Difference between revisions of "AI War 2:Special Mechanics"

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== Personal Shields ==
 
== Personal Shields ==
  
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Most ships have some level of personal shielding to help augment their hulls.  Damage is first applied to the shields, and then the hull.  Damage from the shields spills right over to the hull if there is an overage.  Any self-damage that a unit does to itself ignores its shields, however.
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If it has been at least 4 seconds since the ship was damaged by an external source, then that ship's shields will automatically start regenerating on their own.  It takes roughly 30 seconds for a ship's personal shields to return to full health.  This can be accelerated by having an engineer repair the ship.
  
 
== Engine Stun ==
 
== Engine Stun ==

Revision as of 12:50, 10 August 2018

A Note To Players from AI War Classic

Please note that pretty much every mechanic you are familiar with has been changed to at least a minor degree.

Every mechanic is more flexible now, with ranges of how they can function rather than just being on/off gates. Additionally, mechanics are now heavily dependent on the 8 basic stats of every ship, which are mostly new in this game (note that metal is discussed on that page but not counted as one of the 8 basic stats).

There are no longer any generalized "immune to tractor beams" (or whatever along those lines) properties. Instead, everything is more physically-based and the attacking system would instead say "I can only target ships with xyz physical property."

This does a few things:

  • Firstly, it makes it so that ships don't have a ton of immunities and single-use stats (like engine health or paralysis resistance amount) defined. This makes tooltips simpler and more consistent.
  • Secondly, it allows for variable-quality systems. Some tractor beams can be allowed to grab more powerful targets than others, for example.
  • Thirdly, it makes it so the relevant stats needed to understand how a ship with a special ability functions are all on that ship itself; you can see what sort of ship stats it can hit with its ability, and what its ability does, all in one place. This again increases readability.
  • Lastly, this future-proofs ships to a certain extent, which is particularly important in a moddable environment. The various physical stats are not arbitrary, but instead define physical properties of the ship. So long as someone who made a custom ship has defined those in a way that makes sense for their ship, then any new weapons introduced in future expansions, other mods, or similar will all "just work" with the custom ship with no changes.
    • In AIWC, we would have had to evaluate every ship to see if it needs new immunities to the new ability, by contrast, meaning that if a modder didn't do that their ship could act in unexpected ways with new features.

For Modders

For explanations of how to mod these mechanics onto ships, please visit the Modding Special Mechanics page as a reference.

Cloaking

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Tachyon Beams

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Tractor Beams

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Gravity Fields

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Bubble Forcefields

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Personal Shields

Most ships have some level of personal shielding to help augment their hulls. Damage is first applied to the shields, and then the hull. Damage from the shields spills right over to the hull if there is an overage. Any self-damage that a unit does to itself ignores its shields, however.

If it has been at least 4 seconds since the ship was damaged by an external source, then that ship's shields will automatically start regenerating on their own. It takes roughly 30 seconds for a ship's personal shields to return to full health. This can be accelerated by having an engineer repair the ship.

Engine Stun

Weapons that have an engine-stun ability on them will add a certain number of seconds' worth of engine stun to targets that they hit. If a weapon has an engine stun effect of 8 seconds, then every target it hits will have its engines stunned for 8 seconds. The effects of these stuns are cumulative, up to a maximum of 60 seconds.

However, an engine-stunner can only hit ships that have up to a certain engine gravitic exponent (gx). Depending on the strength of the stunner, many ships with stronger gravity-generating engines will be completely immune to the stun. No ships have partial immunity. Note that even if a ship is immune to the engine-stun from a weapon, the firing weapon will still do its normal hull/shield damage.

Lastly, when looking at a ship that has been engine-stunned, it's worth noting that the stun is less effective depending on how few second's of stun are left. At 1 second of stun remaining, the ship can still move at 90% of its normal speed. At 4 seconds of stun remaining, it can still move at 50% of its normal speed. By the time there is 7 or more seconds of stun remaining, the ship cannot move at all.

It is possible for engineers to repair engine-stunned ships to get them back online faster.

An engine-stunned ship can still use all of its abilities and weapons as normal; it simply cannot move (or cannot move as fast, if its stun has almost worn off).

Paralysis

Weapons that have a paralysis ability on them will add a certain number of seconds' worth of full-ship-paralysis to targets that they hit. If a weapon has a paralysis effect of 8 seconds, then every target it hits will cease every function for 8 seconds. The effects of these paralyses are cumulative, up to a maximum of 20 seconds.

However, an paralysis effect can only hit ships that have up to a certain mass tonne-Exponent (tX). Depending on the strength of the paralyzer, many ships of a larger scale will be completely immune to the paralysis. No ships have partial immunity. Note that even if a ship is immune to the paralysis effect from a weapon, the firing weapon will still do its normal hull/shield damage.

It is NOT possible for engineers to repair paralyzed ships to get them back online faster. The internal crew or repair systems have to take care of it themselves.

An paralyzed ship cannot do anything; that said, its shields do not go offline, and so bubble-forcefields will continue to work.

Ion Damage

Ion damage is a special form of radiation that affects ships of a lower mark level than the attacker. Notably, a weapon with ion damage can only hit ships that have a lower mark level than itself. Ion weapons also cannot hit markless ships.

The greater the difference in mark levels between the attacker and the defender, the more damage the attacker does. However, defending ships with a sufficiently high albedeo are also immune to ion damage. The ion weapon has a rating on itself that states what maximum albedeo it is able to hit; so not all ion weapons are equal.

Another inequality between ion weapons is just how much damage they do based on the difference in mark levels. Some may only have a 20% ion damage rating, and thus do 20% damage to a ship that is 1 level below them, 40% to a ship that is two levels below them, and 40% damage to a ship three levels below them, etc. Another weapon may have an 80% ion damage rating, and thus do 80% damage to a ship that is 1 level below them, and 100% damage to a ship that is 2 levels below them. The amount of damage caps out at 100%.

What exactly is the "damage percentage" based off of?

  • If the defending ship has any shield points at the moment, then it is based off the percentage of the maximum shield points that ship could have.
    • So if a ship has 250 max hull points and 200 max shield points, and currently has 250 hull points and 10 shield points...
      • An ion weapon with a rating of 100% would do 200 damage to the ship, thus causing the target ship's shield points to drop to 0, and the ship's hull points to drop to 60.
      • An ion weapon with a rating of 20% that is two levels above the ship would deal 80 damage, thus causing the shield points to drop to 0 and the hull points to drop to 180.
  • If the defending point has no shield points at the moment (regardless of whether their max shield points is above zero), then it is based off the percentage of the maximum hull points that ship could have.
    • So if a ship has 250 max hull points and 200 max shield points, and currently has 240 hull points and 0 shield points...
      • An ion weapon with a rating of 100% would do 250 damage to the ship, thus killing the target.
      • An ion weapon with a rating of 20% that is two levels above the ship would deal 100 damage, thus dropping the target's hull points to 140.

Special note!! As you may have noticed in the math examples above, ion damage immediately rolls over from a personal shield to the hull. Yikes! Normal shots impact fully against any personal shields, potentially having wasted overkill, and do not roll over to the hull. This is a big advantage of personal shields that is nullified by ion damage.

Reminder: if a potential target's albedeo is higher than the ion system is rated for, OR the potential target's mark level is greater than or equal to the firing ship, OR the target is markless, then the ion weapon can't even fire at the target.

Vampirism (Self-Healing)

When these ships damage another ship, they also heal themselves. Depending on the strength of their vampirism, they may heal by just a portion of the damage they damage dealt, or could even do a magnified amount of healing.

This first repairs hull health, and then if the hull is fully repaired it will start repairing the shield health (personal or bubble, if present) of the ship.

As a special bonus, if the squad here has multiple subsquads of ships, and some of the subsquads are dead, then it actually revives the dead ones progressively as well.

Self-Damage

When these ships damage another ship, they also damage themselves. Depending on the strength of their self-damage, they may do just a portion of that damage to themselves, or could even do a magnified amount of damage to themselves.

As with any normal sort of damage, this will first damage the shield health of the personal or bubble forcefield that the attacker has, and then it will switch over to damaging the hull of that ship after that.

Note that if another ship is protecting the attacker via a bubble forcefield , that doesn't cause the attacker to damage the external bubble forcefield protecting it. The attacker can only damage itself, whether that be its own shields or hull.

An attacker WILL kill itself eventually if it attacks enough, and it will consider this essentially the normal cost of doing business, so to speak. It won't hold back when an attack would cause it to kill itself.

Repairs To Ships (Engineering)

These ships are able to heal other ships that are damaged (typically their hull, shields, and any sub-squads that have been killed).

Rebuilding

These ships are able to rebuild ships that have been destroyed and turned into burnt-out husks of themselves. This goes for things like golems that die and turn inactive, and things like turrets as well (this is a convenience so that you don't have to manually rebuild your turret placements every time one dies -- you just have to have rebuilders handy and then pay for the metal costs).

Assisting Ship Construction (Also Engineering)

These ships are able to speed up the construction of ships that are either self-building or which are being constructed via a queue inside a space dock or similar. This ability is typically on engineers, but can be given to other ships as well.

Claiming Neutral Entities

These ships are able to go over to neutral ships or structures (anything from golems or other ships that are capturable to simple metal harvester spots) and repair them to turn your team color and start working for you.

Area of Effect Damage (Circular Variants)

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Area of Effect Damage (Beam Variants)

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Multi-Shot Salvos

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Zombification

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Nanocaustation

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Metabolization

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Spawn Camping

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Weapon Systems Damage (Strength/Reload/Range)

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Personal Shield Penetration/Damage-Boost/Penalty (With Variants)

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Armor Crush/Compression (Low/High Armor Damage-Boost)

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Implosion (High Energy Damage-Boost)

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Regen (Personal/Field)

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Regenerator (Global)

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Attrition (Personal/Field/Planetary)

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Spawning Drone Ships

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Hydra

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Damage Reduction Field

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Damage Amplification Field

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Damage Reduction Field

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