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January 26th, 2002, 10:54 PM
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National Security Advisor
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Join Date: Dec 1999
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
Again, isn't this true of all system knowledge, not just that gained with Ancient Race?
To have each player keep their own Last seen view of each system would require the program to store that for each empire, and I don't think it does that, does it?
PvK
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January 27th, 2002, 12:01 AM
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Major
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
That's right. All sytem knowledge is the same.
Selecting ancient race is a waste of points.
Most knoledge of far away systems is completely useles, you normally only care about nearby systems, and exploring them isn't difficult.
Identifying homeworlds is not as easy as you describe, espacially in a large quadrant you'll find too many would be homeworlds.
It would only be a nice advantage if you select the option to make contents of all systems visible.
And you can get all advantages of ancient race without exploring the whole quadrant by signing a partership with someone that has it for only 1 turn.
The "As of 2402.5" exploration memory would need some deep hard code changes but it sounds to me like the best solution.
I had suggested it sometime but don't know if I was the first.
You could make it not only remember the planets and racial points, but even alien colonies, and not sure about ships (keeping track of Last know location of every enemy ship would be too much).
I hate not remembering the location of an alien homeworld I had already found but didn't bother to write down.
The more ruins but fewer with useful tech suggestion sounds good. I would avoind the ruin hunting strategy and give it a more random effect. It should be relatively easy to mod.
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January 27th, 2002, 05:16 PM
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Corporal
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: UK
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
A few comments:
Races which choose Ancient Race have spent 1000 on something which everyone will get eventually. Ancient races can't go into higher levels of alliance, without giving their advantage away to other races.
The ability to get extra tech from ruins is part of what they are paying for, and having more tech is part of what makes them an "ancient race" in my view.
You could of course mod your system generation to put more ruins "behind" hidden sectors - as I am doing in my mod as the "research" element. (This mod WILL be finished and released one day, soon, )
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January 28th, 2002, 01:22 AM
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Private
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Join Date: Dec 2001
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
I think everybody has made some good points: Having Ancient Race does confer some big initial advantages, for colonization and strategic defense if for nothing else. I don't think its actually useless; but as Andres pointed out, the rest of the players can achieve the same thing eventually, and then its useless. Basically, the advantages it confers initially are offset by the fact that its a one-off thing. You can save money on explorers, know where to send your colony ships, etc., (as well as using your starmaps as diplomatic bargaining chips) but 500 turns down the road so will everyone else, and they'll still have Organic tech or Advanced Storage while you have bumpkus. I think that's pretty balanced.
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January 28th, 2002, 07:25 PM
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General
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
and the fact you know about every update to the map.
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January 28th, 2002, 08:12 PM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
Off on a tangent if I may.
This is a perfect example of a point that many people forget during discussions of balance in SEIV. The fact is that most racial traits and techs have strengths and weaknesses that will change in relation to others over the course of a game. Theese advantages can appear unbalancing in a very specific point in the game, but with a long term view, they are not.
I always like to equate SEIV to a giant, highly detailed game of rock, paper, sizzors. I can imagine from the perspective of someone who plays paper, sizzors would seem highly "unbalanced". I mean, no matter how many times I face sizzors, they always cut right through me!
Many people will hit on a particular tech or racial trait and take the view that it is unbalanced and start calling for changes to the game. The fact is in almost every case it turns out they were missing some key point of view that would have allowed them to see the overall balance. Whether it's research cost, or in this case the limited time value of the ancient race attribute.
This is not to say the game is perfect. Of course problems have come up. But the big ones usually get fixed. If they didn't I doubt we would keep playing and caring.
The great modding flexibilty offered by this game allows for almost unlimited tweaking of these "unbalanced" factors. And yet, more often than not when someone decides to take it upon themselves to balance the game through a mod, they find it wasn't as bad as they thought at first, or they even make it worse.
Getting everybody to agree that a particualar acpect is unbalanced is not easy. Getting everybody to agree how it shold be changed to balance it out is almost impossible.
I don't really have a point here, other than this is a better game than even some of us that play it a lot realize.
Geoschmo
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January 28th, 2002, 09:16 PM
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Corporal
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Re: Ancient Race too powerful?
A lot of great comments concerning my initial post, so allow me to follow up:
I'll concede that the primary advantage of Ancient Race is strongest at the beginning of the game and decreases over the game years, but I think that the effect of that advantage carries across the entire game.
My point is that knowing the full-galaxy layout at the beginning of the game allows you to establish empire borders that greatly benefit your own empire. Let's say you determine (by looking for ~100% medium planets) that another player has a home system a few systems away, let's say 6 systems in between (ME-1-2-3-4-5-6-Him). With normal exploration and colonization at average rates (in all directions), you would expect each empire to expand equally, meet in the middle, and each claim the 3 systems on the side closest to their home. But the first thing I'm going to do is to send colonizer ships with armed escort straight to system #5 above (I'll leave him the extra system closest to home), and claim an extra 2 systems that would otherwise not be mine. How is he going to know I'm far away from home? He simply encounters an already colonized system and (unless he's looking for a fight) establishes his empire border in system #6.
In all the games I've played so far (Ancient Race or not), the key has been Location, Location, Location. The race who is able to expand into the most systems early, build up the most research planets, mining planets, and construction planets has a HUGE advantage for the entire game. Assuming 2 equally-experienced players, the player with the most research and resources is going to win nearly every time.
Other comments:[*]"Don't get Ancient Race, just become a partner with one." Yeah, you first of all have to FIND another player/AI that is Ancient Race, and then you have to convince them to Partner with you (with much less advantage for them). You're talking turn 30+, probably more like turn 50. By that time, empire borders are already established, you've already explored most of the nearby systems anyway. [*]Someone mentioned that it's not that easy to find enemy homeworlds, because there are too many candidates. Not true. Go to the planets screen, sort first by Mineral %, then sort by size (the planet icon column). Scroll down to the medium planets, and then down to about 110%. They key is that homeworlds have all 3 attributes around 100%. Random planets with ~100 on minerals will usually have 26% on radioactives or 134% on organics, a dead giveaway that it's not a homeworld. If you have several planets in the same system or nearby systems of the same type/atmosphere, then that's stronger evidence of a homeworld system. [*]Balance. I know this game is all about balance, but nobody has put forward a really convincing case that "Tech XX" is a much better spending of 1000 pts. I'm sure you guys have your opinions, why don't you tell me what you'd rather spend your 1000 pts on? Maybe you'll convince me....
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