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Avalon, I hadn't thought of a 1-4-1 Silksteel Sentinel having any weaponry other than a pea-shooter. If it has a supplementary anti-something weapon, maybe that could be described by a special ability (AAA, SAM).But this doesn't make sense for a 1-4-1 vs 1-4-1 battle. Would there be anti-infantry supplementary guns?The way I envision it, a battle between a 1-4-1 and a 1-4-1 should be a pillow-fight. The battle might result in less than 25% damage dealt to each unit -- similar to an arty duel between land and sea units.However, a 4-1-1 vs 4-1-1 should be a blood-bath. Neither has any armor! Both should take heavy damage. To the death! As it is now, the attacker easily wins 99.9% of the time. Of couse, this is exactly how Firaxis wants it. It is their game. I'm voicing my opinion, my dreams.A 4-1-1 vs a 1-4-1 should be moderately destructive. Both ratios are 1:1, 4 vs 4 and 1 vs 1. I'm not sure if it should be a fight to the death...
It might be more realistic to make armor reduce damage taken, but would be more difficult to balance.
And since by default armor is costly on all but infantry
Unless the "duel to the death" mechanic is changed, there's not much difference between "reduce damage taken" and "increase damage dealt".
I have, perhaps the greatest request of you. And I know that it would not be priority but I see the potential for amazing things and so I must ask:Would it be possible to change combat substantially?
My ideal would that morale would be a hard number, not a % bonus. This number would influence your likelihood to "win" a given combat round: damage the enemy and not get damaged. % Modifiers in all the other ways they exist, could and should still exist. They wouldnt even need to be changed. But the Base numbers would be morale. + modifiers could be differentiated into attack and defense bonii. (So the base number would be a set morale, and modifiers to morale would improve offense or defense base numbers). This would be an added flavor bonus, since the command nexus blurb explicitly talks about how well thought out plans can beat technology, even with inferior force.
Weapons and armor then, would have new function. I have long wished for armor to either represent raw hitpoints/power (NOT REACTORS) and for weapons to be essentially a "firepower" mechanic which determines how much damage is done in a given "win" of a combat round.
I would like reactors to remain about the cost of the unit, but perhaps they could serve some other function as well.
I agree wholeheartedly that this would mean that combat would have to be limited to a set amount of rounds (perhaps a combination of the reactors of both units? Higher reactors = more rounds of combat?)
What I have in mind is essentially longer versions of the "Artillery duels" but for standard units. Artillery themselves would be very useful - because stack bunching is a natural consequence of this change - and artillery can damage multiple units at once - lending them increased utility.
Given all this, i firmly believe SOME things should be all or nothing. In particular: PSI and anti-air combat. Things that can attack the air from the ground should get one shot at it, and if it hits - death. Air v Air should be to the death. Here, perhaps reactors could serve as they do now - distance increasers - very very useful for air superiority. (Especially when modded with your tools).
Yitzi,My ideas are a bit muddled I admit, and I'm trusting your own judgment on what might be possible, and indeed, preferable.I am not sure of formula, but I have a general idea of what i'd like as a result of it.Rough Idea:5 Main features of any given unit:Chasis(Morale)WeaponArmorReactor:Chasis:As it is, the chasis functions as the mobility of the unit - I see no reason to alter or change this, the function is intuitive and pretty good. (Though I raise speeder speed to 3, and hovertanks to 5 - to allow for APC uses on speeders, it changes the game very little.):Morale:The biggest change I'd like is for Morale to be the fundamental decider of capability of a unit. The skill of the unit if you will.I imagine that Very Green, Green, Disciplined, Hardened, Veteran, Commando and Elite would all have specific "base" combat values.Possibility 1- The formula here should roughly run a spectrum between the attack value of 1 to 30ish (as weapons do) The defense value should run between 1 and 12 as armor does. If we can create a Morale system which reflects this - then the rest of the game doesnt need its numbers changed. (possibly)I read the treatise on Morale by someone, and I admit I dont understand quite how the + and ++ modifiers work. I was and am hoping you do.Possibility 2 - Perhaps there could be a base of 3 attack to 2 defense (seems to work well for PSI) and Morale, instead of adding % bonii, could provide a direct additive bonus. Perhaps 1 per level? And perhaps + and ++ (depending on what they're meant for) could provide bonuses to attack or defense specifically. This would make Elite INCREDIBLY accurate and nimble against very green troops. But instead of determining the whole of battle - it would merely determine if the unit "scored a hit" against the opponent.Possibility 3 - We use the 3:2 model directly, and continue to use Morale as % bonii, changing nothing else. However this feels so similar to PSI combat, that players might feel confused or befuddled by graphical information describing the battle.This may also necessitate a very fundamental shift in the way morale is distributed, gained and lost. Preferably there would be a increasing difficulty to gain higher and higher level troops. I would think perhaps that military buildings and combat itself should provide the raw base morale, and other morale modifiers should come in offensive and defensive flavors. SE and Faction choices should obviously have an important role to play, but I'm uncertain if that should be offense/defense bonii/penalty specialties - or raw morale. (See below) Base morale should be an investment found in combat and proper infrastructure. Also - i think Morale gains should occur for surviving units - not necessarily killing units. If two units fight and neither dies, both should have a possibility of a morale upgrade. Combat Morale upgrades might have to be tweaked to be even rarer.Example Morale distribution:Default Morale: GreenAppropriate Military Building: +1 Base MoraleBioenhancement: +1 Base MoraleHigh Morale specialty: +1 Base MoraleCombat Promotions: +1 Base Morale0 MORALE: No change-1 to -4: Base: Very Green, -1 to -3 MORALE on defense (- mods?)+1 to +4: Base: Disciplined, +1 to +3 MORALE on offense (+ mods?)(At first i wanted these to be the opposite, but given the variety of % bonus to defense, and minimal to offense, i figured this should be how it works given that low-morale tend to be builders, and high-morale tend to be armies) Low morale on the attack and high morale on the defense would be almost even. However, the reverse would be a HEAVY advantage to the high morale., meaning the builder should counter attack often.The reverse, low=-offense and high=+defense, means (i think) that fights would be even longer, and high-morale bases could not be taken nearly ever from low-morale attackers.Other Facilities: (Creche and others?) +1 Defensive Morale or as appropriate.Native life: As normal? Not sure how this worksOther modifiers?: ? Not sure of what else is involved.I feel like these changes would also influence a few special abilities nicely: Soporific Gas pods, Dissociative Wave and Blink Displacer:Weapon: I would like this to be the "damage" inflicted, at perhaps a 1:1 ratio between rating and damage against the target. E.g. an Impact unit would do 4 damage against it's opponent for every successful "hit" it scores.:Armor: This I imagine is 10 * the armor rating of the unit - in power/hp. So synthemetal sentinels would have 20 hp. Plasma sentinels would have 30, as would the res and pulse versions, however they'd get bonii to fighting (still hit bonii/morale/combat, not damage reduction). Given this - it might mean that armor will need to be changed to accommodate the ever increasing damage of weapons somehow. Perhaps just a raw .txt file boost. (It takes a 1-1-1*1 unit 10 shots to kill a 1-1-1*1 ; but it takes a 12-8-1*1 only 7 shots to kill another, etc):Reactor: Cost-alone, as you said, may be sufficient, given that "higher cost" units will now be in greater demand.***If done right - a lot of combat should be "similar to" but "more solid" than existing combat.All of this would necessitate significant changes to the interface describing combat result possibilities.***Desired Results***Given the above, units could still serve their respective purposes, generally. But the AI favors counter attack heavily anyway - and this would suit that end. Armored units would be very effective at slowing advances, or generally slowing combat down, allowing time for players or AI to counter attack with other more heavily weaponed units (which they do now anyway). But defense units could not kill on their own - unless the attacker was very poorly armored - making this effective against support units (artillery or pure attack units.)Support and Non-combat units shouldnt do damage at all to attackers. But perhaps if they win a given combat round they "escape" and combat immediately ends? Non-combat penalties would still apply, so the possibility of escape is still low. Plus given that unit death in general is much slower - they'll tend to survive longer anyway. Though, by the impact era the odds of a unarmored-non-combat unit surviving an attack from a impact attack unit should be relatively low and probably near impossible for a missile unit.Pure weapon units would still be viable, but would be primarily for swarm (cheapness) tactics. As the deathtoll would be high.Finally the Weapon+Armor units that exist would finally justify their exorbitant costs.Tactics arising from this could be cheap and underteched units - but ones that are excellent fighters. Built en mass, they may take forever to accomplish their goal, but they could achieve it.Also, high tech but few units could accomplish much the same thing - for opposing reasons.The middleground, held by the ai - would still do well with this, I should hope.***Thanks for even considering it! If you have a simpler way to achieve immersive results, let's just assume I'm a fan of it.-QesEDIT: Distance increasers = Speed boosts from reactor, which effectively increases distance.EDIT2: Also It'd be preferable to have the results of PSI combats look identical to how they are now. Deadly, absolute, and 3:2 on land, etc. This would make it feel even more different than regular combat.EDIT3: Oh, and if at all possible, Needlejets and Gravship units attacking non-air-superiority units should function like artillery.EDIT4(i'll stop now i swear): Is it possible to have artillery attacks in city squares have a % chance of destroying a facility? Maybe like 1%( /5 for command center, /5 for pressure dome, /20 for tachyon field) per weapon rating? Best weapon would have a 30% chance, reduced significantly for each building present. (Perimeter defense doesnt sound like hard bunkers, but a relay/network of scouts)And is it possible for there to be A) the destruction of a pressure dome for a sea base by this (or probe teams), AND for this to have consequences? (like when sea levels rise? - emergency domes are again constructed but with half the population dying.)
I think the best approach would be to multiply the 3:2 or 1:1 (depending on land or sea/air, i.e. the same ratio as for psi) by the morale value. The question is then what range morale should take (it can go fairly high; 100 would be quite doable, I think), and exactly how it should be affected by promotions and bonuses.
I don't think low MORALE giving a penalty just on defense is such a good approach. I think it might make more sense for them both to affect primarily offense, so that when builders fight the defender has an advantage but when warlike factions fight the attacker has an advantage.
Everything else you asked about would be doable...but I think that when sea levels rise and a base without a pressure dome ends up in the water, there isn't an emergency dome built, but rather the base is completely destroyed.
I think the tendency would be to require full weapon + armor on all units.
That's not bad, as tech should be rewarded.
I did try some games with units costing 100+ and what happens then is that native life ends up being universally superior.
Slower wars where less units are outright killed might not be a bad thing either. As I play more, I find that ideally you do not war all that much unless you vastly out skill your opponent, or you had a vastly superior start by luck. Granted the AI doesn't play this way for thematic reasons. What tends to happen with the current A/D paradigm is that even if you build a lot of defensive units, they lack initiative. An attacker can just circumvent around a heavily fortified city and conquer everything else, or wait to artillery down the stack. I think one thing that might help would be to allow retreating for slower units even in battles where the attacker is faster. I guess what I'm getting at is whether intuitiveness really helps much versus balance.
When you make all units requiring weapon and armor, counters then have to revolve around chassis and special abilities. Otherwise you just end up with a different single unit type which dominates everything.
So then you have to look at unit functionality, and where they should be strong.Infantry - powerful for attacking and defending cities (these bonuses exist).Rovers/Tanks - powerful in open terrain (this bonus exists). A few of the triangles of 'rock/paper/scissors' would go:Non-AAA Rovers/Tanks beat AAA infantry, which beat Air, which beat non-AAA Rovers/TanksNon-AAA Sea units beat AAA sea units, which beat Air, which beat non-AAA sea unitsNon-ECM land beats ECM land, which beats Rovers/Tanks, which beat non-ECM land Non-Trance/Empath beats Trance/Empath, which beats PSI, which beats non-Trance/Empath.And so on. I guess what I mean is that all units need to have a cost effective counter. So special abilities need to be strong and also have a cost (which they tend to).I do like the idea of reactors increasing speed of all units, rather than affecting unit cost and HP. I think then you would see more war as the game goes on. War would still be best avoided early game. You have to conquer an enemy very fast to make it worth it, especially when a lot of their facilities get smashed and then considering the C&B drones. Plus far bases tend to have high energy loss, and cities beyond your largest pact mate also produce much less energy. Generally I've found 'more crawlers/formers' better than another city.1-1 to start the game for A:D ratio isn't typical. The game quickly goes to 4-2 with rovers, and 6-3 around the time of air. I would say 2:1 is the standard, though it goes beyond 4:1 almost for awhile with Shard 13-3 being typical. 5 rounds to kill an enemy troop is still quite awhile, compared to just one round currently. You'd want to keep more defense for sure if armor was boosted up. For example a 10-6 would be 50% stronger than a 13-3...in fact you might see armor tech beelining since armor effectively multiplies weapons which are twice as strong. Although by doing so you would sacrifice weapons, so it'd be okay I think.
Would it be better to have it a multiplicative or additive benefit? I sorta imagine each level of morale to have a different base, which is then modified by % modifiers.So, Default 3:2. -1 for Very Green, 0 for Green, +1 per level above green. This would put the best attack ratio at 8:1 before modifiers, and the best defense ratio at 2:7. If we allow + modifiers to extend beyond "levels" (and be just further additional increases), then we could have 11:1 best attack ratio, and 2:10 best defense ratio.
Would it be desirable for the top and bottoms of morale to be further apart? I worry for low-morale builders.
A thought occurred to me on PSI combat. MORALE probably should not influence native-lifeforms base-level growth. One should not increase the quality of their produced lifeforms with MORALE settings, I feel. This would make Native-Life more fickle. Perhaps we can make it solely influenced by PLANET? PLANET ratings equate to MORALE settings for produced life forms? Makes planet a bit more interesting. And would set up some fun Gaian vs Spartan immersion - considering the "high morale" spartans lose to low morale gaians in the story.
Though to be honest, I never really sussed out how MORALE settings affected native life, it seemed influential but strange. MORALE in general operates strangely, so I might be mistaken here as to what is happening between them
Actually that sounds kind of awesome. It might cut down on sea-spam. Especially if we have "ships attacking sea bases" be artillery based - just like when they attack land bases. Why do this? Because it makes thematic sense, and would be more purely destructive. Other ships in harbor would prevent this - it'd be ships fighting, not shelling the base. Plus if we include that pressure domes reduce the possibility of facility destruction anyway - it wouldnt be THAT big of a problem - and would force different means of seabase capture. (Choppers or Amphibious infantry). More seabases would tend to be destroyed outright, keeping the oceans somewhat volatile.
Probeteams: Erm...hm, can we simply make this difficult to pull off? Perhaps an atrocity? (Specifically for that facility in a seabase only?
SE Questions:Is it possible to extend some SE qualities beyond their base? Like could we provide benefits for higher levels of POLICE, bigger ranges of consequences for PROBE and SUPPORT and ECONOMY?
If you make it additive, then high-morale fights will be nearly even, whereas low-morale fights will be strongly attacker-favored. I don't think that'll result in the sort of play you want (most likely, it'll cause builder wars to be more vicious than wars between militant powers).
It is important to balance the morale advantage to be strong enough but not too strong, and I'm not really sure what would be the best approach. But when you decide, I can (once I finish everything that's higher priority) almost certainly implement it.
Might make Pirates unplayable, though.
Definitely. You describe it, and I can probably (eventually) add it. Keep in mind it might be a while, though...
Well if you make it so unit HP = 10*armor value, then unarmored air and rovers will only have 10 HP. That won't be very useful when standard ground troops have 30 HP (Plasma) plus hit back for their weapon damage, and then add in things like ECM/AAA.
I still say it's very hard and not worth it to conquer an equally skilled player; even in the climate of very aggressive and fast styles like chop and drop or rover rushing.
Also the benefit of pacting others and trading techs is immense. Playing against the AI you can think it's a war game; but its really one more of diplomacy and trading like its older successor Civilization.
Only very late is war worth it as a desperation measure, when behind. Now this can be changed too, ironically by lowering building costs you can make a more aggressive game.
Ecodamage should be the main consideration for PLANET rating...native life capture and use secondary.
Mostly because beyond very early, infiltrate will let you see it coming a mile away. Now if PROBE modified infiltrate, that would change things.
INDUSTRY should only relate to minerals production though. Making INDUSTRY boost energy doesn't really make sense to me.
A non PSI unit would always be using their given conventional weaponry to fight (i.e. Missile, Shard, or whatever),
Currently the defensive aspect is based around 2:1 ratio (arguably flawed) and having every unit attack with its weapon would change that to 1:1.
If fights are not to the death so much then I suppose the attacker can get away with fighting battles that result in more damage taken to them. I still say it's very hard and not worth it to conquer an equally skilled player; even in the climate of very aggressive and fast styles like chop and drop or rover rushing.
Now this can be changed too, ironically by lowering building costs you can make a more aggressive game. Players can choose whether to then sink that into pods/formers/crawlers (play economic), or probes and army (play aggressive). Both should have their merits.
Making PLANET give +native lifecycles would probably make more sense than the current +10% PLANET on attack per rank. But it's pretty similar end effect really. PLANET can already be quite powerful especially if you mod ecodamage. Ecodamage should be the main consideration for PLANET rating...native life capture and use secondary. INDUSTRY should only relate to minerals production though. Making INDUSTRY boost energy doesn't really make sense to me. INDUSTRY already synergizes with both itself and energy production very well (due to build rush). Probably INDUSTRY should have been a production modifier rather than cost modifier. Cost modifier means many exploits such as where you tank and then raise INDUSTRY to complete an SP fast using supply crawlers. INDUSTRY thus being something like +X minerals per base, or +X minerals per square (more elegantly, perhaps just -X%/+X% minerals production). ECONOMY should only factor in for energy production and commerce. I suppose nutrients consumed is a decent idea but that would fit more with higher levels of the GROWTH SE. Making higher GROWTH affect N production would be another idea. But I think you'd see potential starvation if you switched out of the SE. That could be the risk I suppose if vendetta was declared on you. The current way GROWTH is handled is pretty good I'd argue as it doesn't allow you to outgrow your natural N production. The main flaw is that sometimes you can't get +1N from that next worker (usually due to drone control, but it could result from bad terrain, or more rarely no more terrain). A base that's just grown will immediately starve resulting in all the N used to make that worker to be lost. I think the fix for that in Civ2 was to make it so a base that grows only uses half its nutrients (to give some reasonable time to convoy or increase N, a city would never consume all its food at once in typical circumstances). Once you use pop booming later in the game this isn't seen as much, since it requires +2N the next worker will usually be fed whether it is a PSYCH specialist or not.
I feel another logical inconsistency in SMAC is the way that PSI and conventional weapons are used. You can see the developers didn't really think this design through when looking at how conventional artillery vs PSI defender is treated.
I don't think that a non-PSI unit would be downgrading to hand weapons ('1', though multiplied to '3' on attack or '2' on defense) vs a PSI unit.
PSI armor, well that is also a complexity. Right now it's not that useful anyways. Most likely it could be changed to give HP dependent on MORALE (20*rank or something similar). That or it could be a true counter to PSI attack, giving a strong damage reduction when defending vs PSI (but low total HP, so conventional weapons crush it).
I feel like, strangely, this makes more sense. Builders, or the inexperienced would fight more desperate and aggressive struggles, while the experienced would be forced to calculate moves and tactics rather than mere strategy. But that's arguable and your point is well made.
Yeah, I realize that you're quite busy with your plans. (Which by the way took some severe investigatory work to find. Your work deserves a "features list" with your notes attached. A miniwiki of it's own: preferably including all that stuff from the "gonna do next" thread I saw.)
I always thought this should be slightly different too. Even with given rules. Yitzi - would it be possible to modify the Infiltrate Datalinks option to a time limit? Perhaps 10 or 20 years? We have to assume societiies upgrade their security every once in a while - which would require a new infiltration (and to notice it was absent).
IN FACT. If I had one superwish - it would be that we drop the concept of "minerals" and revert back to "production" of some kind abstractly. And I wish that we could have a specialist citizen who produces "minerals/production."
Hurrying units should be inexpensive in comparison to facilities, which in turn should be inexpensive compared to Secret Projects. Though I am personally of the belief that while secret projects are being built - both (local)economy AND minerals should add to their construction. (Perhaps make them more expensive to compensate)I also feel like building colony pods should be constructed with nutrients AND minerals (again increasing expense as necessary)
I also generally wish population growth was separated from nutrient supply in general (as poor food-security nations tend to have higher population growth, and birthrates are not quite directly linked to food supplies), but that is an issue with abstraction that the whole of these games suffer from - so it's just quibbling at that point.
Speaking of which. THE BIGGEST MYSTERY IN SMAC is this:How did the Gaians capture their first mind worm boil? I wanna know how that worked. Did the mindworm boil the Gaian scout patrol happen to find share an affinity for kale and they bonded? Mindworm submission is a strange idea. "Mom they followed me home, can I keep them?"