Difference between revisions of "AI War:Why Do Enemy Waves Get So Large?"

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Revision as of 13:24, 4 February 2011

Why Do The Enemy Waves Get So Large So Fast?

Q: With AI players of difficulty 8 and up, it seems like they get really huge incoming waves way faster than before. Is there anything I can do to prevent this?

A: Yes, there is definitely something you can do to prevent this -- keep the AI Progress level as absolutely low as you can. This might mean skipping planets you would normally take, stealing knowledge from AI planets in more cases, not doing as many gate-raids as you otherwise would, doing a lot more deep-raids into enemy territory, and other advanced strategies. That's part of the challenge of these highest difficulties: the decisions about which planets to take, and when, are a lot more momentous. This effect is even more pronounced on difficulty 10.

For a more detailed explanation, here's how the wave sizes are calculated (in version 4.043 and later):

How Wave Sizes Are Calculated

Note that all of the above is for calculating just a single Wave's size. In single player, each AI separately launches a wave against you, often simultaneously. In multiplayer or multi-home-planet starts, each AI gets one wave per player. So with four players, you'll see waves in batches of four or eight, depending on whether one or both AIs are sending waves at you simultaneously, for instance.

Each individual wave is shown as a line item on the alerts window in the upper left of the screen, and the calculations for each line item is what's being covered here.

Also, please note that this formula is completely new as of version 4.040 or so. Prior to that, a different, less-interesting, more-forgiving-for-high-AI-Progress formula was used.

Step 1:

Find the intersection of your current difficulty level and AI Progress off the chart below. This is an abbreviated chart, of course: the non-integer AI Difficulties are ignored here, and only a few example AI Progress amounts are shown. If you want the exact number for your specific case, the formula for this step is as follows: ( AIProgress * AIDifficulty ) / ( 11 - AIDifficulty )

AI Progress 1 10 20 50 100 200 300 500 1000 4000
AI Difficulty
1 0.1 1 2 5 10 20 30 50 100 400
2 0.22 2.22 4.44 11.11 22.22 44.44 66.67 111.11 222.22 888.89
3 0.38 3.75 7.5 18.75 37.5 75 112.5 187.5 375 1500
4 0.57 5.71 11.43 28.57 57.14 114.29 171.43 285.71 571.43 2285.71
5 0.83 8.33 16.67 41.67 83.33 166.67 250 416.67 833.33 3333.33
6 1.2 12 24 60 120 240 360 600 1200 4800
7 1.75 17.5 35 87.5 175 350 525 875 1750 7000
8 2.67 26.67 53.33 133.33 266.67 533.33 800 1333.33 2666.67 10666.67
9 4.5 45 90 225 450 900 1350 2250 4500 18000
10 10 100 200 500 1000 2000 3000 5000 10000 40000

Step 2:

Multiply size by a random number between 0.8 and 1.1.

Step 3:

Given the chart below, if smaller than the floor, then set to the appropriate floor.

AI Difficulty Minimum Wave Size
1 10
2 20
3 30
4 40
5 50
6 60
7 70
8 80
9 90
10 100

Note: the in-between difficulties are taken into account, so 7.6 means a minimum of 76.

Step 4:

Now apply the multiplier based on the AI Type. These range from 0.25 to 2.0, with only the Mad Bomber being as high as 2.0. Most of the “aggressive” types are 1.5 or 1.25.

Step 5:

Now apply the “wave size” variable, which is generally based on how long it has been since the last wave. This typically ranges from anywhere from 0.1 to 3 or even a bit more. For the first wave of the game, it's always 1. In the case of counterattack waves and raid engine waves, this is simply 2.0.

Step 6:

Now apply the multipliers from the actual ship types themselves. Ships with a larger ship cap have bigger waves, those with smaller ones have smaller waves. So there are always 2.8x as many laser gatlings, for instance, compared to the norm.

Note that for waves with multiple ship types (as with the Schizophrenic AI), each individual type of is multiplied by its multiplier, with a floor of 1 per ship type.

Step 7:

Now wave sizes are reduced based on what mark level they are. These reductions happen per each individual type of ship, as happens in step 7 with the wave multipliers -- again with a floor of 1 per ship type.

Mark Level Multiplier
1 1.5
2 0.9
3 0.7
4 0.6
5 0.5

Step 8:

Now the count of each type in the wave is multiplied based on difficulty:

Difficulty Multiplier
Difficulty < 6 1
Difficulty = 6    2
7 <= Difficulty < 8    3
Difficulty = 8+ 4

Step 9:

For waves with only one non-starship type, if the number is less than the effective ship cap for that type it is increased to that effective ship cap. So on low caps a wave of just mkI fighters (plus a starship) will have at least 49 mkI fighters.


And now you have your number -- that's it! Tables created with excel2wiki

AI War:Fleet Command