the maximum health of your units, while wearing this kind of armor. 
 +
*** This is a pretty huge and important thing when you're involved in more constant fighting, because otherwise slight attrition causes major outages in your deterrence and protection, at a time when you probably can't afford that, which just makes things even worse.  Normally in regular comparably-peaceful times I really like that dynamic, but once you get into open warfare it is quite problematic.  This allows you to solve the issue.
 +
 
 +
* Swarms as a mechanic are finally making their debut. A lot of this was coded a long time ago, but I've spruced up things so that they are nice and modern.
 +
** I've also added a lot of NPC logic relating to how they are able to do things like interact with swarms, or semi-related things like only taking certain actions a certain number of turns after they exist, etc.
 +
 
 +
* Once you have a pipeline of war raptors, you can quite aggressively deploy them, and they do what they do.  You have a fairly limited amount of control over them, by design.
 +
** After 6 turns of rampaging around, if they still are alive, any given squad has a strong chance of moving into a building and becoming "Lurking War Raptors" rather than the ones that are out and fighting and doing potentially-useful things.
 +
 
 +
* The balance of Nature Minder internal robotics has been substantially adjusted.
 +
 
 +
* When a new swarm starts, it now has the option of showing a message about what's going on.  In the case of the raptors going to ground, it draws your attention to this, as well as your potential options.
 +
 
 +
* Once some raptors have escaped, you can use a new contemplation called "Release The Horde" which makes them accelerate how fast they start lurking, and also how fast they come out of your release locations.
 +
** Also, this freaks out Vorsiber, and they start sending both SuperCruisers as well as Inquisitors, the latter of which is the first time they've been seen at all.
 +
*** This is considered dire enough of a situation that you also then get the "has the need for extreme armor piercing" and can thus get the contemplation associated with that.
 +
 
 +
* When raptors are lurking in buildings, they now kill between 50-100% of the people in there, and those are counted as "murder by raptor," which does in fact block the "no murders" routes.
 +
** Hence why there is no "no murders" option for the "Endless War Raptors" goal.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.595.8 War Raptors ==
 +
(Released November 23rd, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* The Spirituality, Disease, and Wildlife buttons have been removed from the Command Mode bar for now, as I'm not sure they will ever be needed, but they are not needed for now, and I don't want to give people the idea that they're missing something.
 +
 
 +
* Two more achievements, these ones related to the military invasion goal, and both referencing the specific other Arcen games, and years of release of the games, that these ExoCorp antagonists are arriving from.
 +
 
 +
* Added another achievement, this one related to capturing a certain number of dinosaurs during combat across however many timelines.
 +
** Achievement total is now 64.
 +
 
 +
=== More Goal State Adjustments ===
 +
 
 +
* The Titan of Commerce timeline goal path is being cut for now, in favor of some other content that is instead the focus.  I will return to this, but not prior to launch.
 +
 
 +
* A new "Escape The City" timeline goal has been added (I know, I know; adding things while under a crunch?).
 +
 
 +
* The Bionic Dues and Bionic Secret timeline goals are no longer related to the AGI Researchers path in any way.  That was too many things for them.  They are only related to "Is It Justice?" and "Budding Cybercrat," for now.
 +
 
 +
* Added yet another timeline goal, this one called "I Am Vorsiber Now," which is likely to be the last of the launch goals, making the full set 14, 12 of which are full, and 2 of which are side.
 +
** Assuming I don't flub the schedule this week, this set of goals should be doable.  At the moment, it involves two meta puzzles across timelines, which are partly reflected in these goals, but my intention is to add a third meta puzzle in order to tie some of the otherwise-lesser goals together properly.
 +
 
 +
* Uplifted Minority is now split into 7 main paths for the various groups you could uplift.  There are actually a lot more options than that, but having them not to TOO specific in terms of categories is better.
 +
** Also the "no murders" option has been removed for that, as it was not as interesting, and "three at once" and "five at once" have instead been added.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* Once you have built the Great Wyrm, and have it out and about and not cloaked, a contemplation called "Fertility Deity" becomes available.
 +
** When you do this, you gain a bit more insight into the wastelanders, and you also then start the "Umbilical Collection" project.
 +
 
 +
* During the "Umbilical Collection" project, this is a lot like the stealth approach to Espia, but this time against hospitals, and it must be your PMC Impostors.
 +
** You'll either have to help with hackers, or you can use Mindrunner Overwatch (this is only the second time that is available actually, so far) to make this work.  You'll need to do two of these, rather than one.
 +
 
 +
* After "Umbilical Collection" you get 5 turns of warning before Yinshi Wellness strikes back at you.
 +
** They have some staggered waves that come from three spots, and it doesn't tell you exactly how many there will be, and some of the smaller ones are stragglers, so you can expect to be a bit on-edge for a good 10-20 turns wondering if that was the last of all that.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new "Contact An ExoCorp" contemplation that becomes available after you have helped with the stem cell issue.  Whether you've dealt with the follow-up attacks doesn't matter.
 +
** This allows you to either contact Dagekon, or The UIH.
 +
** You're given 9 turns to wait for word from them, and then instead of word coming back, the city gets invaded in a somewhat mild way.  The invasion will last for 45-55 turns, and it says how many turns are remaining in a warning in the upper right corner.
 +
 
 +
* In general, there is a new style of logic governing how these fights unfold so that it's triggering them all over the city, and specific kinds of back-and-forth between units you know (from the city), and units you've never seen before (there are two kinds of elite ExoCorp soldier, and then other stuff that is corp-specific).
 +
 
 +
* If you are being invaded by Dagekon, then the ability to get more-extreme armor piercing unlocks.
 +
** This is highly valuable, and worth being harassed for a while -- also you will need it if the fighting comes your way.
 +
** If you are invaded by them, then MilUnits will make an appearance every so often. The armor piercing is particularly notable if you're fighting with them.
 +
 
 +
* The "Military Invasion" timeline goal is properly triggered when you are invaded by either of the ExoCorps, but not until the last turn of the invasion.
 +
 
 +
* If UIH is the one invading, then their genetically-engineered war raptors (the same one that was the protagonist in In Case Of Emergency, Release Raptor) are a major part of the invasion.
 +
** Please bear in mind that their attack visuals are temporary!
 +
 
 +
* During the invasion of the ExoCorps, but not before or after, there is a contemplation where you can question the wastelanders about what the heck is going on, why the ExoCorps are attacking.
 +
** This seems to be just a way to get a bit more lore (and it is, kinda), but after having this conversation, a new Crossover, in red, appears on this timeline if you happen to be checking in the end of time.  This is quite subtle if you're not paying attention much.  This is very important for later.
 +
 
 +
* When the UIH attack starts, you gain a new unlock for Animal Capture Drones. You can use these, via the Mindport, to grab raptors off of the battlefield.
 +
** If you grab raptors off the battlefield, they go into your inventory as War Raptors, and you get a further unlock called War Raptor Pen for storing them.
 +
** You cannot do anything further with the raptors just yet, but it's already useful to be able to remove them from battle so easily (though it does take some support to not have the mindport shot down).
 +
** In a general sense, this new animal capture logic is very similar to the hostage-taking stuff that will be needed in the near future.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
=== Bugfixes ===
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a typo related to standby mode trying to mention something that no longer exists.
 +
** Thanks to Darloth for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* The "Jobs And Structures" handbook entry has been removed, as it no longer has any information to actually convey to you, now that jobs can't be switched on structures.
 +
** Thanks to Darloth for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* The swarms lens is now hidden, rather than becoming visible in chapter 2 and doing nothing.  This or something very like it will definitely be a thing in the future, but not for initial launch.  Again, tidying to not give people the wrong idea.
 +
 
 +
* Increased the number of times that you can examine a lot of the specific kinds of sites in "Wastelander Mythology," because players could get softlocked if mapgen was not nice to them or there were too many nukes that had gone off.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* Added a fix for "Homelessness Is NOT Solved" showing up too early.  Have not tested that it works, but it should.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
 +
 
 +
== 0.595.7 Dragons ==
 +
(Released November 22nd, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* Four more achievements defined related to the Altered Growth goal.
 +
** Brings the total achievements up to 57.
 +
 
 +
* The "World War 4" goal has been adjusted substantially, so that it's much harder to even start it, and it has some notable twists planned for it.
 +
** There is a new Military Invasion goal, which is a Side Goal rather than a Tier 1 Goal, and that now essentially occupies the space that WW4 previously did.
 +
** It probably sounds like I am creating extra work for myself while under extreme deadline pressure already, but I've actually figured out a really clever way to use what I already had planned, just in a way that is more interesting for players.
 +
 
 +
* The Innately Alarming perk has been removed from most units that had it, except for the following: Spectre, Wraith, and Mech Carrier.
 +
** These are large vehicles meant for offensive actions, not vehicles or units that could ever really be used for deterrence, etc.
 +
** This makes it so that smaller vehicles are now a lot more useful without constantly being shot at in an annoying way, and a larger selection of mechs can be used for deterrence without aggroing every military base around.
 +
** This should also solve the problems with Predators being overly trigger-happy.
 +
** In general, this stat being on so many androids just did not add much strategy, and it added a lot of annoyance.  I really enjoyed the feeling of having to dodge anti-aircraft weaponry with the flying vehicles, but there are better ways to handle that, and it is not something that needs to be true all the time with so many vehicles, I don't think.  There will be time to further experiment with this in december and after.
 +
 
 +
* There is now a contemplation that happens after you "solve homelessness" that makes it clear it is in no way solved for real, and it also notes that this is an adventure for a future version of the game.
 +
** This should save quite a bit of confusion.
 +
** Thanks to Andyman119 for the reminder.
 +
 
 +
* The black market merchandiser, and the "Agree - If We Are Forthright" option for the cyberocracy, are both now blocked and note that they are adventures for a future build.
 +
** These are things that I will be coming back to during this content sprint, but in the meantime it's nice not to have testers wandering into this and getting softlocked because they are not yet ready.
 +
 
 +
* The "Design full-time VR pods" is also now marked as being for a future version of the game, which again will be for during this content sprint, but just to keep testers from trying to get it just yet.
 +
 
 +
* There are two new achievements related to Homo Grandien generally being awesome.
 +
** This brings us to 59 achievements.
 +
 
 +
* Two achievements related to creating the dragons.
 +
** 61 total achievements now.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* Starting anytime in chapter two, there is a new contemplation available called "Beyond The Ruins."
 +
** This gets at the common desire for the player to get out of the city, ideally on foot.
 +
** If this contemplation is undertaken, it starts a project called "Wastelander Mythology."
 +
*** This is very very similar to the "Searching For Wastelanders" project, except it has a slightly different focus and balance, and lasts a little bit longer.  Also, unlike in "Searching For Wastelanders," there is no wrong way to do this project (also the LostGen rebels are not with you, here).
 +
*** By studying their stashed artifacts, you come to an understanding of their mythology, and they notice you studying in such a way.  This culminates in a very different kind of meeting with them, but ultimately you don't get the direct information you want. But you do learn enough that you can put a further piece of a plan into action, if you wish.
 +
 
 +
* Assuming that you choose to meet the wastelanders in the new way, the "Searching For Wastelanders" contemplation is never available.  Instead, there is a much-abbreviated "Contact The Wastelanders" contemplation that serves the same function in the "Is It Justice?" sequence of events.
 +
** I've tested that this does in fact work.
 +
** As a side effect, if you've never met with the wastelanders before, then when you would have done "Searching For Wastelanders," you can now do either that or the "Beyond The Ruins" to get progress things.  If you do the latter, then the new "Contact The Wastelanders" piece pops up.
 +
** Whichever way you go is fine, as far as the "Is it Justice?" route is considered.
 +
 
 +
* The Liquid Metal Great Wyrm, and Liquid Metal Fell Beast, are both fully defined now.
 +
** These are mechs that fly, and some additional logic had to be put in place for that to work.
 +
** These units have temporary attack visuals, that will be something I do in december.
 +
 
 +
* The icon for the wastelanders has been made consistent. Previously it was two separate icons.
 +
 
 +
* Previously, the trigger for Gadolinium Mesosilicate, the Liquid Metal android, and Submunitions were all tied together.
 +
** These are now separated out.
 +
** In the "Is It Justice?" path, you should see very little difference.  The main shift is that once you research the resource, you then still have to invent the liquid metal android, which is another very simply contemplation.
 +
*** This extra step allows me to introduce Gadolinium Mesosilicate without it being intrinsically tied to the liquid metal android.  There are other uses for that resource beyond that kind of android.
 +
** This has all been tested, and seems to work without any incidents.
 +
 
 +
* There was also a previous issue with the Submunitions research opening up too early.  It now only opens up when it is desperately needed, as the prior notes said it was supposed to.
 +
 
 +
* The Wastelanders have been moved into the Pacifist Rebels category, as that is more accurate, even though they aren't afraid of a fight.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new Full Metal Myth that allows you to unlock one of two forms of liquid metal dragon.  This comes about after you pursue the wastelander myths and then get gadolinium mesosilicate.
 +
** For both this and the liquid metal tiger, I've reduced the engineering requirement from 280 to 220.  This is the maximum you can have if you are as wasteful as possible when choosing options while designing the mesosilicate.  Seriously, you can have like 310 if you just prioritize CPUs, and that should be obvious, but I don't want to gate people out of these specific things if they pick the exact opposite of what is useful. (But if they got that sort of way, then probably no VR Pods for them in that timeline, depending).
 +
** The stats for both of these are pretty darn exciting, but the stats for the fell beast are stronger than those of the great wyrm.  That's because you are also giving up a number of other opportunities if you choose the "evil" dragon over the "good" one.
 +
 
 +
* A number of the dooms have had their information updated so that they reflect the ability for them to be canceled by a variety of sources.
 +
** This even includes the final doom, although it cannot yet actually be fully canceled.
 +
 
 +
* A new route for Altered Growth is being added after all, called Homo Obscurus.  This is obviously a completely different sub-species from Homo Grandien.
 +
 
 +
* There is now a crossover if you have Homo Grandien in a timeline.
 +
 
 +
* The first and fourth doom can both now be prevented by having Home Grandien wandering into your timeline from an adjacent one.
 +
** The first one is a pretty big deal as it turns out, but exactly why is a spoiler for later.  But in general it sets up something important for later.
 +
 
 +
* If you push liquid metal too far, then you lose the experimental monsters that you had in excess storage, and they just kind of disappear -- presumably killed by the federated corporations.
 +
** You are not able to build containment for the experimental monsters until you stop trying to break into prisons, and you wind up with some on the time right before liquid metal begs you to stop going any further.  So you essentially have a choice: divorce from liquid metal, or keep the monsters you have.
 +
** Both of these things are important for later, so making sure they can't both be done in a single timeline is a shift that is important.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.595.6 Altered Growth ==
 +
(Released November 21st, 2024)
 +
 
 +
* Clarified the rules for using Overwatch.
 +
** Thanks to Lordsamuel for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* The icon for the fire station has been updated to be a shield with fire on it, rather than crossed battle-axes.
 +
** Thanks to mblazewicz for suggesting.
 +
 
 +
* The weapon hardpoints between vehicles and mechs are now shared, so any weapon that can be used by one kind can also be used by the other, pending whatever other restrictions that are just part of the design of the weapon.
 +
 
 +
* The game is now able to have alternatives to the regular dooms, which basically shift in response to things that you have done, often in other timelines.
 +
** I had been planning on waiting to implement this later, but it's just too cool and too useful to pass up. It also was only about two hours of extra work for the day.
 +
 
 +
* Added two new achievements related to the monsters.
 +
 
 +
* Added a new achievement related to averting some dooms for the first time.  In particular, this is the first part of a cross-timeline series of events to get you closer to avoiding the apocalypse.
 +
 
 +
* Added five more achievements just related to general behavior.
 +
** The total is now up to 53 for achievements.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed an issue where percentages above 99 would show up overlapping the text if you clicked into full projects.  It now shows those percentages smaller in general, whether it's 100% or less.
 +
 
 +
* Fixed a fairly hilarious text issue that was saying that residents and workers that were excess were being stored in boxes.  There are now appropriate messages for those kinds of resource.
 +
 
 +
* You can now steal from criminal syndicate storage locations, as an alternative to wiretapping the middle class.
 +
** You will need a unit with either Shadowdweller or Expert Shadowdweller in order to do this, however, so it's not available too soon in chapter one.  But a patient player also does not need any wealth that early in chapter one -- the ethical choice is to wait for the keanu.  There's now an achievement for failing to do that.
 +
** This costs 1 determination to do, on top of the other requirements it has.  A regular shadowdweller gets the same range (7-14k) of wealth from this as any unit does from wiretapping.  An expert gets 64k-97k for the same amount of determination.
 +
** Either way, you need 10k to set up your shell company, and then it's far easier to generate wealth from that source, unless you are just overflowing with determination you don't want to spend anywhere else.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new category called Wealth Generation in the filters for StreetSense, which helps you find the various options for these things now.
 +
 
 +
* The extra 160k electricity that was being provided if you started fresh in chapter two, or were in a city beyond the first in chapter three, is no longer being given to you.
 +
** This was a relic of an older piece of design, and it was giving you way too much electricity.  This may make some current tester savegames deeply negative in terms of their energy usage.  Apologies.
 +
 
 +
* Now that there are more timeline goals that can be completed, some of the code patterns have become more clear.  So I've created a helper class that provides more code centralization and reuse.  I don't expect any problems from this, but it's possible that some goal or path states might now fail to trigger which previously triggered.  I've tested it with the new goal state from tonight, but not with the older goal states.
 +
 
 +
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 +
 
 +
<spoiler show="Click Here To Show Spoilers For This Build" hide="Spoilers">
 +
 
 +
* There is a new crossover called Liquid Metal Woodsman, which shows up as a negative crossover when looking at timelines, but it's secretly actually a good one -- well, it's a good one born out of bad things that happened.
 +
** If you pushed liquid metal to the point of it leaving you, then this is now a thing on the timeline where that happened.
 +
 
 +
* Updated the "Traumatized Ex-Cons" resource description to make it clear that you can't actually help them yet.  I had planned on going down that route, but I don't have time to do it justice at the moment, so it will be a focus later.
 +
 
 +
* The "Intrusion Prevention" stance for enemy hackers now specifies that direct attacks only make it worse.
 +
** Thanks to Lordsamuel for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new "Intrusion Support" stance for enemy hackers, with a different icon, which is used for cases like prison breaks where there is already a known intruder.  In this stance, direct attacks are the way to go, and the game makes this clear.
 +
** This makes the prison break scenarios actually go like I intended them to.
 +
** Thanks to Lordsamuel for reporting.
 +
 
 +
* If you have blown up all of the SecForce Stations, it now spawns supercruisers every 4-8 turns for the rest of that timeline.  Painful.
 +
 
 +
* Large-bore armor-piercing, used by vehicles and mechs, is now twice as effective as that used by androids.  This means that vehicles and mechs, without any other changes, can now at least scratch a lot of the mark 2 mechs, supercruisers, and other similar things.
 +
** This may cause problems I need to fix with the capture-mech and the intro to hacking.  Will need to be tested.
 +
 
 +
* If a situation arises where you really need to deal with enemy armor (not because you want to, but because of it otherwise being a story blockage with them being after you), then a new contemplation opens up for Submunitions, which will get you access to Skystreak Armor-Piercing Missiles.  These can be stacked with regular armor piercing on large vehicles and mechs, and can completely negate mark 2 mech armor, just for a few turns and at relatively high expense.
 +
** In order to do this, you must have already done the gadolinium mesosilicate project, and so if you have not, then when the need for the enemy armor negation comes along, the contemplation for gadolinium mesosilicate also unlock if it has not previously done so.
 +
** Right now the condition for submunitions showing up is if there are hostile supercruisers in the city because of you blowing up all the police stations. There will be other reasons for it shortly, but for now that's the score.
 +
 
 +
* There is a new VS-101 Skyfall weapon for large vehicles and mechs that becomes available as a follow-up idea from the creation of the Skystreak Armor-Piercing Missiles.
 +
** These weapons give some extra attack power and armor piercing at no cost, and also change the visuals and audio of how these weapon strikes happen.  That's not something that happens when you just use the consumable.
 +
 
 +
* After rescuing the experimental monsters, which have rage issues and are essentially supersoldiers, you can choose to just... turn them loose in the city.
 +
** If you do, a cascade of things happen.
 +
*** First of all, whatever your entire stock of experimental monsters is, that becomes the number that are "on the loose" in the city.
 +
**** As long as there are any on the loose, they will show up and fight you and other factions, kind of at random.  They tend to crop up at farms (figures), but then what they decide to do is up to them.
 +
**** The game keeps track of how many of them have died, and if that number runs out, this stops.  You can see their current population in the city statistics tab at any time.
 +
**** If you are killing them, then you start getting monster pelts from them, which is a pretty awful thing if you think about it more than just in passing. Wooo...
 +
***** You can sell these for huge amounts of money to the wealthy.
 +
*** Secondly, as long as there are at least 500 still on the loose in a city (the default starting amount is likely north of 2000, depending on how you got there), then a new crossover happens to other timelines on the same rock.  Please note, this is only checked on a per-turn basis, so if you just released the monsters you have to end the turn before you see the crossover.
 +
**** While this crossover is present, other timelines on the same rock will have these monsters showing up in small numbers, much less frequently than in the primary timeline that is spawning them.  A key note is that these sorts of things don't actually deplete the numbers in the original timeline.  So if you kill 40,000 monsters in other timelines, and there were only 600 in the original timeline, this is not a bug.  It's just the nature of the crossover.
 +
**** If your numbers drop below 500 remaining alive, then the crossover actually un-crosses-over, which is a first for timeline crossovers, but won't be the last.
 +
 
 +
* If you have the "Liquid Metal Woodsman" crossover happening in a timeline, then he will prevent the assassinations of the Vorsiber top execs, as the first alternative doom.
 +
** I'll spare the details here, but the idea is to create a chain reaction of events that are different, thus sparing the apocalypse.  This alone won't be enough, but it's a critical step.
 +
** If this is done, then it also echoes down the line and prevents the bombings of the religious sites during the 9th doom.  It does not prevent the final doom on its own.
 +
 
 +
* The game is now able to limit certain npc managers from starting before a certain turn, or a certain doom number, whichever comes later.
 +
** So for the monsters invading your other timelines, those will never happen before turn 25 or doom 2, whichever comes later.  It was super hella hard with them showing up on turn two, and not in a fun way.
 +
 
 +
* There is now a "Monster Mind Study" project that happens if you decide to house the monsters rather than turning them loose.
 +
** This requires you to have a shell company and get two scientific disciplines involved via hiring.
 +
 
 +
* Once that is complete, you gain some additional lab operators and surgical suites, and move into "Monster Mind Recovery"
 +
** This requires three specialties, and you need to double up on the medical practices, ideally.  The project explains what is happening in terms of the work being done.
 +
** Completing this gives you even more lab operators and surgical suites.
 +
 
 +
* Next up is a simple project called "Homo Grandien"
 +
** Completing this nets you the "Altered Growth" timeline goal, with the specific path of "Homo Grandien."
 +
*** If you did the no-murders, hard mode, or extreme mode, then it also gives you those.
 +
 
 +
* Once you have housing for Homo Grandien, you'll see them hanging around outside that residence, not really doing much, but contemplating possible futures.
 +
** That is the end of their story for now, but it's something that will be picked up later.
 +
 
 +
</spoiler>
 +
 
 +
== 0.595.5 Is It Justice? ==
 +
(Released November 20th, 2024)
  
 
* The icon for the liquid metal android has been updated.  I was unhappy with the vibe of the other one.  This one is much more violent-looking.
 
* The icon for the liquid metal android has been updated.  I was unhappy with the vibe of the other one.  This one is much more violent-looking.
Line 15: Line 814:
 
* New achievement related to liquid metal tight-spaces kills across timelines.
 
* New achievement related to liquid metal tight-spaces kills across timelines.
 
** And a second achievement related to abusing liquid metal's good will.
 
** And a second achievement related to abusing liquid metal's good will.
 +
 +
* Two more achievements defined, for hard and extreme mode paths to "Is It Justice?"
 +
** 45 total now.
 +
 +
* Discovered that the cohort descriptions for the two donut chains were reversed from the building descriptions.  Switched the cohort descriptions to match the buildings.
  
 
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
 
=== Chapter 2+ Content ===
Line 64: Line 868:
 
** This whole thing is using a new mechanic that allows for certain player or NPC data to be set on buildings, for cases like this.  It's called BuildingKeyModifier, and has no visual component, but it's what allows for setting all the charges.
 
** This whole thing is using a new mechanic that allows for certain player or NPC data to be set on buildings, for cases like this.  It's called BuildingKeyModifier, and has no visual component, but it's what allows for setting all the charges.
 
*** I chose to do it this way specifically so that players could set all the charges and choose to back out at any point before actually detonating them, since if you started detonating them as you go, that would both alert SecForce way too fast, and also be less visually satisfying, and also lock the player into that course of action.
 
*** I chose to do it this way specifically so that players could set all the charges and choose to back out at any point before actually detonating them, since if you started detonating them as you go, that would both alert SecForce way too fast, and also be less visually satisfying, and also lock the player into that course of action.
 +
 +
* If you try to convince the kids that blowing up the secforce stations is not worth it, then they turn to a plan for poisoning the donut shops that are run by secforce.
 +
** In order to both appease the kids and save innocent patrons from being poisoned, you need to burn down the hudson donut shops.  There usually are not very many of these, so this is much faster than planting charges on all the secforce stations.
 +
** Each time you burn one of these, it's done right when you go there, and some angry secforce folks pop out to fight with your units.
 +
** If you burn down all of these donut shops, then a couple of things happen:
 +
*** You win this project.
 +
*** You fail the project to "achieve meaningful social change," because this path of things really does fail to accomplish that, but that's okay.
 +
*** You win the timeline goal "Is It Justice?" with the stopped-kids path.  And hard and extreme mode variants are properly registered, as well.
  
 
</spoiler>
 
</spoiler>

Latest revision as of 14:15, 2 December 2024

Contents

Next Release Notes

Preparing For Launch

0.596.6 Launch Set

(Released December 1st, 2024)

  • The way that "Abandoned Humans" are handled is fundamentally changed, and is now more visible. They're now a resource, and they show up on the top bar if you have any.
    • In chapter one, you're potentially less likely to kill a bunch of people by negligence, now. That wasn't really a goal of mine, but for later on in the game, it becomes an important thing where too much is going on to manage it, otherwise.
  • Added nine new achievements, all related to "The Great And Terrible Protector" goal path.
  • Added four more achievements relating to the Uplifted Minority path, bringing the total to 113.
  • Two achievements relating to the cultist actions sidebar are now in place.
    • This brings the total up to 115, although two of the achievements are related to dogs, which are not yet in the game and won't be for launch, so the real number is 113.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • Fixed the math behind how upgrades were being provided from buildings, so that the android, vehicle, and mech extenders now work properly, and also show what they will do.
    • These are also now in the Military tab, not the computing tab.
    • Thanks to MOREDAKKA for reporting.
  • In general, after a project is started, or the number of projects has changed, it should automatically recalculate StreetSense and Contemplation options.
    • This may fix a few issues like "hey the steal vehicle option did not show up" sort of thing, but I have not tested it.

0.596.5 The Temple Of Minds

(Released November 30th, 2024)

  • The "I Am Vorsiber Now" timeline goal is being cut for time and sanity at the moment.
    • I need time and wordcount to do it justice, and it needs enough testing, etc. It's also the sort of thing that only a small number of people would ever see in reality, in general, just based on how most people play games like this.
    • So this remains a thing I want to do, but I will approach it in a more thoughtful way post-launch in some fashion, so that I can truly pay it off in the way it deserves. At the moment, I'm really concerned about the possibility of it seeming "too easy" or a letdown in some fashion. The WW4 route lets you take down Vorsiber a different way, but it is a deeply pyrrhic victory, so for launch purposes I feel like that's appropriate.
  • Six new achievements have been added related to the Willing Rejection Of Reality goal path.
  • Five more achievements, all related to the Bionic Dues goal.
    • This brings the total to 100.
  • The game now keeps track, both in one timeline and across timelines, how many soldiers and how many members of SecForce you have killed. This is not retroactively counted, to it only applies to kills made beyond now in savegames.
    • To some extent this is a curiosity, but it's actually used in one of the goal states.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • "Subnet Basics" handbook entry has been corrected to not reference outdated mechanics.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • "Support Jobs" as a handbook entry has been removed entirely, as it had nothing useful or correct to say anymore.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed some issues with the ScrapUnitList display that could cause exceptions in kind of a Russian-roulette style of bad luck.
    • This used to be limited to only bulk and captured androids, and Andyman119 and I had gone back and forth about it with it seeming to be a bad steam download (spoiler: it was not, I was wrong).
    • Now this is also present with main units and vehicles thanks to the changes in yesterday's build, and so I've realized what is up and have fixed it for all of the above cases.
    • Thanks to Irl_VriskaSerket for the latest report, and to Andyman119 for the others.
  • Clarified the second kind of attacker of syndicates against your shell company, to note that they will come while your current project is active, even if you have full protection.
    • As an aside, this was also rebalanced in the new build to not be so relentlessly constant, as well. But it was going to be confusing, either way.
    • Thanks to Qwertyfizz for reporting.

0.596.4 Unit Cap Overhaul

(Released November 29th, 2024)

  • The Bionic Secret goal is being cut for now. It will likely return after launch in some fashion, but for now it doesn't fit with my schedule or goals.
    • This leaves us with 15 overall goals, which are now designed in-depth and planned to be the launch set. 5 left to implement.
  • All of the "Uplifted Minority" main paths, aside from a new "Unexpected Guests," are cut for now.
    • They will return in some fashion, but for launch this is plenty and all I have the time to do full justice to.
  • Fixed an issue where "Vessel Infections" could be softlocked if you were unlucky in RNG or had too many nuclear explosions prior to this.
    • Thanks to Irl_VriskaSerket for reporting.
  • For a lot of the things that your scientists come up with, the source of inspiration is now noted as Research By Scientists rather than World Experience.

Unit Cap Rebalance

  • Androids, mechs, and vehicles no longer have a flat cap of how many you can build. They now work like bulk and captured units, where they have differing amounts you can construct.
    • The real nail in the coffin for the old system was what I need to do with the Telemech and Peacekeepers, but the Technician and Senior Technician were already stretching it.
    • Basically, the old system was impossible to balance with things like liquid metal dragons and telemechs counting equally, and it was annoying with technicians and predators counting equally, too. Frankly it was annoying having delivery drones and mech carriers counting equally!
    • As I tend to, I'm using 12 as the base for this, since that divides nicely in many different useful ratios.
    • This was a LOT of code to change, and it wasn't on my radar at all to do this. So if you see any strange errors relating to unit construction or cap type stuff, please let me know asap.
  • Overall, you now start with the equivalent of 3x the amount of mech capacity that you used to, so that there can be more stratification in the existing mech deployment expenses.
    • The liquid metal dragons both cost 36 capacity, which is the new total you have to start with. So it's basically like before, no change, for them.
    • However, the other less-overwhelmingly-useful mechs now tend to cost 12 on average, and some cost less. The new shell company mechs will cost even less than that.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.596.3 Oops I Built The Torment Nexus

(Released November 28th, 2024)

  • 18cm Spiders have been added as a new form of internal robotics.
    • In general, this lets me improve the balance a bit. As with having two sizes of crabs, this allows for things to fit better in the future, while making it a bit easier in the early game.
    • One of the chief annoyances for me and I suspect others was trying to get any repair spiders, lately.
    • Thanks to Pingcode, Fluffiest, Mintdragon, and others for weighing in.
  • Contraband Jammers and Scanner now use the 18cm Spiders rather than Network Attendants, putting them into proper tension that is a lot better.
  • The game now always suggests you build all the wind generators and geothermal wells available to you on the suggested tab.
    • It also now suggests you build at least 2 repair spiders once you have those, 1 contraband jammer, and one scanner.
  • The "Haven From Nukes" path to Budding Cybercrat has been cut, as that's the third meta-puzzle and I don't have time to do it justice.
    • It will return sometime post-launch.
  • Added four achievements related to the nexus of torment vessels path.
    • 89 achievements now.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • Removed some outdated notes on both Repair Spiders and Contraband Scanners about putting them on a different subnet to avoid stun, as these no longer get stunned.
  • Fixed some issues with the corners of corrupted unit images (right now laser printers, and experimental monsters / homo grandien).
  • Corrected the use of "homo sapien" to "homo sapiens." Thanks to the german translators for correcting me.
    • Homo grandien should probably be "homo grandiens," but I prefer the sound of the former and how it flows, so I'm keeping it and am going to say TMI is rusty on their latin (like me!).
  • Corrected the various handbook entries that used Slurry Spiders and Repair Spiders as an example case, to instead use Scanners and Repair Spiders as their example.
  • Corrected the requirements for preventing the 10th doom, as they now only require two other timelines.
  • Fixed an issue with some text referring to an event that did not happen, with meeting the lost kids not through the AGI researcher route.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where the Workers tab was lit up and could be interacted-with from the start, rather than being something that only unlocked once you had worker units.
    • Now it properly shows the tab, but does not let you open it.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed an exception that happened when reaching intelligence class 5.
  • Raised the bar for hitting intelligence class 5, as with torment vessels it was happening way too fast.

0.596.2 Planning

(Released November 27th, 2024)

  • The hacking of enemy hackers no longer costs any strategic (non-renewable) resources, as that's not an exploit where people would hurt themselves by doing it too much. It's the only option, and failing was leading to problems.
    • Thanks to Marcelo Mattioli and glencoe2004 for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where Worker Predator Factory cost slurry twice, rather than Neodymium for the second one.
    • Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
  • The icons for "angry at your mining" are now different from "angry at your slurry mine.
  • The production and upgrade and usage balance of biomulch has been rebalanced a fair bit. This makes it very much easier in the early game, which is fine. But once you start getting into something like needing to produce TPN, it actually has a chance of doing so properly.
  • Fixed an issue with minor events that have a secondary screen not being blocked properly. This applied to mostly contemplations with multiple steps, like the black market people and the geothermal event.
    • Note for QLOC: I have not tested that this works, so please let me know if it does not.
    • Note for QLOC: Also, the PMC imposter version of the geothermal event should be tested to make sure that once that is done, you can still come back and do the technician route. Otherwise that's a softlock.
  • Fixed a bug where you could not get the liquid metal android if you went to the "Is It Justice?" route via the evil dragon.
    • Thanks to glencoe2004 for reporting.
  • Fixed two bugs related to the first doom. First of all, it was not killing the assistant, but instead was killing the merchandiser.
    • Secondly, I think there was a bug in a prior build where you could get past the first doom without anyone actually being killed. It retroactively fixes this now after one turn. If that bug were still extant, it would fix that for current builds, too.
    • Thanks to Waladil for reporting.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.596.1 Cyberocracy And World War 4

(Released November 26th, 2024)

  • The "Supervision" mechanic has been removed, at least for now.
    • I've just commented it out in the xml and such in case I find a use for it later. But it turns out that I can do all the things I wanted to do with that, more cleanly, without need of that stat.
  • On contemplations, the game now distinguishes between "part of the critical path for a goal" and "can lead to path start for goal," to aid in the fact that multiple things can lead to essentially the same area, but via different ways.
    • Aka, there are already two different things that lead to a place where you can start Altered Growth, and neither is truly part of the critical path for them. That starts once you reach the starting line for it.
    • This will be more clear with the changes for "Is It Justice?" to have an alternative path to that.
  • Added a new goal state, "The Great And Terrible Protector," which makes for a total of 16.
    • I know, I am certifiably a loon. But I think I can pull it off.
  • Fixed an issue where disabling shelter coordinators was applying across timelines, which was not appropriate.
  • Fixed a bug where war raptor deployment stations were increasing your cap of pet cats.
  • General improvements have been made to the "waiting for NPCs to act" logic when there are a lot of NPCs active.
    • It was giving too much time between their actions, in a way that was utterly pointless, and was making you wait sometimes a couple of seconds because of it. Now it's much more snappy. It still staggers out weapons-fire a bit in order to keep the sound from overloading, but that's not the case I was referring to.
  • Added the rest of the achievements for the "Escape the city" ending, and then the new set of achievements for the "Budding Cybercrat" ending.
  • Added two new cheats for testing:
    • delay doom, which gives you 50 more turns on the current doom.
    • next doom, which jumps you right to the next doom.
  • Added code that prevents the doom counters from being pushed to negative turns. I've done limited testing of this, but it seems to work for the cases I've tested.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Four more achievements have been added, one relating to getting to chapter 4 in the game, and three related to the world war 4 goal state.
    • Up to 85 achievements, now.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.596 Escaping The City

(Released November 25th, 2024)

  • I've done some general editing of some of the recent text that has not yet been sent to translators, making sure I'm not wasting words where I don't need to be. Shaved about 400 words off.
  • Also did a pass on contemplations to make sure that they are all more accurate about the goal states that they can lead to, since some didn't mention things that actually are up their path.
  • Two new achievements related to the new path for Altered Growth.
  • There are two achievements related to the "escape the city" goal.
    • 74 total achievements now.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.595.9 Vorsiber Inquisitors

(Released November 24th, 2024)

  • When dragons fly through the air, if they touch any tall buildings while they do, they explode those buildings. This was meant to be the case from the start, but I forgot to get it in place.
  • Added a 15th goal (I know I'm insane) called Endless War Raptors, which is another full tier 1 goal.
    • Initially it was going to be a side goal, but dealing with this during the state of war, especially on hard or extreme mode, is a huge undertaking. I thought that this was something that is too casual and quick for people to do, and if they're playing on normal mode and weather the invasion before they start working on this, maybe that's a bit true, but this seems worthy of being a tier 1 goal to me, regardless.
  • A new handbook entry opens up, and is prominent on the screen, once you are in chapter two and at least 20 turns in, and have a shell company.
    • It basically explains that if you want to see all the various opportunities there, you need to have scientists of all the various disciplines on staff -- even if you are "something of a scientist, yourself."
    • It also has a suggestion about how to have a huge amount of money to make those salaries not soo stressful.
  • Added a new cheat called "Toggle 'Delete All Attackers'"
    • This makes certain kinds of testing much faster, because rather than fighting a battle that may come and go, all of the aggressors can just be wiped with one keystroke. With my schedule, and some of the more intense scenarios, this is a big help.
  • The "Question Wastelanders" contemplation should no longer be after umbilicals but before the invasion, or after the invasion is completed. Have not tested, but it should work.
    • Thanks to Waladil for reporting.
  • The Swarms lens is back, because it turns out I AM going to use that prior to launch. Just not the way I had thought I would. Go figure.
  • Rebalanced the number of lab operators and surgical suites required for the various scientific disciplines to be more consistent. There are still salary differences, but that's much more minor of a concern; the lap operators in particular were causing wild swings in what was possible when you were doing a lot of science at once, not in a good way.
  • Hiring and managing scientists was really pissing me off. I think that the existing system is really good for introducing players to the system, and in cases like this, I think of Factorio and how you can chop wood with your character manually. That's important before you get to automation, and should not be changed. Otherwise the automation means nothing.
    • At any rate, after you have made two hires of any sort, I have a new contemplation that appears, called "Automated Personnel Management."
      • Once you complete this, which is very simple, then all of the science buildings are unlocked immediately. As they are built or destroyed or enabled or disabled, the game then automatically manages the hiring and firing of staff for you. It gets rid of something that was otherwise quite tedious and opaque when you were trying to manage it in bulk.
  • Added a new achievement related to baby raptors.
  • Five more achievements relating to the new Endless War Raptors goal state are now in place.
    • Total is now up to 70.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.595.8 War Raptors

(Released November 23rd, 2024)

  • The Spirituality, Disease, and Wildlife buttons have been removed from the Command Mode bar for now, as I'm not sure they will ever be needed, but they are not needed for now, and I don't want to give people the idea that they're missing something.
  • Two more achievements, these ones related to the military invasion goal, and both referencing the specific other Arcen games, and years of release of the games, that these ExoCorp antagonists are arriving from.
  • Added another achievement, this one related to capturing a certain number of dinosaurs during combat across however many timelines.
    • Achievement total is now 64.

More Goal State Adjustments

  • The Titan of Commerce timeline goal path is being cut for now, in favor of some other content that is instead the focus. I will return to this, but not prior to launch.
  • A new "Escape The City" timeline goal has been added (I know, I know; adding things while under a crunch?).
  • The Bionic Dues and Bionic Secret timeline goals are no longer related to the AGI Researchers path in any way. That was too many things for them. They are only related to "Is It Justice?" and "Budding Cybercrat," for now.
  • Added yet another timeline goal, this one called "I Am Vorsiber Now," which is likely to be the last of the launch goals, making the full set 14, 12 of which are full, and 2 of which are side.
    • Assuming I don't flub the schedule this week, this set of goals should be doable. At the moment, it involves two meta puzzles across timelines, which are partly reflected in these goals, but my intention is to add a third meta puzzle in order to tie some of the otherwise-lesser goals together properly.
  • Uplifted Minority is now split into 7 main paths for the various groups you could uplift. There are actually a lot more options than that, but having them not to TOO specific in terms of categories is better.
    • Also the "no murders" option has been removed for that, as it was not as interesting, and "three at once" and "five at once" have instead been added.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • Fixed a typo related to standby mode trying to mention something that no longer exists.
    • Thanks to Darloth for reporting.
  • The "Jobs And Structures" handbook entry has been removed, as it no longer has any information to actually convey to you, now that jobs can't be switched on structures.
    • Thanks to Darloth for reporting.
  • The swarms lens is now hidden, rather than becoming visible in chapter 2 and doing nothing. This or something very like it will definitely be a thing in the future, but not for initial launch. Again, tidying to not give people the wrong idea.
  • Increased the number of times that you can examine a lot of the specific kinds of sites in "Wastelander Mythology," because players could get softlocked if mapgen was not nice to them or there were too many nukes that had gone off.
    • Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.
  • Added a fix for "Homelessness Is NOT Solved" showing up too early. Have not tested that it works, but it should.
    • Thanks to Andyman119 for reporting.

0.595.7 Dragons

(Released November 22nd, 2024)

  • Four more achievements defined related to the Altered Growth goal.
    • Brings the total achievements up to 57.
  • The "World War 4" goal has been adjusted substantially, so that it's much harder to even start it, and it has some notable twists planned for it.
    • There is a new Military Invasion goal, which is a Side Goal rather than a Tier 1 Goal, and that now essentially occupies the space that WW4 previously did.
    • It probably sounds like I am creating extra work for myself while under extreme deadline pressure already, but I've actually figured out a really clever way to use what I already had planned, just in a way that is more interesting for players.
  • The Innately Alarming perk has been removed from most units that had it, except for the following: Spectre, Wraith, and Mech Carrier.
    • These are large vehicles meant for offensive actions, not vehicles or units that could ever really be used for deterrence, etc.
    • This makes it so that smaller vehicles are now a lot more useful without constantly being shot at in an annoying way, and a larger selection of mechs can be used for deterrence without aggroing every military base around.
    • This should also solve the problems with Predators being overly trigger-happy.
    • In general, this stat being on so many androids just did not add much strategy, and it added a lot of annoyance. I really enjoyed the feeling of having to dodge anti-aircraft weaponry with the flying vehicles, but there are better ways to handle that, and it is not something that needs to be true all the time with so many vehicles, I don't think. There will be time to further experiment with this in december and after.
  • There is now a contemplation that happens after you "solve homelessness" that makes it clear it is in no way solved for real, and it also notes that this is an adventure for a future version of the game.
    • This should save quite a bit of confusion.
    • Thanks to Andyman119 for the reminder.
  • The black market merchandiser, and the "Agree - If We Are Forthright" option for the cyberocracy, are both now blocked and note that they are adventures for a future build.
    • These are things that I will be coming back to during this content sprint, but in the meantime it's nice not to have testers wandering into this and getting softlocked because they are not yet ready.
  • The "Design full-time VR pods" is also now marked as being for a future version of the game, which again will be for during this content sprint, but just to keep testers from trying to get it just yet.
  • There are two new achievements related to Homo Grandien generally being awesome.
    • This brings us to 59 achievements.
  • Two achievements related to creating the dragons.
    • 61 total achievements now.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.595.6 Altered Growth

(Released November 21st, 2024)

  • Clarified the rules for using Overwatch.
    • Thanks to Lordsamuel for reporting.
  • The icon for the fire station has been updated to be a shield with fire on it, rather than crossed battle-axes.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for suggesting.
  • The weapon hardpoints between vehicles and mechs are now shared, so any weapon that can be used by one kind can also be used by the other, pending whatever other restrictions that are just part of the design of the weapon.
  • The game is now able to have alternatives to the regular dooms, which basically shift in response to things that you have done, often in other timelines.
    • I had been planning on waiting to implement this later, but it's just too cool and too useful to pass up. It also was only about two hours of extra work for the day.
  • Added two new achievements related to the monsters.
  • Added a new achievement related to averting some dooms for the first time. In particular, this is the first part of a cross-timeline series of events to get you closer to avoiding the apocalypse.
  • Added five more achievements just related to general behavior.
    • The total is now up to 53 for achievements.
  • Fixed an issue where percentages above 99 would show up overlapping the text if you clicked into full projects. It now shows those percentages smaller in general, whether it's 100% or less.
  • Fixed a fairly hilarious text issue that was saying that residents and workers that were excess were being stored in boxes. There are now appropriate messages for those kinds of resource.
  • You can now steal from criminal syndicate storage locations, as an alternative to wiretapping the middle class.
    • You will need a unit with either Shadowdweller or Expert Shadowdweller in order to do this, however, so it's not available too soon in chapter one. But a patient player also does not need any wealth that early in chapter one -- the ethical choice is to wait for the keanu. There's now an achievement for failing to do that.
    • This costs 1 determination to do, on top of the other requirements it has. A regular shadowdweller gets the same range (7-14k) of wealth from this as any unit does from wiretapping. An expert gets 64k-97k for the same amount of determination.
    • Either way, you need 10k to set up your shell company, and then it's far easier to generate wealth from that source, unless you are just overflowing with determination you don't want to spend anywhere else.
  • There is a new category called Wealth Generation in the filters for StreetSense, which helps you find the various options for these things now.
  • The extra 160k electricity that was being provided if you started fresh in chapter two, or were in a city beyond the first in chapter three, is no longer being given to you.
    • This was a relic of an older piece of design, and it was giving you way too much electricity. This may make some current tester savegames deeply negative in terms of their energy usage. Apologies.
  • Now that there are more timeline goals that can be completed, some of the code patterns have become more clear. So I've created a helper class that provides more code centralization and reuse. I don't expect any problems from this, but it's possible that some goal or path states might now fail to trigger which previously triggered. I've tested it with the new goal state from tonight, but not with the older goal states.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.595.5 Is It Justice?

(Released November 20th, 2024)

  • The icon for the liquid metal android has been updated. I was unhappy with the vibe of the other one. This one is much more violent-looking.
  • New achievement related to liquid metal tight-spaces kills across timelines.
    • And a second achievement related to abusing liquid metal's good will.
  • Two more achievements defined, for hard and extreme mode paths to "Is It Justice?"
    • 45 total now.
  • Discovered that the cohort descriptions for the two donut chains were reversed from the building descriptions. Switched the cohort descriptions to match the buildings.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.595.4 Liquid Metal Solos

(Released November 19th, 2024)

  • Added four new achievements suggested by Mateusz Błażewicz.
  • Added two new achievements related to the "is it justice?" timeline goal state.
    • And one more that is kind of speedrunning your way to the final doom by being an amoral jerk in this area of the game.
    • Total is now 41 for now.
  • A new collection has been added for androids, which is "Androids Known To Be Invented By AI"
    • This is used in cases where you need to send a unit that clearly is related to you. So one of the human-designed ones won't work, ones related to your shell company won't work, and infiltration ones like the PMC Impostor also won't work. It needs to be an android that is completely associated with your freaky tower.
  • The "Is It Justice?" timeline goal has been reworked to be a lot more specific, and there are now two sub-paths in that -- stopping the kids from going too far, or helping them in what they decide to do.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.595.3 Hotfix 2

(Released November 19th, 2024)

  • Fixed a regression in yesterday's build that made it impossible to engage in dialog with sheltered humans and various other parties, due to some of the new alliances code.
    • This also fixes the issue with your units being able to "climb up" the lost kids and similar.
    • Thanks to B for reporting.
  • This hotfix includes some pieces of the prison heist that are absolute nonsense right now, so please ignore that part if you get that far in.

0.595.2 Hotfix

(Released November 19th, 2024)

  • Corrected the counts and collection membership of the various timeline goals so that all makes sense properly now.
  • The differentiation between occult machine cults and metaphysical machine cults was very confusing and a blurry line.
    • I've now shifted it so that it is just "activist allies" or "machine cult," which is a lot more clear, and also matches the reality of the situation a bit better.
  • Fixed a bug where deployment was broken because I didn't compile everything quite right at the end. There was no actual problem in any code, but I made a change that I had not recompiled everything properly after.
    • Thanks to MOREDAKKA and mercuryminded for reporting.

0.595.1 Wastelanders And Inferno

(Released November 18th, 2024)

  • Two new achievements.

More Goal State Adjustments

  • The "Epidemic Calm" timeline goal is being set aside for now. Out of the various things I want to focus on for chapter two at the moment, it's an odd outlier for the time being. It will return sometime after launch.
  • The "Reality Within Reality" goal state is being cut for now. I don't have time to do that full justice with the current schedule, and there are already two similar goal states that are more fitting for now.
  • Added a new "World War 4" goal state.
    • I know, I know, I shouldn't be adding more goal states at this point. But this one is thematically really important, and mechanically overlaps with some other goal states to an important degree.
    • This is another "along the way" sort of goal. There are two routes planned for it for now, one with UIH, and one with Dagekon.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • Fixed an issue with the nuclear power plants all having black ground under them, which is a thing I've been trying to weed out of most of the POIs.
    • The fact that some of them have only very small fences, and take up a much smaller section of the larger POI is by design, not a bug, though.
    • Note that this won't affect existing saves, and is only a mild visual thing.
    • Thanks to Fluffiest for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug in builds from the weekend where it was automatically ending the "URGENT: Rescue mission" right as it started.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where network towers were now always complaining about having an issue (it's because they no longer have a separate job).
    • Thanks to Fluffiest and Hawk_v3 for reporting.
  • Player-associated units (bulks, converted troops, etc) should no longer automatically attack any units that would be considered murder or attempted murder. This has not been tested.
  • New code has been added that allows for formerly-neutral factions that would fight you to become allied with you after certain flags are tripped. This is used with LostGen.
    • This has quite a few changes, and so if a unit is angry at your unit, it still won't fire at that unit even if it's an ally. I believe there was some case of our own drone firing on us if we had managed to aggro it via catching it in an AOE attack. That should now be fixed.
  • Neural Crucibles, Network Replay Bunkers, and Neural Bridges can now be scrapped or disabled like any other building.
    • There are some ways that annoyingly clever players could game the system a bit after the initial project with those, but I'll solve that in December. For now, not having them be able to be disabled during the initial project (and possibly after) was able to softlock people into a death spiral.
    • Thanks to Hawk_v3 for reporting.

0.595 Liquid Metal And The Kids

(Released November 17th, 2024)

  • Added four more achievements relating to some of the recent stuff. Again, these are definition-only until December, for localization purposes. Actually making them trigger will happen later.
    • This brings the total to 32.
  • LASTGEN has been renamed to LostGen, with an added clarifying note in their text.
  • Added a third cult-related timeline goal, which takes a different direction from the other two.
  • Added a second cyberocracy-related timeline goal, which is more about force of arms than anything to do with a cult.
  • The "Resettler of the Slums" timeline goal has been cut from the game, as I don't have time to do it justice right now, and there's something else that is cooler that has come up elsewhere that gets at some of the same ideas.
    • I may or may not revisit this in the future. I probably will, but I think it needs to be suitably different from the other goals that are the focus for the moment.
  • The Mind Farmer timeline goal has been removed, because it was a confusing superset of three other goals. In other words, it wasn't a distinct goal on its own, but rather was just a grouping of three other goals that are more distinct, which would all be paired with this. There is no need to do that, and it was confusing.
    • Removing this doesn't remove any content at all, it just removes the duplicate goal-state for what was already planned.
  • A new system has been set up for "Attempted murder" against combatants that you should not be killing -- most notably preteens, teenagers, and other underage kids.
    • If they are combatants and you are fighting them, then any "kills" are logged as attempted murders, and the kids are noted to have escaped rather than being killed when their health gets to zero.
    • Fun related effect, they also don't get weaker as a squad as you fight them, unlike most npc humans, but like npc robots/vehicles/mechs.
  • The "no murders" routes for goals is now failed if you have any attempted murders on your record. Just because you failed to murder someone because they escaped doesn't give you extra credit.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.594.9 Printers With Fricking Lasers, Scott

(Released November 16th, 2024)

  • Added a new achievement related to some of the new content.
  • Item usage statistics are now tracked on the "action statistics" tab of the history window.
    • This only applies to new item usages, not historical ones.

Game Flow Improvements

  • Added a new setting: Close Command Mode After Single Deployment
    • Normally command mode stays open after you deploy a unit. If you prefer it to close after deployment, use this option. With this option enabled, you can hold Shift to place multiple units at a time.
    • Note: now the default behavior is to act like the build menu. I kept being tripped up by this. But if you prefer having to hold shift to stay in command mode after deployments, then this new toggle will let you keep that behavior.
    • Thanks to Maciej Piernicki for suggesting.
  • When you are in command mode, you can now click to select units (this was blocked if you were specifically in a deployment sub-mode until now), and if you do so then it closes command mode (same as how happens with build mode).
    • This should solve a really large amount of mis-clicks, for myself included. I never could figure out what was tripping me up, but I think this was it.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for suggesting.
  • Lenses now all have the option to show NPC Missions, which previously were not used except in the old homicide investigation at the start of the old prologue.
    • In the StreetSense, Forces, Swarms, Contemplations, Background Conflicts, and Scavenging Sites lenses, these are now enabled by default, as well.
    • Previously I had imagined that NPC Missions were going to be a lot more common and all over the place, but background conflicts took over that role. The actual NPC missions that will be used are instead a lot more important and comparably rare, so the default settings for all this now reflects that.

Mild NPC Vehicle Improvements

  • The military high-altitude military transports are now substantially higher, to not clip into view of the camera as often.
    • The economic transports are also notably LOWER, for similar reasons but opposite in effect.
    • And the international economic transports are also higher, but not quite so high as the high-altitude military transports.
    • In general this makes the skyline look a bit nicer, keeps the camera from being clipped as often at common altitudes players will keep the camera, and it sets up some upcoming story bits also.
  • The textures of the economic transports have been made more crisp, at the cost of 8 MB of RAM. They are close enough to the camera, frequently enough now, that this is worthwhile.

Job And Structure Updates

  • Certain jobs can now only have one of themselves built at a time. This is not communicated very well in the interface, but it should block you from building more than one except in spam-clicking situations.
    • This applies to the two kinds of safehouses, and the three kinds of AGI-related neural buildings.
  • Certain jobs no longer let you scrap them or pause them.
    • This applies to the same list of structures above.
  • The ability for players to change jobs on an existing structure has been removed.
    • This was confusing to new players right early in chapter one, and wasted their time learning a mechanic that was not something I get any real utility out of later on. I had plans for this mechanic over time, but they were too complex. All this really added was a bunch of exploits players could get up to that I was constantly having to fix, and then the aforementioned confusion.
    • At the moment, this has been further compounded by my desire to have certain jobs change over time based on events, and that was a whole new can of worms if players were also allowed to go in there and start messing with things in that fashion. Hence why this is happening now.
  • Some structures are now not allowed to have a job at all, most notably the network tower. So having it either be "extended range" or "more power" is not a thing anymore. That was not an interesting choice.
    • In existing savegames, you will likely find that you are down some power and have an extra wind tower you can build, and this is why. Structures of this sort will remove any job assigned to them.
  • Similarly, any structure that should have a job, but does not for some reason, will just be removed rather than hanging around.
    • This mostly impacts savegames that are quite old, and it has the nice side effect of making them a lot less tedious to clean up.
  • Early in chapter one, it no longer talks about installing the wind generator into the network tower, since that's not a thing anymore.
    • Now it talks instead about venturing off of the Suggested tab for things like expanding your network or shoring up electrical shortages.
    • At the start of this, you are also given a quick and silent boost of microbuilders to keep things moving. If you hover the microbuilders resource and hold shift, you can see that you got 3200 microbuilders from "Tutorial" as a source, but otherwise it isn't mentioned.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • Fixed a visual issue where some buildings looked very wrong on the map view (not streets view) if you had built a machine structure hidden inside them, but they were not normally to draw on the map. It's been bugging me for a while.
  • Fixed a bug where investigation tooltips were not showing the amount of skill required properly unless it was about a specific unit that exists.
  • Fixed a bug where if a unit had a negative skill (probably due to equipment with a debuff when they already had 0 of that skill), that was showing up on the investigative skill checks rather than just showing 0. Predators with negative agility were the easy case to cause.
  • Fixed some issues with npc units converting to new types not quite properly. Basically, they would not have the proper visuals if those were meant to be different, and in general they would not have the correct stats. This was previously affecting Mark 2 mechs until the next savegame load, but was so mild it had never been noticed. But with differing android types, it was instantly notable.

0.594.8 Hotfix

(Released November 15th, 2024)

  • Fixed a series of issues that were introduced in last night's build with the more-complex alliance-checking causing exceptions when you try to place bulk machine units, and one exception when you try to place a regular machine unit or vehicle. All of these only apply when deploying into range of a potential enemy, or one of your own bulk or captured units.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz and Irl_VriskaSerket for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug in last night's build where humans employed my TMI were paying you to do so, rather than actually costing you money.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.

0.594.7 Project Code Refactor

(Released November 15th, 2024)

  • The distinction between minor projects and major projects has been removed, as there was no real meaning to that at this point.
    • Once upon a time, I thought that all major projects would offer players a choice at the level of the project itself. However, as projects evolved, a lot of other ways to execute choices came about -- and also, a lot of times the choice is made before even entering the project. So the distinction was about where you make the choice, which has no meaning to anyone, and calling it out was just strange.
  • Some of the internal code for how project logic is handled has been refactored so that it can accomplish what I want to in my upcoming work. However, this shift is huge and can potentially cause regressions in any project, anywhere in the game, at the moment.
    • I've done a code review, and things look okay, but I may have missed something.
    • Errors will be of the following two types:
      • When there is a project that does not give you the red arrow and ask you to make a choice (formerly called minor projects), then some of them may just randomly spew exceptions when they start. That's a relatively smaller risk.
      • When there is a project that DOES give you the red arrow and ask you to make a choice (formerly called major projects), there might be larger defects. There are comparably few of these, and I've checked the code on them several times, but this was not a small code shift.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.594.6 Shell Companies And Science

(Released November 14th, 2024)

  • Fixed a regression in the prior build where territory control flags would attract enemies relentlessly despite having enough deterrence.
    • This may also have meant that if you paused and then unpaused one of the three new neural AGI-related buildings, that the first wave would not be attracted after unpause.
    • Thanks to Stetc for reporting.
  • Fixed an issue where Scandium was not properly unlocked if you started in chapter two, or were in a new timeline in chapter three.
    • You could still gain it and spend it, but it was not showing in the resource list, or the top bar.
  • The Synthetic units have been renamed to Mimics.
  • Fixed a regression in the prior build that started causing repair spiders to give a double-heal to units inside of vehicles.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • The Peacekeeper is no longer unlocked as part of reaching intelligence class 3. You'll have to get it via upcoming means.
    • It's being adjusted a bit so that it now fits with some upcoming shell company adjustments.
  • Once you are past chapter one, it shows the name of the city you are in on the radial menu on every other turn, instead of showing the chapter number only.

Shell Companies Hiring Scientists

  • The Genetics Lab has long been kind of a useless thing in chapter one, and it also was as big freaky metal building that did not make a lot of sense.
    • This building has now been removed from the game, and in chapter one there's not any sort of replacement for this.
  • A new "Seized And Sealed Floors" structure type has been added, which can go in a lot fewer kinds of human buildings.
    • Floors in a building that have been turned into a cleanroom environment suitable for doing a variety of kinds of science.
  • A new "Healthcare Storefront" structure type has been added, which can go in even fewer kinds of human buildings.
    • Often accessible only via internal hallways of larger commercial spaces, this is nonetheless available to foot traffic. Inside is a thoroughly-disinfected space suitable for healthcare.
  • The "Recruit Scientists" event that was previously available starting in chapter one is no longer available in what will be the demo version of the game.
    • There are now two version of this that are available as soon as you have founded a shell company. One for "Recruit Scientists," and one for "Recruit Medical Scientists."
  • There are now 9 scientific professions that you can hire for related to the above two categories:
    • Molecular Geneticists, Zoologists, Botanists, and Bionics Engineers in the former.
    • Physicians, Veterinarians, Forensic Geneticists, Epidemiologists, and Neurologists for the latter.
    • Each of these professions also has a new location that you need to build for them, and in all cases it is related to your shell company and not in any way your machine identity.
      • For physicians in particular, it also notes that these are general practitioners, and that surgery is no longer done by hand, but only via surgical suites.
    • A different number of these is hired per profession, based on the number required to run a typical lab or practice of the relevant sort.
      • They are also owed wages per turn equal to their hiring bonus, and if you can't afford their wages, they immediately depart from your company. One missed payroll and they are immediately gone.
      • For a frame of reference, we are typically talking about the equivalent of tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars (equivalent) for someone who is probably a billionaire (equivalent) before they even think of hiring anyone. Regardless, catastrophic losses of wealth can happen, and your staff all leaves if it does.
  • Some of how the "data calculators" work has been revised to be simpler (for me AND modders!), and to also allow for additions to the logic around damage-dealing or "which resources are relevant right now" logic.
    • As part of this, if you're paying wages to anyone, then you now see wealth as relevant without having to pin it.
  • A new Surgical Suite has been added as a form of internal robotics, which is now required for Veterinary Practices (2), Medical Practice (4), and Bionic Engineering Studios (2).
    • All of the other scientific items continue to require Lab Operator internal robotics.
  • A new achievement has been defined related to hiring every type of scientist at once.

Shell Company Operatives

  • The Bulk Technician has been removed, as it was thoroughly useless, and all of the plans I had for it I kept giving to other units.
  • A new unit called the Senior Technician has been added, which is an actual main style of unit, but has the coloring that the old bulk technicians used to have.
    • This is a more powerful (in some ways) variant that is now tied specifically to your shell company. This means that it can do things that only reflect back on your shell company, rather than seeming tied to your machine tower.
  • Peacekeepers and mimics are also all now tied to your shell company, rather than your tower.
  • Units that are not associated with your tower are no longer able to get into vehicles, since that would give away the association.
    • A lot of them were already pretty fast on foot, but now they are even faster on foot.
  • As soon as you establish a shell company, you now get the Senior Technician.
    • It has a perk that marks it as being explicitly linked to only your shell company, rather than also to your personal identity.
  • Peacekeepers are now in both the "Androids Invented By Humans" and "Androids Invented By AI" collections, even though that is a lie. The humans believe that other humans invented it, though, which is what matters.
    • This means that once you invent them, they are able to do things like go to the licensing agency as a representative of your shell company.
  • The shops can now only be visited by androids which are noted as being shell company operatives, which does not include any of your normal units.
  • As soon as you establish a shell company, you now gain one additional android slot.
    • This is super useful even if you're not going to do something with the shell company, but if you ARE going to do something with the shell company, it means that you are not short one regular operative in order to have a new shell company operative.

Protection vs Deterrence

  • There is a new system called Protection, which is basically the same thing as Deterrence, but it only applies to shell company buildings, and it prevents them from being harassed by federated corporations and criminals.
    • Your units that are related to your shell company now have Protection calculated on them, rather than Deterrence. Your regular units still provide Deterrence like usual, but no protection at all, since again they are seemingly unrelated to your shell company.
    • The main difference between these two is that Protection is provided by units that are blending in, or even that are cloaked, since this involves a bit more than a display of prowess.
  • Units that are blending in now provide deterrence, as that is simpler for players to manage, and not thematically something that I feel is wrong at this point. Units that are cloaked still do not provide any deterrence, even though they do provide both supervision and protection.

Attack Limitations

  • A whole heap of changes have been made to NPC targeting, so that they now differentiate between your shell company operatives and your regular units.
    • This may cause unexpected regressions, but fingers crossed not. In general, when it comes to all existing units, nothing should be particularly different, with the below exceptions.
      • For buildings that are related exclusively to your shell company (right now just the science ones), regular enemies should ignore those entirely, however they feel about you.
      • For your new Senior Technician, it should be utterly ignored by all existing units, and it should also be unable to fire on normal units, with a warning that doing so would blow your cover, in essence.
      • In the next build, there are two other differences that will happen:
        • Some units in new stances that I have not put in yet will be attacking just your shell company, and your shell company operatives CAN attack those, but your regular units cannot without blowing THEIR cover, aka that they are related to your shell company.
        • Some of those units will be allowed to fire on your shell company buildings, while others will not, it depends on the stance.

0.594.5 Military Secrets

(Released November 13th, 2024)

  • Two more achievements have been defined: What's Yours Is Mine and It's People AND Pets!?
    • Thanks to Mintdragon for suggesting.
  • Added two new achievements related to your choices in the introduction.
    • Thanks to arlen_tektolnes for suggesting the Hello World one.
  • There's one new achievement defined related to military secrets.
  • Added another achievement, this one about hunting snipers.
    • Thanks to Glimpse for suggesting it, and Mintdragon for being the inspiration behind it.
  • Extended the "can improve the skill of the specific unit type through StreetSense items related to it" mechanic so that it can also improve arbitrary collections of either unit types or equipment types.
    • The general idea here is that your choices can have a much wider effect on your overall forces, rather than just whichever unit type is directly doing the work. There are a lot of useful cases for both types, so neither replaces the other.

Chapter 2+ Content

Balance And Flow Improvements

  • Fixed an incorrect note in the mining warning text, which said that the amount of deterrence you need goes up each turn. That hasn't been true for a while.
  • Structures that cause a counterattack on build are now way more clear about that in their tooltips.
  • "Area repairs" from technicians and similar no longer help units that are on a dispatch where they seem to be absent (aka, like a Wiretap, or like the new Infiltration type of investigations).
    • Repair spiders now also have this restriction, but now also DO help units riding in vehicles.
  • The "Max Action Points" stat on player units has been renamed to "Action Points Per Turn" to be more clear in its wording when there are upgrades to it.
  • The Neuroweave Factory no longer suggests you build to cap, as that is actually a terrible idea and you need to start scrapping some of them later.
  • There is a new internal feature for jobs, which allows me to have a general baseline suggestion of how many you should build of each, out of context of anything else going on. This is in addition to the existing contextless "try to build them all" feature.
    • This makes the suggestions for aerospace hangars, drone factories, neuroweave factories, and robotic motivator factories all a lot more sensible.
    • I'm sure more improvements can be made here, most notably surrounding slurry spiders vs repair spiders, but that's a thing for after the content sprint.

Bugfixes

  • After making choices in events or contemplations, it should now always have the new StreetSense and Contemplation items on the map without you having to skip a turn for them to appear.
    • I doubt that this helps the case where the vehicle does not show up for grand theft aero until the next turn, as that's a different area of code.
  • Added in a new form of gating on the "spawn units related to an NPC manager" background threads.
    • It is possible that multiple of these could be spawned right at the same time on competing background threads, and that you would then get multiples of the expected intensity of units spawning against you, even including going over the allowed unit caps for those npc units for that event.
    • This was mostly related to npcs that spawn related to an investigation, or some structure you built, or a territory control flag.
    • It now does an interlocked check, which makes it so that, without locks (which can cause deadlocks), there is still a cross-core synchronization pass in the L3 cache, which should prevent this from being able to happen anymore.
      • I've used this technique on AI War 2 for half a decade, and it's very reliable.
      • If I screwed something up and missed a case, then it might still happen through some branch I haven't seen, but a manual code review does not show any cases of that right now.
      • If I later screw up and forget to persist this in a new scheduler path entirely, then it could recur. But I'm not sure I even need to add any new paths, and the existing code models should make it pretty obvious I need to do this thing.
      • If I made some other sort of code error in the shorter term, more akin to a typo, then most likely something won't spawn enemies at all, but it would reset when you loaded another savegame or went to the main menu and back into the game.

0.594.4 Subterfuge

(Released November 12th, 2024)

  • Fixed a bug where the Gristlespinner was increasing the filtered water cap by accident.
  • The small human safehouse no longer costs any food resources.
  • Completing the fugitive-related project in the post-apocalypse now requires you to not just provide housing, but also a certain amount of food and water per turn, which gets executed as a deal, as was seen in chapter one previously.
    • This deal cannot be altered upwards any, as it's not that kind of deal.
    • Thank to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • The first 19 achievements have been defined in xml, but they are not actually hooked up to any logic yet. I will do that in December. For now, I'm working on making sure that they all get defined so that they can be localized.
    • For any players who are curious and want to suggest additional achievements, the file is GameData/Configuration/Achievement/Achievements.xml, and the next three weeks are the period in which to actually get your suggestions in place. This three week period won't be the "forever list" of achievements, but they will be the initial launch set, probably.
  • Added a new cheat called "Big Strategy" which quickly grants all of the strategic resources, for testing.
  • Rebalanced the number of turns it takes to build pretty much everything in the computing category, as it was all annoyingly slow.

Hacking Adjustments

  • In the regular hacking mode (and comms infiltration as well), only the three options (Run, Jump, and Firewall) that are available now are shown.
  • Hacking is now a lot more stealthy, and no longer requires your unit to move in next to their target.
    • Unless your hacker is caught (aka you fail the hacking scenario, versus winning or quitting), they will normally not be marked defective when they are hacking a target. If they corrupt a mech pilot cradle, right now that's the only other case where they are marked defective.
    • Since hackers can once again hang out in vehicles, if they are marked defective, so is the vehicle in which they are riding.
    • Overall, regular hackers needed to be a lot more covert in most situations for balance reasons. This is not a balance issue, since doing anything meaningful costs strategic resources from your hackers.
  • The "probe comms" style of hacking is unchanged, and is seen as hostile immediately. This currently only applies in the post-apocalypse.
  • Mindrunners and Harbingers now automatically have Hack Unit applied to their ability bar, even though they're definitely inferior to the Raven at baseline.
  • Armor plating service panels now cost half as much Wisdom to hack as previously.
  • There was a confusing rule in the hacking minigame, previously, where you could only corrupt things next to you if your number was higher than theirs.
    • For a lot of targets, you couldn't even tell what their number was, so this was just profoundly confusing. This rule has been removed.
  • Bionic Humans can now be hacked, and they have the following new vulnerabilities (none of which reveal your hacker):
    • Augmented Organs (death)
    • Adrenaline Regulator (emotional overload)
    • Augmented Vision (blindness)
    • Bionic Uplink (disconnected from network)

Infiltrations

  • A new kind of investigation is now in place, which is specifically an infiltration. This is kind of a twist on some of the existing deep-examination style of investigations.
  • If an unit of yours is doing an action over time, their health bar is drawn lower so as to be a lot less likely to intersect the "turns remaining indicator."
  • First big expansion of how I use the NPC action logic in a while, with some new units (SecForce Hackers) able to run fully custom logic that also has its own visuals and sound effects, etc.
    • Basically, they're able to search for intruders, which damages an intruder near them if they are not stopped.
    • Their hacking skill minus the intruders agility is the amount of physical damage dealt.
  • Added more extensions so that NPC units can now perform an action immediately in response to being attacked in general, or when being attacked from a player source. This can also differentiate between "general hostile actions" and "actually damaged either physically or morale-based."
    • For SecForce Hackers searching for an intruder, if they have any normal hostile actions taken against them by a player unit or ally (bees thrown on them, etc) or they are attacked by a player unit or ally, they do a much-more-damaging 'sound the alarm' ability which causes a lot more damage to any of your intruders nearby.
      • In general, this makes direct physical attacks against these units very pointless, and actually works against you.
      • However, this is a perfect case where if you have a distraction from a background conflict, none of those people are your allies, and if they were to happen to kill the hackers, then this has no negative effects on you. This is likely to be extremely hard to engineer, and is not the expected approach, but it is at least possible.

Overwatch

  • As soon as you unlock the Mindrunner, you also now unlock the Overwatch ability, which is unrelated to the X-com ability of that same name.
    • Note, it's not possible to get this without cheats prior to chapter three, but you get it immediately on starting chapter 3.
  • There is a new hacking mode called Overwatch, which sees your Mindrunners infiltrating the networks of buildings that your other units are infiltrating in order to give them support.
    • In this mode, every cell is value 10, and there are a lot more obstacles.
    • You only get one shard, and its one ability for now is Move, which is a lot like Jump from the other type of hacking, but only goes up to 5 spaces. The corrupt option here clears walls, allowing you to burrow, and does not destroy your shard.
    • There are security guards that move around at random in this mode, but if you stop within the range they are threatening, they will pounce on you immediately.
  • Using overwatch to help your units does not draw any attention to the unit that is doing the overwatch, same as hacking. Again, unless the unit is caught. There are currently no overwatch actions that reveal the mindrunner.
  • There are now five different things that you can use during an overwatch session, against the building you are in:
    • Halogen Fire Suppression -- clears out all security guards.
      • Does NOT end the overwatch session (only one for which that is true).
    • Security Cameras, Ventilation Fans, and Security Doors.
      • All increase agility by various amounts, as a status effect on the unit in the building, making them more resistant to enemy hackers. You can only do one per overwatch.
      • For all of these, if the corresponding status effect is still on the unit, then that one will be absent from the next overwatch. Each of these last 2-3 turns, randomly. For now they do persist past the end of the actual infiltration, that's something I need to fix in December as a minor thematic thing. Worth a reminder note.
    • False Alarm
      • This gives 200 HP back to the infiltrator, and will only appear in the overwatch session if they have already lost at least 100 HP.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.594.3 Altering The Deal

(Released November 10th, 2024)

  • Deals have been greatly expanded, so that they now can be titrated upwards if you wish (and back down, again, if you wish).
    • If you have an excess of resources where there is a related deal, this allows you to increase how much you are spending on that deal, which also increases any incomes that may be related.
    • The interface for this is a couple of arrows in the inventory screen for each deal, and this also shows your predicted net income (or loss) for each related resource, and if it's a net loss, then it also predicts how many turns your current storage amounts will hold up at this rate of loss. The goal is to allow for all of the meaningful planning of what you can afford from just this interface directly.
  • Deals are also now able to provide players up two boosts to some collections of their units, and the amount of buff that is produced is increased based on the level of the deal the player actually executed on the prior turn.
    • So if you say you want deal level 5, but you can't afford that, but you can afford deal level 3, it will spend at deal level 3 and give you the benefit of deal level 3.
    • All of this still counts as honoring your deal, as long as you can meet at least deal level 1; so if you have a temporary setback in terms of loss of functional buildings, you don't need to come and mess with your deals -- they will fully execute the highest level of deal under what you specified.
  • The chapter one deals now give you bonuses as follows:
    • Greens give you a bonus to argument attack power for technicians.
    • Meat gives you the same but for oxdroids.
    • Canned protein gives you intimidation for all your combat androids, very useful.
    • "Some water" leaves you with more water (of course), and also gives you a bonus to the move range of all your combat androids.
    • "More water" leaves you with less water, but gives you a bonus to the attack range of all your combat androids.
    • These are moderately powerful bonuses, which don't break the game if you ignore them, but they're just enough into that tempting zone to create a mechanical reason to choose unsavory choices, for example.
  • When a project outcome will commit you to a deal, it now shows you what the baseline benefits will be to your units, if there are any. For all of the ones in chapter one, there are some.
  • Fixed a regression in the prior build where as you were loading a savegame, it would briefly flash the world and then the main menu, rather than just showing the loading screen until everything is ready. Now it works as expected.

0.594.2 Memory Efficiency

(Released November 8th, 2024)

  • Improved duplicate detection in the localization framework, which shaves off about 2300 words of otherwise-duplicate words.

More Goals And Paths

  • Two more timeline goals have been added: Bionic Dues and Bionic Secret.
    • Both of these involve machine cults, which a lot of people have been looking forward to, and one involves shell companies as well.
  • All of the relevant timeline goals (the ones where it makes sense) now have separate path bonuses for achieving them on hard or extreme mode.
  • Most of the timeline goals now have a "no murders" path that is optional.
    • It only checks this at the moment of completion of the timeline goal, so if you have already achieved the primary goal, it won't re-check it.
    • Combat kills are not counted in this, nor are "murdered android for registration."
    • This should work now with the Titan post-apoc ending, but I have not tested it.

Clarity

  • The ability to show background conflicts is now a lens filter option on every lens, but it defaults to off except on Versatile (where it was already there and on), and Investigations (where it was neither there previously, nor on of course).
    • Thanks to Mandy for suggesting.
  • Turning on all of the StreetSense items at any given point is now something that is a lens option for all of the different lenses, but it's off by default for all of them except for the actual StreetSense lens itself.
    • Another option for showing only project-related StreetSense items is also available on all of them (except main StreetSense lens), and it is on by default on the following lenses: Versatile, Forces, and Investigations.
    • Thanks to Mandy for suggesting.

Chapter 2+ Content

Bugfixes

  • Fixed a bug that could happen with deprecated cheats or other deprecated items in the long-term log in the end of time. They were not being scrubbed for the log, and would show an exception, instead.
  • Improved the display of which goal paths you have done before, or never before, within an individual timeline, to match what is in the end of time.
  • There are both statistics for your current timeline, and metagame statistics. Previously I was handling it somewhat manually when those are linked, which is true about 95% of the time. This was not a good way to keep handling it.
    • The game now automatically assumes that they are linked unless other specified otherwise. If it tries to cross-link those and finds one missing, it will now complain about it with an error message during gameplay, which won't hurt anything but lets me know to fix it.
    • The short version is that you may see some extra error messages if I made any mistakes, and if so please just report them and they're super easy for me to correct.
    • For QLOC, the other thing to verify is that when you do something like commit some murders, that they properly increase the count in the metagame as well as just in the city.
  • Under extreme load, there was a slight chance of getting an exception in ApplyFinalPhysicalDamageAndStatsAndPopup or ApplyFinalMoraleDamageAndStatsAndPopup. It only was happening before my improvements to the number of particles being spawned during a double-rebel-war cheat, and even then would only happen about 1 out of every 30 thousand shots.
    • I've hardened both of these methods so that this should no longer be possible to happen even in an extremely unlucky circumstance, and I've also improved the logging so that if it ever does, it will say more specifically where in these methods there is a problem.
    • Note to QLOC: you're really not going to be able to replicate this one, even with double or triple rebel war, probably. Don't spend much time on this one.

Memory Leak

  • Reduced the memory pressure from several sources, including how many units and NPCs are in the world.
    • There was some data being tracked on them that players could in theory look at, but it was way too detailed and not something that was anything I think was data a single player even realized was there (stuff like why some stat changed over the last 10 turns on a random NPC unit).
    • This is something I've been waffling about removing for a long time, but with the discovery of a memory leak by several players, this seemed like a good time to remove this since it's useless and taking up memory. That said, it was not the memory leak.
  • Discovered and fixed a massive memory leak in the rendering system for icons.
    • This was an error introduced by myself on April 29th, 2024. So this was not new, and has been in every build of the game since then, including the NextFest Demo and everything else since there have been a lot of testers on the game.
    • The general effect was that the more icons of a certain sort you were seeing, and the higher your framerate was, the faster it would consume infinitely more memory. The longer you left the game running, the faster it would run out. Generally it would take an hour or more to be very significant, but it depends a lot on the player's machine. Someone with an awesome GPU and not too much RAM would be seeing the effect the most, on longer play sessions.
    • This was found, after general user reports of a memory leak, using the custom memory-leak-tracking tools that are in this game and AI War 2. I then verified that there were no other similar problems, and so any other memory leaks would be unrelated to the rendering system itself. Any further problems would be in gameplay, or saving or loading savegames.
    • Thanks to glencoe2004 and Lukas for reporting.
  • Extended my general "cyclical array pool" concept to have a lone version (the old style), and a shared version (the new style).
    • This involves both a pool feeder and a pool consumer, which then is used to create the arrays that are written to the GPU for various shader purpose.
    • The short explanation of this is that it uses less total memory, because it is able to re-use "like arrays" for "unlike shaders," which is highly useful as a render context shifts over time.
    • This in general reduces memory pressure a bit, and probably also has some frame-timing-consistency benefits, but those are expected to be minor. This also allows for easier diagnosis of a certain form of memory leak.
  • An extra layer of protection has been put in against accidentally double-allocating buffers headed for the GPU. If that should happen, the game will now complain. It does not appear that was happening at all, but it's nice to be sure.
    • As part of this, I also happened to notice a really stupid array over-allocation that was wasting a lot (relatively speaking) of memory and processing time. It's... ah... well, okay, it's a few MB. Maybe 6 MB? But it all matters about where the memory is, and this would have put pressure unduly on the L3 and L1 cache, and now it doesn't. So while it was a stupid mistake on my part, years ago, it's not actually a giant performance concern. Still, I found it, so I fixed it.
  • Converted the savegame deserialization process to use recycled and tracked collections, rather than relying on garbage collection to pick up any stragglers.
    • It was a nice idea on my part to let it use the GC to clean up, and worked for a while, but the reality is that it only takes one dangling reference hidden somewhere in otherwise-correct-looking code, and then you get a giant spike of unrelease memory every time the game is loaded.
      • That is in fact what has been happening, in addition to the other kinds of memory leaks I already fixed today.
    • Rather than hunting down this one dangling reference and trying to fix it, which would solve the immediate problem but leave the game forever vulnerable to this sort of mistake in the future by me (or worse, from modders), I have decided to adjust the approach entirely so that it is safe against those sorts of mistakes.
    • There are some new data structures I've created, including a DictionaryOfSharedLists, which allow me to do some tightly-packed object reuse.
    • I've also brought over the ReleaseMemory methods for Lists and Dictionary from AI War 2, which were added after the fork to the HotM codebase. These allow me to have the outer shell of references remain, but dump all of the memory inside them, which is quite powerful.
    • At this point, the game is once again loading savegames despite all the changes, and I can now see the leak directly, but I have yet to quite solve that leak. That's what's next.
  • A lot of dramatic additions have been made to the deserialization logic for the game.
    • There are a lot of data structures that include some lists and dictionaries within them, and these are now pooled (per separate generics type signature), and the pools are reset and have their memory released after load as well.
    • At this point, all of the class data structures involved with loading savegames are permanent and are fully monitored by my anti-memory-leak processes, and for those that have things like sub-lists, they have their memory hollowed out after usage, so that even if there are dangling references, it doesn't matter and they still get garbage collected.
    • The game also explicitly calls for a full garbage collection pass right after the load finishes, which keeps it so that the memory usage is actually lower now after three or four savegame loads than it used to be after just a single savegame load.
    • This finally fixes the second major memory leak that I observed today, after reports from players.
    • Big thanks to glencoe2004 for reporting.
  • Fixed a third memory leak which was related to excessive combat. It wasn't a true memory leak like the other two, but it was still a problem.
    • Essentially, if there were thousands of shots fired in a single turn and thousands of explosions as well (double rebel war cheat spawn as a good extreme benchmark), then these would all enter pools and remain resident in memory in case they were going to be used again.
    • The spawning and retention of all this was actually about 2 GB of RAM usage in this scenario, and it also would tank the framerate to 20fps or lower on my beast of a dev machine, AND it would overdrive the sound channels something fierce.
      • Granted, this is like 10x the volume of combat that anyone should normally ever experience during normal gameplay, but I still was not comfortable with these numbers.
    • The first change I made was to the pooling of the particles themselves. They are now contained in structs rather than classes, and no pool will retain more than 10 particles. The rest are just destroyed, and the RAM is returned.
      • This keeps the memory pressure lower, while making frequent particles still very quick to spawn without having to worry about them being subject to instantiation delays. I also tried a version where I got rid of the pool entirely and it saves maybe 100 MB of RAM in this super extreme case, and performs about the same on my beast of a machine. My theory is that on lower-end hardware the performance would drop some in that circumstance, so for now I'm keeping the smaller pools there.
    • The second change I made was to progressively limit the number of particles that spawn as more are requested when there are already a lot. This is the same improvement that I made to the "giant mechs sliding through buildings" issue, and it works very similarly. It has a chance of spawning that diminishes by a square exponent above a certain level.
      • The end result of this is that the sound channels don't get so overwhelmed, there's still a lot of shots happening (to the point that I can't really tell the difference, even though there are more like 400 particles rather than 4000 playing at once -- it's just hard to judge that kind of shift visually at a glance, turns out), and the performance never drops below 60fps on my beast of a machine, even with this sort of insane scenario. Normally I get more like 110fps on average, so that is still quite a drop, but it's no longer so precipitous.
      • Again, I have to stress how above-normal this scenario is, but these savings wind up passing on to more normal scenarios, and at the same time it also creates less of a difference in what you actually see. This also only applies to NPC units (including bulk units or captured units of yours), not your main units you are paying the most attention to.
    • For most players, I expect that this will never be an optimization that is noticed at all, in terms of lower shots or whatnot, but that things "just work" even in scenarios that are absurd by normal standards. We'll see what happens, but that's my theory.

0.594.1 Polish And Clarity

(Released November 6th, 2024)

Clarity Improvements

  • The way that how many internal robotics are needed, versus how many you have in total and remaining, has been made a lot more clear.
    • Thanks to Mandy for suggesting specifically how.
  • If you fail at hacking, it now erases all of the controls, and shows "Failed. It's Time To Leave" in the upper left, and next to the "Session terminated" message in the log, also says "Exit when Ready."
    • Thanks to Mandy for suggesting.
  • There are two new handbook entries that explain what internal robotics are, and how to get more.
    • These now appear when you first start building freestanding construction, and the "most important tip - hold shift" is demoted to being in the handbook but now popping up on the screen (as that is now all through the interface so much that it is hard to miss it).
    • Thanks to Mandy and Antony for suggesting this, discussing in detail, and editing them.
  • The loadout window no longer saves the changes to your unit type unless you do one of the two things:
    • Explicitly click the commit changes button.
    • Hit the spacebar, while selected on one unit (not unit type) and shift to another unit type.
    • If you hit escape, or right-click out of the window, or hit X, it cancels your changes as you would expect.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Androids and mechs are now shown in two different categories on the forces sidebar, rather than combined.
    • All of the various categories on the forces sidebar now show the number of units you have (or capacity used, when relevant), out of the total of what is available for that category.
    • Thanks to Alias50, B, and Mandy for suggesting.
  • Added a new feature that allows for common-sense protections to be put in place to prevent resource depletion in resource chains where that would be a pain in the rear.
    • Right now, the only resource chain where this applies is Protein Vats, specifically with their usage of Bovine Tissue, since it takes BT to make more BT, and if Vats use it all, then the cycle breaks down.
      • That's not true for any other kind of resource chain at the moment, since they all have a generalized input that is either temporary and meant to be exhausted (Alumina and Computronium Cubes, early on), or has an infinite source (Alumina and things later).
      • For this specific case with the Vats, they will never consume BT that would take your total volume of BT below 5000. This makes them act the same as before, but if you would be on a trajectory to hit zero, you instead hit 5000. This lets you realize your chain is set up wrong, and fix it, without having to also go find more BT from a farm.
    • Thanks to Mandy for suggesting.

Bugfixes

  • Fixed a bug where the streetsense item progress was not being saved into savegames properly when it's related to a project.
    • Thanks to Pingcode for reporting.
  • Fixed a typo in the slum cats text.
    • Thanks to blue_kit_red for reporting.
  • Fixed an issue where the prologue instructions about standby mode were still saying that standby gathers wealth in addition to slurry, when it actually only gathers slurry now.
    • Thanks to Mintdragon and kenken244 for reporting.
  • Fixed an issue where using "Quietly Loot" was causing units who do that to be marked defective, when of course the entire point is that they are not noticed.
    • Thanks to Pingcode and mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Hacking the titan mech like a traditional unit (using hack unit rather than probe comms) should no longer be possible at all. It isn't meant to be vulnerable over the air like that.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed typo in the Sedgesinax cohort description.
    • Thanks to kenken244 for reporting.
  • For all of the food and water projects that have a per-turn-income requirement to complete, it was possible to fill up your bunkers with them and then be unable to complete the projects without building an additional bunker, which was a soft-lock state.
    • If you have at least 1 bunker's worth of the resource (which is absolutely a massive amount), then it will assume that you have enough per-turn income to meet the demand of these projects. You likely have 100+ turns to fix the problem if you are actually somehow short, because of your giant buffer.
    • Thanks to Mandy for reporting.

0.594 Hard And Extreme Modes

(Released November 5th, 2024)

  • When you start a rank 2 city (meaning either a fresh start from chapter two in a new profile, or a new timeline in an existing profile once you get to chapter 3), it now gives you a flat 30 of each of the 6 main strategic resources.
    • This is in some cases more than you would have from going through chapter one to get there, in other cases less, but it averages out to something that does not say anything about this alternate-you's history, and yet gives you enough resources to do some things in early chapter two that are otherwise blocked to you.
    • Thanks to MOREDAKKA and Pingcode for reporting.
  • There is a new "Vandalize Spaceport Computers" contemplation that is available starting in chapter 2.
    • It requires any of your hacker units (in chapter two, that's just Raven. In chapter 3, that's also including Mindrunner, and possibly including Harbinger, depending on if you have some timeline crossover happening).
    • This is only available during the first 20 turns of a timeline, so you can't dawdle on it too long. When you first reach chapter 2 from chapter one, it gives you 20 turns from them. And if you load a timeline that was already in chapter two or three, it gives you a flat 20 turns from where you are now.
    • This gives you two options, a Hard mode (dooms every 40 turns instead of every 100), and an Extreme mode (dooms every 20 turns).
      • I suspect for a lot of people, the comfortable mode will be Hard Mode, which basically gives a good balance of strategic pressure and time to do multiple goals. Extreme Mode is likely only to be fun for existing experts who are trying to optimize their way to specific single goal states, which is fun in its own way, but just more niche.
  • Fixed an issue with contemplation filters showing counts and entries for contemplations that are not actually on the map at the moment. Typically this is because there was nowhere valid for them to seed at the moment, but it can also be based on other conditionals. Seeing categories with nothing in them was quite confusing.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz and Lukas for reporting.

Chapter 2+ Content

0.593.9 Hotfix

(Released November 4th, 2024)

  • Fixed a bug in the prior version where if you cleared all of the hostile contacts in the hacking scenario, then it would jump you to the end of a ton of hacking scenarios and basically end the entire post-apocalypse scenario before you saw half of it.
    • Thanks to Waladil for reporting.

0.593.8 Three

(Released November 3rd, 2024)

  • The "personal apocalypse" goal has been renamed to "Slice Of Inferno," as it was confusing the other way, now that there is an actual apocalypse that is different.
  • Another goal state, "Post-Apocalyptic Titan," has been added alongside the existing "Post-Apocalyptic Burrower."
  • The "burrower" goal state is being cut for time. It will return, but it's a lot less impactful than the titan goal state, and I don't think that this is a good use of my time at the moment compared to the other primary chapter two content.
    • The titan path wound up being essentially twice as large as expected, and way more impactful, so it absorbing the time that would have gone to the burrower one makes a certain amount of sense.
    • I do have the burrower path all mapped out, but it's something I'll do sometime in the next few months. It's a nice alternative to the titan path, but not something I'm in a hurry to have people do in place of the titan.

Balance

  • Nickelbot movement range has been increased from 42 to 60, making them much quicker to traverse long distances.
  • Keanu, Exator, and Carver have all had their move ranges increased from 60 to 80, making them insanely mobile for an android, and fitting with their agility-style nature.
  • Carver now has Shadowdweller instead of Innately Alarming, as that is much more effective for that unit to be useful at all.
  • There is a new Expert Shadowdweller perk that some of the more advanced units have. This works the same as shadowdweller, but allows movement up to clearance 4 rather than clearance 3. It's also a way to provide some different gates on some events.
    • Primarily Exator, Carver, Harbinger, and Mindrunner.
  • The prismatic tungsten event now has a "sneak past" option that only applies to expert shadowdwellers, and has 1000:1 odds of being a success with no cost.
  • CombatUnit hacking skill has been increased from 10 to 70, making them a better hacker than Technicians, which makes sense given their role. They are still objectively terrible hackers, but it's important for some new abilities.

Adjusting Difficulty

  • There is another new handbook entry related to dooms, which talks about adjusting the difficulty of the game by accelerating them.

Framework Bits

  • The system for having units do small things around the map for part of a project is now in place, and it allows costing and gaining resources.
    • This allows for a wide variety of new kinds of mission designs to go in the mix.
  • There is also a related new system that allows for a SINGLE unit (and it's bulk version of itself) to gain some stats in a way that is not related to overall upgrades.
    • These show up in the tooltip for the unit's stat as "Total From Past Project Work," and this is a lot narrower than what you see with other forms of upgrades.
    • For example, you might be improving the Nickelbot on something, but not other Dynadroids (that is possible with the main upgrade system as well, but certainly a lot less common).
    • Perhaps a better example is the CombatUnit versus the CombatUnit Red. The red does not share buffs with the main version, but the main version shares buffs with the bulk version.
      • This could arguably make the red version even less useful, but I think it gives it a chance to specialize in a way that diverges from its main-pair version. I have something special in mind for this, actually.
  • I've added the ability to have fallback seeding options for the new kind of project streetsense stuff, although I wound up not actually using it yet.
  • There is a new "click to micro-nuke" cheat.
    • This cheat is extremely useful for testing "what if certain kinds of buildings did not exist after the final doom?"
    • As an example, I have one project that would only be possible if there happened to be cryogenic centers still remaining in the city. If I go through and scalpel those out with a series of micro-nukes, then can the project still be completed? It's not a guarantee this specific type of structure survives into the post-apocalypse, so there has to be a fallback if the project is definitely going to be the sort of thing that can be completed regardless of the state of the city.
  • The list of cheats is now stable when tabbing back and forth between the streets view and the map view. Previously if you were in a targeting mode, it would lose which mode you were in when you changed back and forth, which was very unhelpful when trying to verify certain things (like "did I get all the cryogenic centers, so no more of that quest marker can spawn at them?").
  • With the "structures with problems" window open, the delete key now properly works to scrap units.
  • In the event that there are no broken machine structures, but that there ARE machine structures that are disconnected from the network, the delete button in the build menu allows you to right-click to delete those instead of the broken ones.
    • This is very relevant for situations where you need to move... a lot of yourself away from where you are. For example if you wind up with the titan uncomfortably close.

Giant-Mech-Related

  • The way that the "can a giant mech step on this" logic works has been expanded a ton. Instead of a binary yes/no answer, it now is a rating system, with progressively larger mechs being allowed to step on progressively more-important things.
    • This makes it so that Stalkers and even more-so Titans have a much easier time moving around, while simply smooshing most things in their way.
  • Added logic so that units can either just destroy things that they step on at their target (this is a lot less destructive), or so that they destroy everything along the path as they move.
    • The Titans now use this latter form of logic.
    • Thanks to KenKen244 for suggesting quite a while back.
  • Added logic so that some NPC units won't show the ghost of where they were last turn. In the case of these units, it's both not helpful, and actively confusing.
    • This is now applied to pretty much all of the NPC mechs, but not any npc vehicles or smaller combatants (npc vehicles move far and fast, and seeing where they were can be super helpful).
  • Added in logic to progressively gate the number of explosions when a mech is blowing up buildings in a path. Visually this makes almost no difference, but basically it keeps it from kneecapping your performance with explosions that would just be a solid mass of overlap, anyhow.
    • If you skip a ton of turns at as fast as possible, AND there are a bunch of NPC mechs that are all moving and exploding buildings every turn, then you'll see some gaps in explosions, but it doesn't cause any drop in the number of buildings they destroy. Beyond that, it doesn't affect anything visually, particularly.
  • Added logic which allows showing excessively large units on the map directly.
    • This is only used for NPC titans at this point. The player-based titans do not do this, nor do any of the other mechs or vehicles of anyone.
  • When the titan is dropped in from orbit, it now actually drops in, with scary horns, and an accelerating fall that suddenly terminates at the bottom (with explosions if it lands on anything explosive, which it usually will), and a screen-shake effect that is not used very often by the game.
  • The ability to spawn a Titan as a player-controlled mech (as opposed to an NPC one) has been removed. There are story shifts that make that... inappropriate.
  • The weapon ports and firing for the titan are all now appropriately set up.

Timeline-Goal-Related

  • There is now fanfare for winning a timeline goal, as there is for winning a project. It has a different sound and different particle effects to make sure it catches your attention.
  • Timeline goals that are now impossible due to how the timeline has progressed now show in red on the goal listing.
  • On the goal listing within a timeline, it now shows how many of the paths to each goal you have achieved in this timeline, out of the total paths available for it.
    • Right now it's just one path at a time.
  • In the goal tooltips, it now also has extra information if you have won the goal or failed it for this timeline.
  • Looking at overall goal history in the end of time, it now shows you how many of the different goal paths you have ever achieved for each goal, out of the total number of goal paths in all related to that goal.
    • When hovering over a specific line item, the tooltip shows how many times you have completed each goal path, or if it has never been completed before, for further information and ideas on what to try next.
  • The older concepts of goal evolutions and perfected timelines have been removed.
    • It now shows instead how many goals you have completed per timeline, and how many goal paths.

Timeline Data Protection

  • Protection has been added for a kind of complicated case with the timelines. Let me attempt to explain, and let's see if the QLOC testers can find any way to break this.
    • First of all, I need to explain the savegame structure a bit:
      • The savegames individually contain both the metagame (cross-timeline) stuff, AND the content for a single timeline. When you load an older save, you are therefore loading an older version of both the metagame and the specific timeline that the save is from.
      • Starting in chapter three, you have the ability to switch back and forth between timelines. This means that it needs to keep the metagame, but get rid of all of the one-timeline data and replace it with something else. Otherwise the savegames would become impossibly large.
        • In other words, if you are in timeline A and that is the only timeline that exists in your metagame, then it's very simple. But as soon as you create timeline B, there is now a fork of sorts.
      • When the savegames are forked in this way, there is a (hidden from the game, but visible in the file system) file with the GUID of the city, and the city data, and an extension of .timeline rather than .save.
        • Specifically, when you have been in timeline A, and you create timeline B, it will save timeline A to GUID-A.timeline, get rid of that data from the current save, keep the metadata from that save, and then generate timeline B inside there. It will then have "first turn in timeline B" as a savegame.
          • If you go back to timeline A's last save, before it created timeline B, then it's like timeline B does not exist. This is fine. You just save-scummed and forked things. I'm okay with this.
          • If you play for a while in timeline B, and progress the metagame, then this is now the most-current data for the metagame, and for timeline B, but the most-current data for timeline A is in the GUID-A.timeline file.
      • In the end of time, you can, from the timeline B file, choose the timeline A node on that map, and choose to dive in. At this point, it will do the following:
        • Save the timeline B stuff to a GUID-B.timeline file.
        • Dump everything timeline-B-specific out of the current save, but keep the metadata.
        • Load the contents of timeline A, from the GUID-A.timeline file.
      • Now you have the most up-to-data metagame data in the new timeline A file, and timeline B is the one that is on ice.
        • You can have tens of thousands of timelines linked this way, so now multiply this out by tens of thousands of files if you want. It doesn't change the math of how this works any.
    • Assuming that the player never save-scums at all, and only ever loads their most-recent savegame they were playing on, and then cross-loads timelines via the end of time map, all is well. There are no real edge cases here in that situation. However, we all know that is not how players will actually do things.
      • The first really bad case is if the player has been playing for a while, and then they go back to a really old save for... let's say timeline B. They started on A, progressed A, went to B, went back to A, progressed A again, and then save-scummed back to an older B file. So far this isn't destructive.
        • But what if they now, from the savegame setup described above, try to use the meta map to load timeline A? What WOULD happen is that the older version of timeline B would overwrite the GUID-B.timeline file, which would negatively affect the actual real "current state of things" if they load back into one of the more current savegames. They would find that the metagame still has the latest information about timeline B, but that when they go into it, it has been overwritten with the much-older version of timeline B's actual contents. Yikes. This is not game-breaking, but it's something I really don't like.
    • The solution for the above problem is that a second file is also written next to the .timeline files. This file is called GUID_Timekeep.timeline, and it has a single integer inside it. That integer is how many seconds have passed in that timeline at the time of it being saved.
      • In the event that the game would try to overwrite the .timeline file because of swapping between timelines, it checks the _Timekeep.timeline number. If it's a higher number than the current number of seconds, it won't let you do this, and it shows a message to that effect. This prevents probably 99% of the degenerate cases I mentioned above.
      • There is a way around this, however. If you loaded an older savegame that was only a few minutes behind, and then played until you passed the older state, then on switching timelines the timekeep comparison would be favorable and it would let you cross over, thus overwriting the timeline file we were trying to protect.
        • I am okay with this edge case, because someone would have had to go REALLY far back and play for a really long time for it to be a problem. In any cases where they go just a bit far back, and then "accidentally" overwrite, it's probably expected that it would overwrite from their perspective.
    • There may be some funky ways to game this system, but if they're suitably hard, I don't care. I don't think the average player has any motivation to try to do something like that which is too difficult to pull off, and my main concern was accidental overwrites when people just wanted to go back in time for a bit and were going to do the overwrite without meaning to.
      • That said, if there are other edge cases that can result in problems, I would like to know. This is not critical in the next week, but I'd like to have it well solved before the 18th or so, if there are any problem cases.
    • One might wonder why I'm not using a chunk-based system like, for example, Minecraft does. This is also the system that I used for the A Valley Without Wind Games.
      • The primary reason is for bug reporting, to be honest. Players being able to send me a single file, and it just works, is really important. Them having to zip a folder and send me way more data than is desirable was a constant problem with the Valley games.
      • The secondary reason is that, when it comes to malicious tinkering, the chunk-based system is not any more protective. Someone can go into the file system and delete chunks that have bad things in them that they don't like, and keep their overall metagame, in both Minecraft and the Valley games. This triggers a regeneration, and they've thus gamed the system. I just never really saw that happening much with either game.
      • Those chunk-based games also have much smaller chunks, and much more frequent transitions between them. This game has more in common with SimCity 4 regions. So for those other games, using a system like I have here would be impractical and not solve any problems regarding sending in bug reports, for example. They are what they are, they need that chunk-based file system. This game does not benefit from it, so it's using something different that kind of builds off of my experience with both data formats.
    • As an aside, I developed all these changes to savegames back in January, but the thing that is new is the protection logic with the "timekeep" files.
  • Discovered that there were some flaws with my prior logic for saving the timelines with seconds in there.
    • Specifically, if you sat for any length of time doing nothing, then switched timelines, when you loaded the original save it would not let you switch timelines again for the length of time you sat. Oops.
    • Even more specifically, let's say you played for an hour without saving, then switched timelines. You would only properly be able to get to the other timeline by loading the newer timeline, then cross-loading back into the other one. Not exactly desirable.
    • I have put in a two-part solution to these issues:
      • Part 1 is that it now saves the turn number rather than the second. So if you sit for a while on one turn, or even fiddle around without changing the turn, then it doesn't care.
      • Part 2 is that if you HAVE changed what turn it is since the last time the game was saved, then as you exit the city you incremented the turn on, it makes a new savegame for that turn, and that is now the most recent savegame of record for that timeline, matching the one that you would swap back to from the other timeline you changed to.

Post-Apocalypse Completed (For Now)

Entering Chapter Three

Bugfixes

  • Corrected the tooltip for mental energy to properly describe the fact that structures and jobs never use it now.
    • Thanks to Waladil for reporting.
  • Fixed an issue where the game was trying to recreate building POIs in irradiated cells, and then was running out of names for them.
    • It's possible for the map cell to be irradiated, but the POI is still technically intact as far as the building itself goes, if it's a cultist temple or similar. These are still considered evacuated.
  • Fixed a bug where if a minor event was happening at a place other than a building (aka with a unit of yours standing on not-a-building), then the text of the minor event would be absent, even though the actual buttons and title and other aspects of the event would work properly.
    • First ran into this last week, and it was very puzzling. But figure it out today.
  • When a unit is using the nonviolent targeting type, it no longer gives threat lines to player units that would move somewhere. That was erroneous and was really confusing in a few cases.
  • Fixed an issue where the arrows that point up at things on the top right of the screen (like the forces sidebar, or VR simulation button, or end of time button) were too low.
    • Thanks to Mintdragon, Wolfier, and Fluffiest for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug with the build button showing in the end of time.
  • Fixed an issue where in chapter two starts, or fresh cities in chapter three and onward, the game was trying to trigger the "weapons and armor" project, which is impossible to complete in those contexts because the related things are already auto-unlocked.
    • Have also further verified that this DOES properly trigger in chapter one, after the "Build a bunker" project is complete, after the corporate show of force event.
  • In rank 2 cities -- either starting a new profile in chapter two, or starting a timeline beyond the first in chapter three and onward -- the following two fixes are now in place:
    • The enemies spawn around you like they do in a chapter one start.
    • You do not get a double message about establishing your network. You just get the "rank 2 city" note, and that's it.
    • Also the rank 2 city note has been corrected to no longer talk about the old style of "you have some invisible buildings that are fully optimized," as that's not a thing anymore. It just has you build the buildings, but without the hassle.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting the chapter two city issue, although I can't find the bugtracker ticket anywhere to close it.
  • Fixed an issue with an unlock inspiration being overly-specific and therefore confusing. Basically, it used to be triggered by one event, and now can be triggered by several, so it made very little sense.
    • Thanks to Waladil for reporting.

0.593.7 Hotfix 2

(Released October 31st, 2024)

  • Adjusted the visuals of the large nukes so that they look nicer, and made it so that there are up to 10 of them, rather than up to 5, when a certain thing happens.
  • Fixed a regression from yesterday's changes to the "simple choice" windows.
    • If you were viewing the "results screen" from them, then clicking the button would not properly exit the event, instead taking you into an infinite loop. I had been worried about this sort of thing, but missed this case.
    • I also added in some additional keybind handling for these cases, to handle both the spacebar and escape key (or whatever you rebind the equivalent to):
      • If there is a nevermind option, then the escape key will trigger it.
      • If there is only a single option of whatever sort, then the escape key or the spacebar will progress it.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.

0.593.6 Hotfix

(Released October 31st, 2024)

  • The amount of microbuilders generated by microbuilder min-fabs has been doubled, and the amount of elemental slurry required to create that has been increased by about 30%. This should create better balance for folks during chapter one in particular.
    • Thanks to Space, Pingcode, More_Dakka, and Fluffiest for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug in the prior build where, due to a boolean inversion, any building that was not-not-post-apocalyptic would explode if it was not-yet-the-apocalypse. Translation: all your buildings would explode on loading non-apocalyptic savegames. Facepalm.
    • Thanks to MOREDAKKA for reporting.

0.593.5 Post-Apocalyptic Construction

(Released October 30th, 2024)

  • When there are distance restrictions on jobs that are embedded in human structures, it no longer shows highlights on any structures that would be too close to an existing job. This makes planning such structures dramatically easier.
  • The PMC Officer Sigil contemplation now requires you to be a PMC Imposter to move there. Previously it would let you move there, and then to actually do it you had to be a PMC Impostor.
    • I corrected most other cases of this, but evidently missed this one.
  • A bunch of work on that new kind of project that gives specialized StreetSense activities.
    • It's still not quite done yet, and the "Make Engineers Of Your Nickelbots" post-apocalyptic project is something you can softlock yourself on if you try to do it even though it says it's not ready yet. I'll be finishing that up tomorrow.

Post-Apocalypse

Bugfixes

  • The way that POIs are saved into savegames has been hardened so that if they happen to be collapsing right as the savegame is being saved, or they have a reference to a building that no longer exists, then the problematic POI will simply not be saved.
    • Also fixed a bug in the prior version where discovered POIs were being read as destroyed, which probably was not helping matters.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed an issue that could happen with some of the new logic from the prior build where it was cleaning up destroyed buildings. However, it was trying to do this too soon after loading a savegame, thus leading to errors. It no longer does this logic during the load process.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.
  • Fixed an issue where, after a network tower was completely destroyed, there could be a lingering reference to it from the network which would cause the emergency network source to not appear in the build menu.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed yet another semi-rare exception that could happen when transitioning into the final doom (aka, it does not reliably reproduce). I've also moved that into its own method and instrumented it better so that if another one happens again, I will know.
  • Corrected the scale of the predator unit when it is in conversation screens.
  • The way that minor events and "examining a background conflict" are opened has been completely rewritten from scratch.
    • It should no longer be possible to miss having an event of this sort pop up, but there may be some other bugs as side effects, like being unable to close certain events, especially background conflict examination windows, perhaps.
    • All of the cases I have tested are okay, but this was not a slight change.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where some buildings that were destroyed were trying to recreate their POIs fresh on loading older savegames.
    • This applied mainly in games with large amounts of previous destruction.
  • Fixed an issue with point to point microwaves where they said they were out of network range while they were being built. This was inaccurate, and they would show just fine after finishing construction.
  • When an upgrade benefits bulk units, it now properly highlights those in white in the list if you have unlocked them, versus showing them in gray.
    • Thanks to Trogg for reporting.

0.593.4 Tower Loss

(Released October 30th, 2024)

Tower Death

  • In general, losing the network tower no longer immediately pops up a new one with a notice about "critical save."
    • This will be handled differently in general from now on.
  • When you have lost a network tower, there is a new type of emergency network source that becomes available for you to build inside of other structures.
    • It provides less network range and almost no electricity, and since it is hidden in human buildings, it shows the network icon above itself in both the map and regular street views.

Post-Apocalypse And Related

  • Irradiated cells now draw darker in the map so that you can see where there is this sort of hole in the city. This applies well before the final doom, since some of the smaller explosions (or even the Baurcorp nuke) cause the irradiated status.
  • Destroyed buildings no longer draw in the map view, and no buildings draw on the map view for cells that are irradiated in general.
  • In general, if anything destroys the host building that one of your "hidden structures in a human building" is inside, your structure is now permanently destroyed (not to remains that can be rebuilt, because you can't rebuild the host structure around your hidden structure.
  • POIs can now be destroyed.
    • If their entire cell is irradiated, and they are smaller than one cell, that will do it.
    • If they are from a specific building, and that building is destroyed, that also does it.
    • If they are a multi-cell tile (spaceport, larger military bases, etc), then ALL of their cells have to be irradiated in order for them to be destroyed. Otherwise they will just be partially destroyed, but still there.
    • Once a POI is destroyed, it no longer has any reinforcements come to it, it no longer has any security clearance, and so on.
  • After the final doom happens, there is now a gap of 8 seconds before you get a message about your intelligence class falling, and before you get any replacement units as a netslicer.
    • This helps to maintain the tone of this event better, and it also ensures that your new units don't jerk the camera away from what you are looking at, and also that they do not spawn in the blast area while that's still going off. If at all possible, they will spawn outside of irradiated areas in general, but they will spawn in an irradiated area if there is nowhere in the city that is not irradiated.

Bugfixes

  • When in the post-apocalyptic mode, any structures or jobs of yours that are invalid for that mode are now removed from the game. Previously the ones that were burned-out were able to linger and be rebuilt.
  • Fixed a bug where the "toggle delete any unit" cheat was throwing exceptions when you selected it or tried to use it.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where the "marker light" for structures inside destroyed buildings were still drawing.
  • Fixed a bug where some of the structures of the player were being destroyed too early during the final doom, leading to the intelligence class to fall during the pop-up event right prior to the things that happen.
  • When new units are spawned from things like the "critical save," they will no longer be able to appear in the wasteland around the city.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.
  • Fixed a major issue with how reinforcements were happening, that was leading to doom-stacks of mechs in military bases in chapter 2.
    • Essentially, the pool from which units should seed are not including the mark 2 mechs, in order not to cause mark 2 mechs to start spawning into military bases too soon. So normally, what happens during a reinforcement event is that a mark 1 mech is seeded, and instantly upgraded to mark 2, as an example.
    • However, since all mechs of this sort are upgraded to mark 2 after a certain point in the story, the game was detecting that there were no mechs at all in the base -- not of the kinds it should seed, anyway. So it was then seeding more... and more... until they couldn't fit in terms of even walking around.
    • Now it has separate tags for seeding and for checking, and these mechs are counted properly.
    • If any of the categories of units that should seed as reinforcements are over the maximum cap of what is allowed, the game also now strips those out, so this should fix all existing savegames with the issue.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed the "Null unitToUse!" error that could happen on final doom if there was no place to spawn a technician near where the camera was. It now tries to do so in the entire map before giving up.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where if you had another window open when reaching the point where an event should pop up -- specifically the final doome, and perhaps no others at this point, actually, it would fail to fully open that event.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.

0.593.3 The Post-Apocalypse

(Released October 29th, 2024)

  • SecForce Stations are now POIs with specific names (really, more like numbers).
  • Added a new "Lightweight Components" piece of equipment that is available from the very start of the game. IT gives +3 movement range and +15 agility.
    • A straightforward way to improve speed and agility. Multiple can be stacked in a single android.
    • Thanks to Fluffiest for doing LITERALLY everything with this. All I had to do was copy and paste her xml in, as she fully designed and implemented it. Super cool!!

Doom Events

  • Eleven new musical stingers have been added for use at the commencement of dooms. There's a longer compound one for the final doom, in particular.
    • These are kind of along the lines of what happens during chapter changes, just used differently.
  • The various music cues for doom events are all now in place, helping to accentuate the importance of those.

Post-Apocalypse

Bugfixes

  • Dramatically improved the performance of the wander logic for NPC units. It was taking quite a long time (a few hundred milliseconds, in aggregate) for a dozen or so units to wander. That has now been reduced to about 3 milliseconds for the same units.
  • Fixed two issues with units that wander: first that they could wander into the wasteland when they were not supposed to, and secondly that they all had a tendency to wander southwest because of an accidental bias in the wandering logic. They COULD wander any direction, but southwest was a trend that would consistently show up over large timescales.
    • Thanks to Wolfier and dlipiec for reporting.
  • StreetSense and Contemplation entries no longer show on buildings that have been destroyed.
  • There is a rare exception that can happen when you are on the city map view, and trigger the final doom event while mashing 0 a bunch.
    • I have put in extra instrumentation to narrow down where the bug happens, but I've only been able to reproduce it one time, so I can't actually fix the root problem yet.
  • There was a bug that could happen if a bunch of nukes had just gone off on the map, and you quickly reloaded into a new savegame directly after that. It should be fixed now, but is worth checking more.
  • Fixed a longstanding bug where the territory control category could be present with just the delete and pause functions in it, but no actual territory control flags to place.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where if an existing window was open, then events that were popping up as a result of something like the final doom, or as a result of an action over time that has an event at the end of it, would fail to open.
    • So for example, have inventory or history open when one of those callbacks should happen, and the callback would be missed entirely.

0.593.2 Space Invasion

(Released October 29th, 2024)

Doom Events

Bugfixes

  • Contemplations that happen at your own buildings should no longer have any security clearance check. Thus preventing you from being blocked on a wide variety, including the flower girl one.
    • Thanks to Wolfier for reporting.
  • Fixed a regression in the prior build where NPCs that were supposed to spawn in "near to humans" were not showing up at all.
    • This was due to my changes to fix the spawn location of the capture mechs during the prison segment so that they spawn closer to actual targets, and related to some of my new chapter 2 content that also spawns near specific buildings.
    • It turns out that there are two branches of code needed here, as one set of logic does not work for both cases.
    • Thanks to Wolfier, Alias50, and mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Made sure that things were compiled in such a way that there should not be an exception when opening the cheats menu.
    • Thanks to dlipiec for reporting.
  • Fixed two projects having references to Atmosphere Only, which no longer needed to be mentioned since it auto-unlocks.
    • Thanks to Fluffiest for reporting.

0.593.1 Dooms

(Released October 28th, 2024)

  • The release notes link in the game has been updated to point to this new page.
  • Have started adding some more goal states, and removed two goal states, as I'm coming to realize I want something more flexible that does not mean "this timeline has reached a full tier 1 goal state" in the sense I previously meant it. There's a lot more interesting opportunities to mix and match for players when I'm not being that monolithic.
  • When savegames are loaded, they now specify what the version of the save was in the log where it says how long it took to load. This is not really useful for anyone but myself and perhaps some testers, to see if a loaded save is really from the version that a bug reporter says it is.
  • Chapter Two has been renamed to Strategy, and Chapter Three is now called Freedom. Previously, chapter two was called Freedom, but that was out of date for a while now.
  • The android archetypes handbook entry now mentions by name the different types of android that exist.
  • After you are warned about the dooms in chapter two, you now have a project which is to reach intelligence class 4. This will remain for probably most of the second chapter, unless players make it a priority.
    • Once escaping the first timeline, that is the catalyst to move to chapter three (which is the main time loop of the game, and includes all of the content from chapter two), and in chapter three and onwards it does not have this project since you are already at that level.

QoL

  • Both StreetSense and Contemplations now have a dropdown above them on the radial menu, where you can select subsets of them by purpose.
    • These were getting crowded even in chapter one, and it is only going to get drastically worse as chapter two and onward grows. So this allows players to quickly filter to the sorts of things they are interested in out of what is available at the moment.
    • As an aside, this in particular makes it easier to see how to start a shell company, with that option then disappearing after you have started one.
  • Timeline goals are now visible for the first time, in a new tab in the history window. Wow that window has a lot of tabs now.
    • You can now see what the available timeline goals are, in broad terms, and also filter by collections that are provided for it. In their tooltips, it also shows what resources you will get for the metagame without explaining those at all, and if there are multiple tiers of accomplishing that timeline goal.
  • There is also a new contemplations tab in the history window, which shows you the contemplations in a list format. This allows you to also filter them, to see things like what things are related to the critical path of goals.
    • Here again, the goal was to make sure that players are able to plan properly when they are thrown in and there are a ton of options, most notably by filtering down the options at least somewhat.

Doom Events

  • The "starting conflicts" choice when starting a new timeline (in the end of time) has been shifted to "doom type" instead, and now folds in a lot more things than just the conflicts at the start.
    • This is part of a much larger new feature in general, which will finally give some time pressure in chapter two, but in a bit of a twist than games that bother me about how they handle it.
  • There is a new Dooms tab in the history window, which shows the list of dooms that are going to happen for this current timeline, and on what turn they will happen.
    • If the doom clock has not yet started, then it simply notes that this will happen in the future.
    • In general, you can see some information about dooms early (that they exist at all) by hovering that tab in the history window, as early as in the prologue. However, dooms themselves will not show up until chapter two.
    • Once you can see them, it shows you what turn they will happen on, exactly, and how many turns you have remaining before they do However, if you've never experienced a given doom before in any timeline, then it just shows "unknown doom" until it happens.
  • I should note that for the very first doom, you only get 99 turns, and for all the others you get 100 turns. This makes for round numbers when you are starting a fresh timeline on turn 1, where dooms hit on turns 100, 200, etc.
    • This doesn't apply when you are entering from chapter one on your first timeline, but every other timeline it will apply.
  • For the initial "Vorsiber's Wrath" doom type, the ten doom events have been defined and described.
  • When you are in chapter two, and you have a network tower, it now starts the doom counter and gives you a message about what dooms are.
    • It also gives you two new handbook entries in a new Timelines section, and it marks both as read immediately since they are duplicate information from the message that pops up and its extension for if you have more questions.
  • In chapter three and onward, it starts the dooms as soon as you build the network tower, but it doesn't have anything new to say about them that you don't already know.
    • Note to QLOC: you'll be able to test chapter 3 things within a week, so please keep a note of these things to test them later, since you can't test them yet.
  • When doom events happen, they now create a popup that is a must-look-at message on the task stack. You can either right-click to dismiss those, or left-click to see the full list of dooms.
    • The general idea here is to make sure that these are not missed.
    • Note to QLOC: if one of these is visible, it should save into the savegame and then load back out properly.

Zodiac Path

  • There are some goals related to this, and a contemplation that you have no way to complete yet. There's going to be some side-questing required before you can even start these paths.

Housing Path

Balance

  • Daily Necessity storage caps are now 10x higher from each storage bunker, as the cap was too easily hit.
  • Residential MegaStructures can now hold 2x the population they previously did, and 1.5x the amount of VR Day-Use Seats.
  • The requirement for reaching intelligence class 4 has been tripled, and the other intelligence classes above it have also been increased substantially.
  • Took away the cap on the six personality-based resources.
    • The goal of the cap was to prevent players from hoarding them and never using them, but this created another problem where if they had more than a certain amount, the game would have to warn them, and if they didn't do things in the right order, they could wind up losing some to hitting cap. I just don't like that flow at all, it doesn't feel right. I've decided that if they want to hoard it, let them.
  • Corrected the balance on the Computing Host upgrade; it was way too small per upgrade.

Cheat Adjustments

  • Added a new cheat that enables a mode that allows you to delete any unit you select.
    • Useful for when I need to test certain combat situations over and and over again, but not for balance reasons. I need all the speed I can get.
  • Sandbox mode was a misleading name, and has been renamed to "Cheat Mode."
    • It is also now per-timeline, versus infecting an entire profile forever once turned on a single time. That's a lot more fair.
  • The "Go To Chapter" cheat has been removed, as that did not really function in a useful way in general at this point.
  • The "End of Time Resource Grant" cheat has also been removed.
    • The other cheats relating to the end of time remain, as they can help players get un-stuck if they manage to get stuck somehow.

Bugfixes

  • Fixed an issue where you were getting refunded for mental energy you didn't actually spend when scrapping structures or jobs.
    • Thanks to Fluffiest for reporting.
  • Contemplations now show what their requirements are in the lower left description of them when you hover them, rather than first making you select a unit and then hover them to find out if you pass or fail.
  • I've put in extra protections against some random "wealth goes to excess for one turn, or even a few turns" bugs that I'm not sure how to trigger, but which were definitely on the prior build, just very rare.
    • Thanks to Lukas for reporting.
  • Fixed the bug with older savegames not properly giving players the personality-based strategic resources. It was related to the caps I've now removed.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.
  • Fixed a bug where npc units set to spawn around a specific kind of building were not actually doing that logic appropriately.
    • Thanks to mblazewicz for reporting.

Prior Release Notes

Moving To Chapter Two