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RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 11:16 pm
by Wade1000
ORIGINAL: hadberz
I, too, am wondering if the blue "fog" is REALLY a border representation?
This is your long range scanner. Building monitor stations causes the fog to show and you can see enemy ships unless they have stealth tech.
1) Do you can exterminate all colony population?
2) How this affected post glass colonization?
Yep, you can kill them all and it is bad for the environment. The environment will recover slowly over time.
Then what are the smaller blue circles? Erik Rutins said THEY are the long range sensor detection area.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 11:23 pm
by Duckfang
ORIGINAL: Wade1000
Then what are the smaler blue circles? Erik Rutins said THEY are the long range sensor detection area.
My guess would be short-range sensors. IE, that's where you'll pick up stealthed ships.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 11:41 pm
by hadberz
Then what are the smaler blue circles? Erik Rutins said THEY are the long range sensor detection area.
The small circle means you have a colony in that system and own it. When looking at the strategic map the fog is large circles. See pic.

RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 12:52 am
by Wade1000
Thanks.
So all the smallest, colored in, blue circles must be transports. On the battle screens the transports are in circles, the warships in triangles, and the bases in hexagons.
Some of the "empty", blue, ownnership cirlcles are of various sizes. I'm assuming that the more you own in a system then the bigger that ownership circle gets.
Is that correct?

RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 1:43 am
by Duckfang
ORIGINAL: Wade1000
Some of the "empty", blue, ownnership cirlcles are of various sizes. I'm assuming that the more you own in a system then the bigger that ownership circle gets. Is that correct?
I was wondering that myself. S'why I thought they must be short-range sensors.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Wed Mar 17, 2010 9:24 am
by hadberz
Some of the "empty", blue, ownnership cirlcles are of various sizes. I'm assuming that the more you own in a system then the bigger that ownership circle gets. Is that correct?
I think it's related to how large your population is in the system. The smaller circles have smaller populations, larger circles larger populations.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 3:22 am
by rhohltjr
ORIGINAL: hadberz
Yep, you can kill them all and it is bad for the environment. The environment will recover slowly over time.
Is there a terriforming tech? If so then perhaps the environment can be recovered to usefullness quicker than "slowly over tiime"?
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 3:40 am
by magickoji
I was wondering. Is the game multi-processor aware?
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 3:46 am
by DampSquib
Well the spec's on the home page say CPU: Dual Core CPU @2.0 GHz so...yep
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 8:07 pm
by magickoji
ORIGINAL: DampSquib
Well the spec's on the home page say CPU: Dual Core CPU @2.0 GHz so...yep
Well lots of games have that as the spec. I don't think it really means that they use both cores.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 8:17 pm
by DampSquib
Deleted.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 11:34 pm
by hadberz
Is there a terriforming tech?
Currently no.
I was wondering. Is the game multi-processor aware?
Yes it is, I don't know the details of it. Have to ask Elliot about that.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 12:06 am
by Wade1000
http://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2391696&mpage=1&key=terraforming�
ORIGINAL: Son_of_Montfort
There is "sort of" Terraforming in the game. It's more of colony modules that allow you to more and more efficiently colonize different planet types than your race requirements, but it functionally serves the same purpose.
Also, if I remember what I read correctly, there are always like one two planet types that each race can not ever colonize. You can , however, conquer(or aquire via trade?) and assimilate races that will be able to use those planet types.
I like that idea because it adds some strategy but I still prefer that there be some "high" teraform technology in later game that would allow us to colonize the planets that are only available to certain races at start.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 11:27 am
by Shark7
ORIGINAL: Wade1000
http://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2391696&mpage=1&key=terraforming�
ORIGINAL: Son_of_Montfort
There is "sort of" Terraforming in the game. It's more of colony modules that allow you to more and more efficiently colonize different planet types than your race requirements, but it functionally serves the same purpose.
Also, if I remember what I read correctly, there are always like one two planet types that each race can not ever colonize. You can , however, conquer(or aquire via trade?) and assimilate races that will be able to use those planet types.
I like that idea because it adds some strategy but I still prefer that there be some "high" teraform technology in later game that would allow us to colonize the planets that are only available to certain races at start.
The other option would be the 'Death Star Solution', if I can't have it, no one can...

Then we can mine the asteroid field we leave behind.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 11:34 am
by Wade1000
That would be cool also. I'd would like the opposite of it too though; having high technology able to create planets, or even habitation orbitals(like rings or spheres) and even further, Ringworlds and Sphereworlds.
If we can reach a level of development to destroy a world then it seems that we should also be able to eventually create worlds(though the creations would most likely be orbitals instead of solid mass spheres as planets are).
I like the idea of eventually being able to both destroy and create anything.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 11:56 am
by Epsilon
Given a civilization is advanced enough, the creation of planets, terraforming and the moving of stars is easy enough. What is hard is defeating the causality complex and creating a functioning wormhole.
I dare say that in 3 billion years when we're shaping star systems to our own desires and shaping planets like they were clay we still wouldn't be able to create a functioning wormhole.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 3:03 pm
by martok
We're getting a bit off-topic here, guys....
ORIGINAL: Wade1000
but I still prefer that there be some "high" teraform technology in later game that would allow us to colonize the planets that are only available to certain races at start.
I strongly disagree with this. I much prefer that some planets can never be terraformed/colonized. Otherwise, you'd end up with 5-10 colonies in just about every bloody star system you own, which would be utter madness. Even with Distant World's macro-management tools and automated AI functions, trying to run an empire with that many colonies would be a nightmare.
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 3:46 pm
by Gertjan
Any new screenshots to tease us?
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 6:41 pm
by Gargantou
ORIGINAL: Epsilon
Given a civilization is advanced enough, the creation of planets, terraforming and the moving of stars is easy enough. What is hard is defeating the causality complex and creating a functioning wormhole.
I dare say that in 3 billion years when we're shaping star systems to our own desires and shaping planets like they were clay we still wouldn't be able to create a functioning wormhole.
I'd like to see your proof that for an "advanced" enough civilization, that it's easy to create planets etc.
Is there ANY form of proper science that can support this claim or is it just hopeful speculation on your part?
Anyway, just a few more days for DW now(hopefully), I hope I'll enjoy it when it comes out!
RE: A few screenshots...
Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2010 7:55 pm
by Epsilon
ORIGINAL: Gargantou
ORIGINAL: Epsilon
Given a civilization is advanced enough, the creation of planets, terraforming and the moving of stars is easy enough. What is hard is defeating the causality complex and creating a functioning wormhole.
I dare say that in 3 billion years when we're shaping star systems to our own desires and shaping planets like they were clay we still wouldn't be able to create a functioning wormhole.
I'd like to see your proof that for an "advanced" enough civilization, that it's easy to create planets etc.
Is there ANY form of proper science that can support this claim or is it just hopeful speculation on your part?
Anyway, just a few more days for DW now(hopefully), I hope I'll enjoy it when it comes out!
Sure I'll just refer to any advanced civilization who has already done this, that will be no problem at all.
It's basic physics, we're allowed to move matter around and matter interacts within the rules and limitations of fields of gravity.
I'll wager that once mankind has the ability to study stellar nurseries in detail, the knowledge of how to pull mass together to create a small planetoid and create a molten core will not be far away.
However I can't imagine how mankind would ever figure out how to punch a hole in space that would allow near instantaneous travel from one point to another millions of light years away.
Most of our technological advances stems from interacting and perceiving the nature and the universe around us, the causality complex is such that you cannot die from a bullet that hasn't been shot yet, nothing thats naturally occuring within the known universe or within our laws of physics that shows such a thing to be possible and so faster than light travel will also be an utopia
