Difference between revisions of "Getting Started"
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Approximately every 10 minutes , the AI will send a wave of units at you, displayed at the top left. As AIP increases, so does the strength of the wave. The AI at lower difficulties will target its waves at any planet you own with no clear objective in mind. It's attacks are also suicidally overconfident. The units that attack also tend to not retreat, and thus will not become a part of the threat or hunter fleet. As you increase the difficulty though, The AI's attacks tend to get more intelligent, and will actually overestimate how powerful your defenses are, causing it to often picking on the weaker planets or one with irreplaceable capturables on it. This also gives the AI a more "cowardly" attitude towards its attacks on the surface, as the AI's units will now attempt to retreat instead of fighting to the death. This will cause them to become threat fleet and if enough threat is accumulated, then that threat may just roll up to your homeworld in one massive wave. At higher difficulties, if you have multiple connected worlds (most often your homeworld and it's adjacent planets), the AI will often attempt to sneak some of a wave's units past your defenses to raid vulnerable worlds behind. This can lead to a sudden power outage if the AI manages to snipe an economic command station planet behind a military station planet. | Approximately every 10 minutes , the AI will send a wave of units at you, displayed at the top left. As AIP increases, so does the strength of the wave. The AI at lower difficulties will target its waves at any planet you own with no clear objective in mind. It's attacks are also suicidally overconfident. The units that attack also tend to not retreat, and thus will not become a part of the threat or hunter fleet. As you increase the difficulty though, The AI's attacks tend to get more intelligent, and will actually overestimate how powerful your defenses are, causing it to often picking on the weaker planets or one with irreplaceable capturables on it. This also gives the AI a more "cowardly" attitude towards its attacks on the surface, as the AI's units will now attempt to retreat instead of fighting to the death. This will cause them to become threat fleet and if enough threat is accumulated, then that threat may just roll up to your homeworld in one massive wave. At higher difficulties, if you have multiple connected worlds (most often your homeworld and it's adjacent planets), the AI will often attempt to sneak some of a wave's units past your defenses to raid vulnerable worlds behind. This can lead to a sudden power outage if the AI manages to snipe an economic command station planet behind a military station planet. | ||
− | Every 2 hours or so, the AI will unleash a Cross Planet Attack (CPA). A CPA is when the AI spawns in a massive amount of ships | + | Every 2 hours or so, the AI will unleash a Cross Planet Attack (CPA). A CPA is when the AI spawns in a massive amount of ships as threat, and they'll be ready and waiting to raid your homeworld when they feel that they can take it. A CPA spawns it's units over MANY AI planets with a warp gate present. Destroying a warp gate prevents CPA units from spawning on that planet, but the units that would have spawned on that warp gate will distribute themselves among the remaining warp gates. Once the units spawn, they tend to converge on an AI planet closest to your homeworld, and once they gather enough strength will simply charge towards your homeworld in an attempt to cut the head off the snake. If you raid the planet the CPA's units are gathering on, they tend to disperse and choose a different planet to attack from a different angle. CPAs are no joke, and it's not uncommon for people to die on them the first time around. |
At a high enough difficulty and AIP level, the AI can unleash wormhole invasions. Wormhole invasions are TERRIFYING. They can strike anywhere except for your homeworld, and at difficulty 9 and 10, right near your core worlds (worlds adjacent to your homeworld). There's no telling when they strike, but they tend to target weaker planets or planets with important capturables on them. Even worse, a wormhole acts as a warp gate for the AI allowing it to potentially unleash waves deep into your territory, despite not having a warp gate present. | At a high enough difficulty and AIP level, the AI can unleash wormhole invasions. Wormhole invasions are TERRIFYING. They can strike anywhere except for your homeworld, and at difficulty 9 and 10, right near your core worlds (worlds adjacent to your homeworld). There's no telling when they strike, but they tend to target weaker planets or planets with important capturables on them. Even worse, a wormhole acts as a warp gate for the AI allowing it to potentially unleash waves deep into your territory, despite not having a warp gate present. |
Revision as of 17:40, 22 October 2019
Contents
Newcomers
Welcome to AI War 2!
AI War 2 is a combination of RTS, 4X, and Tower Defense. You'll be continuously commanding units in battle, explore the galaxy, and defend your planets all at once.
It's recommended to start with the tutorials.
Once those are done (or for the impatient), look in the Quick Start section of single player and check out one of the beginner situations. This should help you familiarize yourself with the game's mechanics and quirks. There is also a lot of "How to Play" documentation available from the in-game main menu.
In general, AI War 2 isn't about going guns blazing and capturing everything in sight. That'll just get you killed. It's about taking only what you need and being as quiet as possible so you don't draw the attention of the AI. The AI doesn't play by the rules, or rather, it plays by a different set of rules. The AI can afford to throw countless ships at you. You (in general) can't do the same. Pick your targets strategically, methodically and carefully. Don't be afraid to cut and run if you start loosing a battle.
At the top of the UI, you'll see a big red number with the accompanying letters AIP. This is AI Progress, AKA how pissed off the AI is against you. The higher this number rises, the more attention the AI directs to you. At the start of the game, the AI is busy attending to business outside the galaxy (it's probably trying to fight the Spire in the Andromeda Galaxy), but as you start taking planets from the AI and destroying its infrastructure, it'll start turning its attention towards you. More on this below.
Remember! There are many different ways to play this game. The game is fluid, and what may work against one AI type may not work against another, so adapt and revise how you play constantly. Variety is the spice of life after all.
The AI can be divided into 6 components, AI Sentinels, AI Threat, AI Warden Fleet, AI Hunter Fleet, AI Instigators and AI Praetorian Guard.
- The AI Sentinels are the main AI faction you'll be fighting. AI Sentinels are usually dormant, found inside Guardposts, or sent as attack waves towards your planets. Most AI units start out as Sentinels but can become AI Threat under certain circumstances, usually after a certain amount of time after you aggro them.
- The AI Warden Fleet are used by the AI to defend only. They will never be committed to an attack on your planets.
- The AI Threat are AI forces actively waiting to strike. These units are ready to come at any time they sense a weakness. Threat is provoked typically by AI defenders who escape a planet after you attack it, or the remainder of defeated waves. If Thread doesn't find a suitable target to attack after a while, those units will join the Hunter Fleet.
- The AI Hunter Fleet will constantly probe your planets for weaknesses and will attack whenever they feel like they can win.
- The AI Instigators are not immediately apparent until later into the game. Every hour or so, an Instigator base will spawn somewhere in the galaxy. Instigators spawn close to your homeworld and on low level planets initially, but as the AIP becomes higher, they will spawn farther away and on higher mark planets. Instigator bases have a variety of nasty effects, ranging from increasing the amount of strength the AI will put into its waves, to spawning units every now and then to attack you. Instigators are usually not immediately threatening, but do not take your time dealing with them. The longer they remain active, the deadlier they get!
- The AI Praetorian Guard behaves like the AI Warden Fleet, except they will only appear near and on AI home worlds and WILL attack any nearby human planets.
Difficulty
AI War's difficulty is non linear. It's more like an exponential curve between 10 points, so difficulty 1-4 isn't to much of a change, difficulty 5-6 is when the AI starts getting notably more powerful, difficulty 7-8 is when the AI really starts kicking you in the shins, difficulty 9 is nigh impossible, difficulty 10 IS supposed to be impossible (if you somehow manage to beat difficulty 10 without cheating or heavily stacking the odds in your favor, please report it to mantis bug tracker).
When setting the difficulty for the AI, there are 3 main components, the base AI/AI sentinels, the AI wardens and the AI hunters.
- Increasing AI sentinel difficulty affects the game the most. The default difficulty is set to 5, but the real fun/challenge begins at 7. at lower difficulties, the AI is... pretty much lobotomized and is nowhere near as intelligent as it could be. It's ships pick less than optimal targets, it will never retreat it's forces, and it tends to underestimate human defenses, but as you turn up the difficulty, the AI gets much more intelligent, and will actually start overestimating your defenses, causing it to send more forces than necessary to be sure, it's units will target other units it's strong against, and will even attempt to slip some attacking forces behind your planets when a big battle takes place. Many nasty things are locked behind difficulty 7.
- Increasing AI warden difficulty will increase how many wardens will spawn at the start of the game, as well as increasing the maximum strength cap of the warden fleet. Increasing the AI warden difficulty also allows the warden fleet to get closer to your planets as well as how intelligent they are. At higher difficulties, the Warden Fleet gets access to more powerful units up to and including GOLEMS. At low difficulty levels, the Warden Fleet will attack more recklessly.
- Increasing AI hunter difficulty will increase how many hunters spawn at the start of the game. Once the difficulty high enough, the hunter fleet starts getting bonus ships constantly throughout the game, rather than having to wait for threat ships to transition to hunters. Just like AI wardens, At high enough difficulties, the Hunter Fleet gets access to more powerful units up to and including Dire Guardians. At low difficulty levels, the Hunter Fleet will attack more recklessly.
How DOES The AI Work?
The AI has an "income" that it can "spend" on various "budgets". These budgets are Reinforcement, Wave, CPA, Warden, Hunter, Praetorian, Wormhole invasion, Reconquest and possibly more. As you increase the AIP and difficulty of the game, the AI gets a bigger income increase and thus more "buying" power. Let's look at this in a simplified way. Let's say that the AI wants to attack a human planet. It needs to build up that fleet using raw materials (income), but must also consider committing some of these soon to built ships to defense, lest the pesky humans perform a counterattack. After finishing building the ships it wants, the AI dedicates (spends) most of the newly created ships to attacking the human planet it wants, and the rest on reinforcing various key points (wave and reinforcement budget). The AI's behavior is also dependent on it's difficulty.
The AI's Attack Process
Approximately every 10 minutes , the AI will send a wave of units at you, displayed at the top left. As AIP increases, so does the strength of the wave. The AI at lower difficulties will target its waves at any planet you own with no clear objective in mind. It's attacks are also suicidally overconfident. The units that attack also tend to not retreat, and thus will not become a part of the threat or hunter fleet. As you increase the difficulty though, The AI's attacks tend to get more intelligent, and will actually overestimate how powerful your defenses are, causing it to often picking on the weaker planets or one with irreplaceable capturables on it. This also gives the AI a more "cowardly" attitude towards its attacks on the surface, as the AI's units will now attempt to retreat instead of fighting to the death. This will cause them to become threat fleet and if enough threat is accumulated, then that threat may just roll up to your homeworld in one massive wave. At higher difficulties, if you have multiple connected worlds (most often your homeworld and it's adjacent planets), the AI will often attempt to sneak some of a wave's units past your defenses to raid vulnerable worlds behind. This can lead to a sudden power outage if the AI manages to snipe an economic command station planet behind a military station planet.
Every 2 hours or so, the AI will unleash a Cross Planet Attack (CPA). A CPA is when the AI spawns in a massive amount of ships as threat, and they'll be ready and waiting to raid your homeworld when they feel that they can take it. A CPA spawns it's units over MANY AI planets with a warp gate present. Destroying a warp gate prevents CPA units from spawning on that planet, but the units that would have spawned on that warp gate will distribute themselves among the remaining warp gates. Once the units spawn, they tend to converge on an AI planet closest to your homeworld, and once they gather enough strength will simply charge towards your homeworld in an attempt to cut the head off the snake. If you raid the planet the CPA's units are gathering on, they tend to disperse and choose a different planet to attack from a different angle. CPAs are no joke, and it's not uncommon for people to die on them the first time around.
At a high enough difficulty and AIP level, the AI can unleash wormhole invasions. Wormhole invasions are TERRIFYING. They can strike anywhere except for your homeworld, and at difficulty 9 and 10, right near your core worlds (worlds adjacent to your homeworld). There's no telling when they strike, but they tend to target weaker planets or planets with important capturables on them. Even worse, a wormhole acts as a warp gate for the AI allowing it to potentially unleash waves deep into your territory, despite not having a warp gate present.
AI Progress
AI war is a balancing act. You must make sure you can increase your power, without tipping the AI about how strong you really are. The
There are many ways to Increase AIP, but very few ways to decrease AIP.
Increasing AI Progress
- Destroying AI command station: 20 (includes warp gate)
- Destroying AI warp gate: 5
- Destroying AI troop accelerator: 5
- Destroying AI black hole machine: 5
- Destroying AI attack amplifier: 5
- Destroying AI astro train station:
- Destroying AI astro train depot:
- Destroying AI
General Tips
- Don't attempt to conquer everything, only capture planets that have something important/you need, or have strategic value. A planet that has a Zenith Power Generator or a fleet, or worlds directly adjacent to your home world are good for example.
- At certain AIP points, the AI "techs up" its units, so that the Warden Fleet, Hunter Fleet, and waves will be one level higher. This is a major buff to the AI's strength, so be careful about increasing the AIP too much too quickly.
- There is a cap to how strong the Warden Fleet can get. Once it reaches that cap, any resources devoted to the Warden Fleet instead adds to wave budget. IF you see waves suddenly spike up in strength and no/very little AIP has increased, it's probably because the Warden Fleet is at its maximum capacity. Start grinding down the Warden Fleet to return waves to normal strength.
- Neutering planets refers to killing everything on an AI planet except for the Warpgate and Command Station. This makes the planet almost harmless to travel through. Don't just leave it. Note: The AI can rebuild turrets if they were originally around the Command Station on the planet. Be aware.
- Cross Planet Attacks are best dealt with piecemeal. You don't want to have a sudden rush of AI units barge into your homeworld while you're dealing with something else on a different planet. Generally, the units from a cross planet attack will wait outside one of your planets, and once they have amassed enough units or feel confident enough to take on your planet they will charge all at once. While they are gathering, find the planet they are on and kill off as many as you can. While this will typically cause them to retreat and go to a different planet, it's better to deal with that threat a little bit at a time.
- Find and hold (by default) both major data centers for a HUGE AIP reduction.
- Reconquest waves happen once you cross a certain AIP threshold.
Abbreviations
- MDC: Major Data Center
- CPA: Cross Planet Attack
- ZPG: Zenith Power Generator
- ZMC: Zenith Matter Converter
- ARS: Advanced Research Station
- IGC: Intra-Galactic Coordinator
- ZT: Zenith Trader
- AIP: AI progress
- ST: Super Terminal
- SA: Spire Archive
- DSVG/VG: Dark Spire Vengeance Generator/Vengeance Generator
- DS: Dyson Sphere (Note: Dyson Sphere and Dark Spire both have the same abbreviation, DS, so read the surrounding text to see what which faction someone is talking about)
Veterans
Welcome back to AI War. The AI has taken over the galaxy (again), but lots of things have changed.
Major Mechanic Changes
- In general, AI War 2 is not as micro intensive as classic, and many things have been removed due to redundancy, clutter, or making things easier to understand.
- Fleetships are renamed to Strikecraft and Starships are renamed to Frigates.
- Instead of producing Strikecraft and Frigates immediately, they are bound to a Flagship. You can't just, say for example, immediately build 150 Fighters, Bombers, missile frigates and a bonus ship. Instead, you must have a Flagship that has those units attached to it. Once built however, there is no limit to how far a Strikecraft or frigate can go across the galaxy, like AI War Classic.
- Flagships are captured much like Golems from Classic and they are what lets you expand your military power. Flagships come in 3 varieties, strike (generic transport Flagship, but many Strikecraft and Frigates), officer (Flagship has a gimmick or is very powerful on it's own) and Lone Wolf fleets (no supporting Strikecraft or frigates, but the Flagship is INSANELY powerful).
- Flagships cannot die. Instead, when they reach 10% health, they become crippled. While crippled, a Flagship cannot have Strikecraft or Frigates assigned to it built and if it has a weapon, can't shoot. The Flagship can still move however and be repaired back to full strength. While this means that you can't lose your Golems anymore, the AI still gets LOTS of salvage for reprisal.
- Units now have shields, which is basically a second health bar. However, anything with a fusion attack such as Raider Frigates and Bombers will ignore a certain % of shields. (For example, a Raider Frigate has 90% fusion damage, so an attack that deals 1000 damage will decrease the target's health by 900 and shields by 100)
- Scout Strikecraft no longer exist. Scouting as a whole has been reworked.
- Planets have 4 states, unscouted, explored, watched and permanently watched.
- Unscouted planets cannot be traveled to at all. Explored planets can be moved to but you have no vision on that planet. Info on explored planets are on a "last seen" basis. Watched planets are planets that you can see in real time because you have a unit there or something providing vision. Permanently watched is the same as watched but no unit is required to be there in order to see what's going on. You scout by destroying AI command stations, which causes 8 unscouted planets to become explored.
- Planets have 4 states, unscouted, explored, watched and permanently watched.
- ARS no longer give their contents via capturing their planets, but by hacking them.
- Hull and ammo types are gone.
- These have been replaced with the stats Armor, Albedo, Engine and Mass. More info can be found on AI War 2: Units of Measurement
- You no longer spend knowledge on individual unit upgrades, but instead on categories divided into weapon types and hull types.
- While you spend more knowledge short term, with multiple units upgraded at once, you save knowledge long term.
- All ships are no longer built as individual marks. Instead they are upgraded all at once (For example: if you have MK2 V-Wings somewhere in the galaxy, and you upgrade the Generalist tech category, ALL V-Wings currently alive and built after this upgrade will become MK3.)
- Units can now be upgraded to mk7
- Hacking points are now earned per planet, rather per AIP.
- Each planet has 30 Hacking points and you can only earn them by building a Command Station on that planet.
- Colony ships no longer exist.
- In order to build Command Stations on planets, you must have a Flagship on that planet as well as no AI Command station.
- Supply mechanic no longer exists
- So feel free to build whatever wherever.
- Energy collectors do not exist anymore. Instead, Economic Command Stations produce 2 energy collectors' worth of energy, Logistical Command Stations produce 1 energy collector's worth of energy and Military Command Stations produce no energy at all.
- Salvage no longer exists, so it's pointless to build a world designed specifically to collect it, but you can make a point of farming EXP to increase that Command station's Level to make it harder for the AI to remove.
- Cloaking is no longer an "on/off" state, but rather each ship that has cloaking has a certain amount of cloaking points, and every time it shoots or gets detected, it loses cloak points by a set amount or certain rate respectively. Once cloak points reach 0, THEN, the ship is no longer cloaked. A ship cannot recharge cloak points until all its cloak points reach 0 and is not being detected or firing for 5 seconds.
- Cloaking boosters have been removed, so a a sentry frigate can't cloak boost another one to be invisible to other detection sources.
- AI strategic reserve has been reworked into the praetorian guard, so they are always "visible"
- Engineers can no longer go through wormholes.
- variants that CAN go through wormholes are called Combat Engineers.
- Currently, no unit teleports
- Science labs have been removed.
- Command stations automatically collect science
- Mercs have been removed so you can't just hire mk4 units right off the bat.
- They have been reworked into Outguards, which work something like this. Hack an Outguard beacon to gain access to various Outguards. You can immediately call in 1 Outguard. for every 100 AIP you gain, you can summon another Outguard. Having 200 AIP and then hacking an Outguard beacon gives you 3 free calls.
- Every fleet and command station can gain exp to level. Leveling up upgrades the flagship/command station and a few units attached to it. eventually you can spend skill points on stuff (this has yet to happen)
- Neinzul (currently) no longer exist
- Cries in Neinzul
Minor Changes
- Wormhole guardposts no longer exist.
- Yay! No more annoying 2 damage attacks
- The Devourer Golem is killable (Fun fact: In Classic, the Devourer Golem used to be killable, but had insane vampirism. But then the Fallen Spire ships got added, which allowed players to cheese and destroy it rather easily. It was quickly made truly invincible after that.)
- He respawns though. For some reason he also likes to eat the Zenith Trader too.
- Translocation isn't an instant teleport, but rather a burst knockback, which is essentially the same thing.
- Harvester exoshield has been removed
- Decloakers no longer exist. Their role has been given to scout/sentry frigates.
- There is no reclaimation. Parasites and the like now cause zombification.
- By default, music playing is AI War 2 exclusive. If you wanna enable Classic music, check out the options menu.
- ALL forcefields reduce damage output of units being protected by them. Even AI units are not spared from this penalty.
- Hardened forcefields have been removed.
- Mobile builders have been removed
- If you want to build beachheads, look for citadels and battle stations.
- Science labs and Hackers have been removed
- Science labs' job has been given to command stations and flagships commence hacks now.
- Advanced factories, Core fabricators and Experimental fabricators have been removed
- Missile silo and warheads have been removed
- Goodbye Nuclear missile mk3 :(
- Human warp gates have been removed
- Mini forts, Fortresses, Super fortresses and Modular Fortresses have been removed.
- The AI still gets fortresses and super fortresses.
- Alarm posts now trigger automatically rather than activate when the AI command station is destroyed. However they no longer have a 50% chance of alerting other AI forces if destroyed manually or by hacking.
- Ion cannons and OMDs are no longer captured by taking over the planet, but by hacking.
- Most AI capturables (like Black hole machines) can no longer be converted to your side.
List of Currently Removed Content From Classic
Human Exclusive
- Advance Warp Sensor
- Human warp gate
- Missile Silo and associated warheads
- Harvester Exo shield
- Hackers and their associated extensions
- Science labs
- Neinzul as a whole, including hybrid hives and silos
Capturables
- Radar Jammers
- Armor Boosters
- Counter Spy
- Armor Booster/Inhibitor
- Interplanetary Munitions Booster
- Advanced Factory
- Core and Experimental Fabricators
- Human Rebel Colony
- Captive Human settlment
AI Exclusive
- Counter Attack Guard Post
- Core Shield
Minor Faction Changes
Dyson Sphere
The Dyson Sphere mechanic wise hasn't changed to much from it's incarnation in classic, however it has a whole slew of new interactions and units.
- It's units are no longer restricted to being laser gatling guns in space. Divided into 4 units, Sentinel, defender, bulwark and bastion
- Dyson Antagonizer is no longer a part of hybrid hives, but instead a part of the faction itself after being set to faction intensity 8.
- You can now "hack" the Dyson Sphere for various results, be it increasing unit production or allowing you to produce dyson units yourself! Of course hacking the Dyson Sphere may make it a little bit miffed at you.
- Multiple Dyson Spheres can exist at once now! But all it takes is just one antagonizer to make ALL of them mad...
Marauders
Marauders have changed pretty radically! They are now basically a more evil and simplified version of you!
- They will no longer throw a few bombers and missile frigates at you or the ai, they will instead attempt to actually colonize planets!
- They still spawn in like classic at the edge of a planet's gravity well.
- Once all oposition has been removed, they will begin colonizing the planet by spawning in starbases and building defense turrets.
- Starbasese mark up over time and once they reach mark III, they will begin to spawn raider frigates (not to be confused with the blazing fast raid frigates) that will attack the closest weakest planet available. A starbase cannot be mark III if there is a planetary controller already planetside (AI or Human command station)
- Starbases can have at max between 6 and 15 (depending on intensity of faction 6 being on int 1 and 15 being on int 10).
- After raider frigates have cleared out human/AI forces, they then colonize that planet, starting the cycle again.
Dark Spire
Still the same grumpy xenophobic fellows from the first game, with a few new interactions.
- You can obtain Dark Spire ships by hacking one of their vengeance genrerators.
- You can also kill vengeance generators now by hacking them to render them vulnerable.
- Vengeance strikes still occur, and you can cause them manually via hacking.
- Hacking a vengeance generator causes it to accumulate energy over time, so make sure you know what your doing.
- Dark Spire wards, used exclusively by the AI insta kills any Dark spire that roam onto planes with one.
Astro Trains
These guys are nowhere near as annoying as classic, so you don't have to worry about a nuclear train randomly blowing up one of your most important worlds. However they now all function as cargo trains.
- Give knowledge on death, so you can "farm" them for tech upgrades.
- Come in 3 varieties, Drone (spawns drones to distract you) Combat (focuses on killing your stuff directly) and Tank (has MUCH higher health but only has an anti structure weapon.)
- Can spawn prototype guardians (heroic dire guardians) once a project is complete.
- At max intensity, instead of spawning nuke trains, once an astro train project is complete a familiar shadow may appear...
Zenith Trader
This guy is still a "neutral" roamer who sells stuff to humans and AI. For some reason the Devourer Golem likes to munch on him. We don't know why, perhaps there's something sinister about the Zenith Trader? Don't worry though, if he dies he'll respawn.
- to humans, he no longer sells the crap from classic. Instead he sells controllable macrophages, nanocaust aberration and abominations, Dark Spire eidolons and lesser Z.power generators.
- to the AI he sells ion cannons, OMD, fortresses, black hole generators, troop accelerators and possibly more to be doccumented.