New species trait: hull engineers
Moderator: Oberlus
New species trait: hull engineers
We have the species pilot trait that give bonus/malus to damage of weapons, which affects the value of weapons in the ship designs so that good pilot species might prefer a greater weapon/armour parts on their designs.
We could have the same for the hull structure and/or armour parts:
- bad hulls/armours: -20% base structure
- good: +20%
- great: +40%
- ultimate: +60%
To be decided if it should affect only the base structure of the hull or also the base structure of the armour parts.
Thoughts?
We could have the same for the hull structure and/or armour parts:
- bad hulls/armours: -20% base structure
- good: +20%
- great: +40%
- ultimate: +60%
To be decided if it should affect only the base structure of the hull or also the base structure of the armour parts.
Thoughts?
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
In general I like the idea. I think you could pair bad engineers with good pilots and get a species built for offence, while doing the opposite to get a species built for defense. Also, maybe Chato could be bad engineers instead of bad pilots?Oberlus wrote: ↑Sat Jan 04, 2020 11:59 am We have the species pilot trait that give bonus/malus to damage of weapons, which affects the value of weapons in the ship designs so that good pilot species might prefer a greater weapon/armour parts on their designs.
We could have the same for the hull structure and/or armour parts:
- bad hulls/armours: -20% base structure
- good: +20%
- great: +40%
- ultimate: +60%
To be decided if it should affect only the base structure of the hull or also the base structure of the armour parts.
Thoughts?
All of my contributions should be considered released under creative commons attribution share-alike license, CC-BY-SA 3.0 for use in, by and with the Free Orion project.
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
This makes very little sense thematically. Couldn't, in a multi species empire, another species be used to make ships that aren't crap for the good pilots species?
Maybe make this about the species recklessness vs cautiousness? Cautious species would use more durable (and more expensive) variations of hulls, while reckless (for lack of a better word) would prefer cheaper but less durable design?
Maybe make this about the species recklessness vs cautiousness? Cautious species would use more durable (and more expensive) variations of hulls, while reckless (for lack of a better word) would prefer cheaper but less durable design?
https://github.com/mmoderau
[...] for Man has earned his right to hold this planet against all comers, by virtue of occasionally producing someone totally batshit insane. - Randall Munroe, title text to xkcd #556
[...] for Man has earned his right to hold this planet against all comers, by virtue of occasionally producing someone totally batshit insane. - Randall Munroe, title text to xkcd #556
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
I think the same, makes little sense, but can't find a satisfying solution because the good pilot species traits makes also little sense:em3 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2020 12:18 am This makes very little sense thematically. Couldn't, in a multi species empire, another species be used to make ships that aren't crap for the good pilots species?
Maybe make this about the species recklessness vs cautiousness? Cautious species would use more durable (and more expensive) variations of hulls, while reckless (for lack of a better word) would prefer cheaper but less durable design?
Couldn't the cautious (good hulls) species build the ships for the crazy pilots (good weapons) species?
Maybe both traits (structure and damage) could be made to change both effectiveness and cost.
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Re: New species trait: hull engineers
Theme wise it works because the engineers need to be On the ship to maintain it, just like the pilots have to be there to operate it. And because they are sharing the same environment, they must be the same species.
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
I mean, it's not like the same people that built a ship will be maintaining it? The shipwrights and support crew are usually different people.Krikkitone wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 5:49 am Theme wise it works because the engineers need to be On the ship to maintain it, just like the pilots have to be there to operate it. And because they are sharing the same environment, they must be the same species.
https://github.com/mmoderau
[...] for Man has earned his right to hold this planet against all comers, by virtue of occasionally producing someone totally batshit insane. - Randall Munroe, title text to xkcd #556
[...] for Man has earned his right to hold this planet against all comers, by virtue of occasionally producing someone totally batshit insane. - Randall Munroe, title text to xkcd #556
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
You could call those ship operators or technicians or name the trait GOOD_SHIP_MAINTENANCEem3 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 10:35 amI mean, it's not like the same people that built a ship will be maintaining it? The shipwrights and support crew are usually different people.Krikkitone wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 5:49 am Theme wise it works because the engineers need to be On the ship to maintain it, just like the pilots have to be there to operate it. And because they are sharing the same environment, they must be the same species.
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Re: New species trait: hull engineers
But in our case they are "the same people" from a game perspective. Ships are always crewed by the species that built them, so having bad/good/great/ultimate engineer traits makes sense gameplay wise.em3 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 10:35 amI mean, it's not like the same people that built a ship will be maintaining it? The shipwrights and support crew are usually different people.Krikkitone wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 5:49 am Theme wise it works because the engineers need to be On the ship to maintain it, just like the pilots have to be there to operate it. And because they are sharing the same environment, they must be the same species.
All of my contributions should be considered released under creative commons attribution share-alike license, CC-BY-SA 3.0 for use in, by and with the Free Orion project.
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
So I see general consensus is the idea deserve attention.
The naming and fluff:
Maybe use Krikkitone's (implicit) idea that the extra structure is due to the good design and also the maintenance that the technicians perform onboard, including or specially during combat. So it's not only manufacturing the ship, but also crewing it.
So the species trait could be something like Bad/Good/etc. Engineers.
A detailed comparison with the Pilots species trait effect on Short Range weapons, to try to balance the values in a similar way:
Each weapon refinement gives +1, +2, +3 and +5 for MD, Laser, Plasma and DR respectively. Let's call this values the Damage Per Refinement (DPR). Each weapon (except laser) starts at 3*DPR damage and then can get up to thre extra tech refinements, ending at damage 6*DPR. Each level of Pilots gives (or takes) one level of refinement, so +1*DPR. In the end, we have an Ultimate-Pilot, non-refined weapon does +100% damage compared to the Average-Pilot counterpart, and +50% for fully-refined weapons. I make rest of calculations for fully upgraded Short Range weapons, which is the most common scenario. So Good Pilots give +16.7% damage over Average Pilots, Great Pilots +33.3%, Ultimate Pilots +50%.
It seems to make sense if we make Engineers to provide the same boost to structure: -16.7, +16.6, +33% and +50%.
Since Pilots affects every weapon part mounted on a ship, it makes sense for the Engineers to affect armour parts as well. The question could be if it should affect also the base hull structure. I think it should, or at least it's harmless: if fearing that it could make it OP against Pilots trait, consider that the base hull structure is usually a small percentage of total ship's structure or is small when compared to the average damage per shot, therefore it has little effect of the outcome (except for some hulls, and that is good for strategic ship design).
The naming and fluff:
Maybe use Krikkitone's (implicit) idea that the extra structure is due to the good design and also the maintenance that the technicians perform onboard, including or specially during combat. So it's not only manufacturing the ship, but also crewing it.
So the species trait could be something like Bad/Good/etc. Engineers.
A detailed comparison with the Pilots species trait effect on Short Range weapons, to try to balance the values in a similar way:
Each weapon refinement gives +1, +2, +3 and +5 for MD, Laser, Plasma and DR respectively. Let's call this values the Damage Per Refinement (DPR). Each weapon (except laser) starts at 3*DPR damage and then can get up to thre extra tech refinements, ending at damage 6*DPR. Each level of Pilots gives (or takes) one level of refinement, so +1*DPR. In the end, we have an Ultimate-Pilot, non-refined weapon does +100% damage compared to the Average-Pilot counterpart, and +50% for fully-refined weapons. I make rest of calculations for fully upgraded Short Range weapons, which is the most common scenario. So Good Pilots give +16.7% damage over Average Pilots, Great Pilots +33.3%, Ultimate Pilots +50%.
It seems to make sense if we make Engineers to provide the same boost to structure: -16.7, +16.6, +33% and +50%.
Since Pilots affects every weapon part mounted on a ship, it makes sense for the Engineers to affect armour parts as well. The question could be if it should affect also the base hull structure. I think it should, or at least it's harmless: if fearing that it could make it OP against Pilots trait, consider that the base hull structure is usually a small percentage of total ship's structure or is small when compared to the average damage per shot, therefore it has little effect of the outcome (except for some hulls, and that is good for strategic ship design).
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
Armour | Strength | inc. per level (1/6) |
Standard | 6 | +1 |
Zortrium | 11 | +2 |
Diamond | 18 | +3 |
Xentronium | 30 | +5 |
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
Should drydock at a bad engineering species planet fix ships of other species only partially?
https://github.com/mmoderau
[...] for Man has earned his right to hold this planet against all comers, by virtue of occasionally producing someone totally batshit insane. - Randall Munroe, title text to xkcd #556
[...] for Man has earned his right to hold this planet against all comers, by virtue of occasionally producing someone totally batshit insane. - Randall Munroe, title text to xkcd #556
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
This may be over-thinking it. Remember we don't want to make this over-complicated. Usually species traits effect only one thing at a time.
Also as far as names go I'd go with just "engineers" as it feels similar to just "pilots".
All of my contributions should be considered released under creative commons attribution share-alike license, CC-BY-SA 3.0 for use in, by and with the Free Orion project.
Re: New species trait: hull engineers
Nice !
Is there a way to make them specific to one Hull Line ?
Like Abbadonni being very good at reinforcing Asteroid Hull structures and Setinon good with Organic Hulls ?
Also, making this trait work for the basic structure or for the Armor also is a very big difference, the first choice being a small change to early gameplay and the second one a balance-changer.
Ditto for flat boni (that would benefit the Organic Hull line, and probably the Energy line too) or percentage boni (that would benefit bigger hulls like Asteroid and Self-Gravitating).
I don't have preferences¹, so maybe (since I love diversity) have both ? Engineering trait and Armorsmithing trait ?
It's not KISS to have both flat boni AND percentage boni for general-purpose species, but for Hull-lines specific traits it seems to me that it's possible to have the Organic-tied traits give flat boni and some others have percentage boni ?
¹ As long as the balance is carefully studied for the Armor boni.
Is there a way to make them specific to one Hull Line ?
Like Abbadonni being very good at reinforcing Asteroid Hull structures and Setinon good with Organic Hulls ?
Also, making this trait work for the basic structure or for the Armor also is a very big difference, the first choice being a small change to early gameplay and the second one a balance-changer.
Ditto for flat boni (that would benefit the Organic Hull line, and probably the Energy line too) or percentage boni (that would benefit bigger hulls like Asteroid and Self-Gravitating).
I don't have preferences¹, so maybe (since I love diversity) have both ? Engineering trait and Armorsmithing trait ?
It's not KISS to have both flat boni AND percentage boni for general-purpose species, but for Hull-lines specific traits it seems to me that it's possible to have the Organic-tied traits give flat boni and some others have percentage boni ?
¹ As long as the balance is carefully studied for the Armor boni.