Can the AI be gamey?
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
Can the AI be gamey?
I was thinking about a couple of my recent posts and it occured to me today that the AI seems to be making some gamey moves. For example, a lone destroyer attacked my group at Midway that was off loading a base force causing the TF to fallback, but i just put it back the next day. Then the AI attacked Port Morseby, but not in strength. In fact, the landing force is just sitting there.
The action of the destroyer seems really gamey to me. Its something a player would do just to mess with someone, but not something that would happen in real life. The same seems true of Port Morseby. Drop some troops to make me panic, but not do anything to actually change the balance of power. It has left me scratching my head and wondering just how good the AI actally is.
The action of the destroyer seems really gamey to me. Its something a player would do just to mess with someone, but not something that would happen in real life. The same seems true of Port Morseby. Drop some troops to make me panic, but not do anything to actually change the balance of power. It has left me scratching my head and wondering just how good the AI actally is.
- Chickenboy
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: Rogue187
I was thinking about a couple of my recent posts and it occured to me today that the AI seems to be making some gamey moves. For example, a lone destroyer attacked my group at Midway that was off loading a base force causing the TF to fallback, but i just put it back the next day. Then the AI attacked Port Morseby, but not in strength. In fact, the landing force is just sitting there.
The action of the destroyer seems really gamey to me. Its something a player would do just to mess with someone, but not something that would happen in real life. The same seems true of Port Morseby. Drop some troops to make me panic, but not do anything to actually change the balance of power. It has left me scratching my head and wondering just how good the AI actally is.
The AI cheats like a mother-******. Always has. Always will. It runs on scripts but, depending somewhat on your realism settings, doesn't always feel compelled to follow rules involving supply outages for LCUs, will magically teleport ships around the globe to meet mission demands, has a liberal use of torpedo HQ elements for TBs, etc. etc.
With regards to your specific example, I don't think that's gamey at all. IRL the Japanese tasked two DDs from the home islands to bombard Midway island in the first days of the war-as nothing other than a noisemaker / distraction. The Japanese also had singleton raider ships plying elsewhere in the Pacific, especially in the early war-generally causing concern and nuisance raiding.

- geofflambert
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
Is the Pope Catholic?
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
To be a little kinder in describing the AI:
- everything the computer does is driven by the chosen script. If that DD raided Midway after the first day or so of the game, it was following a raiding script. The script writers threw these events in to keep the Allied player honest in protecting his assets that are away from the front lines.
- because the script writer cannot predict how any game will unfold (Allied moves are up to you, and damaged ships take an unknown amount of time to repair), the forces available to carry out scripts may be out of position or even involved in other operations. To get around this, the script writers allow the computer to take whatever ships it can find available from wherever they are and assemble them into a TF for the script. It will place them on the map somewhere near the objective, but I think they leave at least a turn's travel to objective so the Allied player has a chance to detect them and respond.
- AFAIK, the supply situation is based on the setting you have for the game. Hard give the Japanese a little bit of supply each turn in every location. Very Hard presumably gives even more supply and Ironman may provide loads of supply. This makes sense too because if the script writer set up supply convoys to travel from A to B and supply his outposts, it would be easy to find their route and wipe them out early in the game.
- everything the computer does is driven by the chosen script. If that DD raided Midway after the first day or so of the game, it was following a raiding script. The script writers threw these events in to keep the Allied player honest in protecting his assets that are away from the front lines.
- because the script writer cannot predict how any game will unfold (Allied moves are up to you, and damaged ships take an unknown amount of time to repair), the forces available to carry out scripts may be out of position or even involved in other operations. To get around this, the script writers allow the computer to take whatever ships it can find available from wherever they are and assemble them into a TF for the script. It will place them on the map somewhere near the objective, but I think they leave at least a turn's travel to objective so the Allied player has a chance to detect them and respond.
- AFAIK, the supply situation is based on the setting you have for the game. Hard give the Japanese a little bit of supply each turn in every location. Very Hard presumably gives even more supply and Ironman may provide loads of supply. This makes sense too because if the script writer set up supply convoys to travel from A to B and supply his outposts, it would be easy to find their route and wipe them out early in the game.
No matter how bad a situation is, you can always make it worse. - Chris Hadfield : An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
Could Napoleon be gamey? Of Corsican.
[:D] I would say that is inhumane, but coming from a Gorn ...
On topic, IMHO there is nothing wrong in principle with a small raider or disruptor force, even a single DD. Depending on the circumstances I believe that either side would have used such a tactic, though I admit that some players disagree and some even have a house rule forbidding it.
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
There are certain things that the AI will do to enable it to work. They have been well documented. PBEM players are notorious about stating it cheats. Players who play the AI refer to it as the AI.
[8D]
I have been playing the AI for 10 years now. I cheat* all the time, it never does.
* I have to load up head to head to help it periodically to get it through rough patches and make sure that it is making good strategic decisions. I also make use of my mod ability to replenish AC and device pools (stealing from the european buildup).
[8D]
I have been playing the AI for 10 years now. I cheat* all the time, it never does.
* I have to load up head to head to help it periodically to get it through rough patches and make sure that it is making good strategic decisions. I also make use of my mod ability to replenish AC and device pools (stealing from the european buildup).
Pax
- geofflambert
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: jwolf
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
Could Napoleon be gamey? Of Corsican.
[:D] I would say that is inhumane, but coming from a Gorn ...
On topic, IMHO there is nothing wrong in principle with a small raider or disruptor force, even a single DD. Depending on the circumstances I believe that either side would have used such a tactic, though I admit that some players disagree and some even have a house rule forbidding it.
I prefer photon torpedoes to disruptors.
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RichardAckermann
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
I prefer photon torpedoes to disruptors.
Hey, aren't you Gorn using just plasma F/G/S/R launchers for heavy weapons ?
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
It's called diversion...[;)]...
Fred
River Wide, Ocean Deep - a book on Operation Sea Lion - www.fredleander.com
Saving MacArthur - a book series on how The Philippines were saved - in 1942! https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07D3 ... rw_dp_labf
Saving MacArthur - a book series on how The Philippines were saved - in 1942! https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07D3 ... rw_dp_labf
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
Could Napoleon be gamey? Of Corsican.
[:)]Had to read it thrice to get the meaning.
Touche!
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
Could Napoleon be gamey? Of Corsican.
That's just bad.

As for the AI 'teleporting' vessels. It can only take them from those that are in port. For example, if Saratoga is in port in San Diego she can be put into a TF at Suva.
It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once. Hume
In every party there is one member who by his all-too-devout pronouncement of the party principles provokes the others to apostasy. Nietzsche
Cave ab homine unius libri. Ltn Prvb
In every party there is one member who by his all-too-devout pronouncement of the party principles provokes the others to apostasy. Nietzsche
Cave ab homine unius libri. Ltn Prvb
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: Rogue187
I was thinking about a couple of my recent posts and it occured to me today that the AI seems to be making some gamey moves. For example, a lone destroyer attacked my group at Midway that was off loading a base force causing the TF to fallback, but i just put it back the next day. Then the AI attacked Port Morseby, but not in strength. In fact, the landing force is just sitting there.
The action of the destroyer seems really gamey to me. Its something a player would do just to mess with someone, but not something that would happen in real life. The same seems true of Port Morseby. Drop some troops to make me panic, but not do anything to actually change the balance of power. It has left me scratching my head and wondering just how good the AI actally is.
must be the name avatar but who cares, what did you think what happend in your next move against the ai, may happend to you
try with a PBME better with a human,, is easy
mis amigos; EL FRENTE ATLETICO, LA PANDA DEL MOCO, OCHAITA FANS
- HansBolter
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: PaxMondo
There are certain things that the AI will do to enable it to work. They have been well documented. PBEM players are notorious about stating it cheats. Players who play the AI refer to it as the AI.
[8D]
I have been playing the AI for 10 years now. I cheat* all the time, it never does.
* I have to load up head to head to help it periodically to get it through rough patches and make sure that it is making good strategic decisions. I also make use of my mod ability to replenish AC and device pools (stealing from the european buildup).
+1
I don't load head to head to help the AI ( I don't want the free intel I can't unlearn on the whereabouts of units that are hidden to me).
I do re-run turns to mitigate AI disasters.
One down side of playing the AI that really can't be called cheating is that it knows all and sees all.
Nothing is hidden from the AI. It doesn't have to recon randomly to find LCUs moving in Jungle terrain 800 miles from the nearest enemy LCU that could spot it.
It automatically knows that you put that LCU you thought was hidden from view in move mode and WILL bomb it the turn after you put it in move mode.
The AI KNOWS the LCU is there. It KNOWS you put it in move mode, A live opponent would NEVER even know that LCU existed, but the AI is all over it as soon as it enters move mode.
Is this an annoyance? Yes it is. Is it a game breaker that will prevent me from playing the AI? Absolutely not.
Hans
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: Lowpe
Is the Pope Catholic?
Is the the Space Pope reptilian?
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
And if so, does he have Easter egg hunts?ORIGINAL: Lovejoy
ORIGINAL: Lowpe
Is the Pope Catholic?
Is the the Space Pope reptilian?
-
Uncivil Engineer
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: HansBolter
ORIGINAL: PaxMondo
There are certain things that the AI will do to enable it to work. They have been well documented. PBEM players are notorious about stating it cheats. Players who play the AI refer to it as the AI.
[8D]
I have been playing the AI for 10 years now. I cheat* all the time, it never does.
* I have to load up head to head to help it periodically to get it through rough patches and make sure that it is making good strategic decisions. I also make use of my mod ability to replenish AC and device pools (stealing from the european buildup).
+1
I don't load head to head to help the AI ( I don't want the free intel I can't unlearn on the whereabouts of units that are hidden to me).
I do re-run turns to mitigate AI disasters.
One down side of playing the AI that really can't be called cheating is that it knows all and sees all.
Nothing is hidden from the AI. It doesn't have to recon randomly to find LCUs moving in Jungle terrain 800 miles from the nearest enemy LCU that could spot it.
It automatically knows that you put that LCU you thought was hidden from view in move mode and WILL bomb it the turn after you put it in move mode.
The AI KNOWS the LCU is there. It KNOWS you put it in move mode, A live opponent would NEVER even know that LCU existed, but the AI is all over it as soon as it enters move mode.
Is this an annoyance? Yes it is. Is it a game breaker that will prevent me from playing the AI? Absolutely not.
+2
I'm currently playing as Japan against the AI using 2-day turns. Well, I'm playing 2-day turns; the AI is playing 1-day turns.
And as for teleporting - a CV TF consisting of Yorktown, Lexington, and Saratoga recently appeared in my rear, nowhere near an Allied base. I got some very lucky die rolls and sank all three for the cost of Zuiho, and some damage to Ryujo and Shoho. Allied airstrikes suffered no coordination problems even though in late 1942 all 3 CV's were in the single TF.
A week later, the TF of Enterprise, Wasp, and Hornet appeared. I lost Akagi and Kaga for 2 of theirs (not yet confirmed, but the Allied aircraft ops losses were at least 2 carriers worth, since they had no bases to divert to.)
- Chickenboy
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RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: Uncivil Engineer
And as for teleporting - a CV TF consisting of Yorktown, Lexington, and Saratoga recently appeared in my rear, nowhere near an Allied base. I got some very lucky die rolls and sank all three for the cost of Zuiho, and some damage to Ryujo and Shoho. Allied airstrikes suffered no coordination problems even though in late 1942 all 3 CV's were in the single TF.
A week later, the TF of Enterprise, Wasp, and Hornet appeared. I lost Akagi and Kaga for 2 of theirs (not yet confirmed, but the Allied aircraft ops losses were at least 2 carriers worth, since they had no bases to divert to.)
I think that's a stellar example for the purposes of the OP question. [:D]

RE: Can the AI be gamey?
ORIGINAL: Zorch
And if so, does he have Easter egg hunts?ORIGINAL: Lovejoy
ORIGINAL: Lowpe
Is the Pope Catholic?
Is the the Space Pope reptilian?
That's a good question. Perhaps a Gorn would know...
RE: Can the AI be gamey?
The game can't "think" so i cannot devise devious dastardly deeds. I has its scripts to tell it what targets to attack or defend and when to start and stop the script. There are also some raiding scripts just to keep it interesting.
What some players appear to consider "gamey" has been explained as the necessity for the AI to be able to carry out its scripts even though the script writer had no way of knowing what the tactical or strategic situation would be after a few turns of play. SO, the AI was given the ability to "warp" ships out of port to where they are needed for the script. I presume that could be the case for some air units and LCUs as well.
To the player it is "gamey" because he cannot do the same, but it is just part of the bargain when you play the AI.
What some players appear to consider "gamey" has been explained as the necessity for the AI to be able to carry out its scripts even though the script writer had no way of knowing what the tactical or strategic situation would be after a few turns of play. SO, the AI was given the ability to "warp" ships out of port to where they are needed for the script. I presume that could be the case for some air units and LCUs as well.
To the player it is "gamey" because he cannot do the same, but it is just part of the bargain when you play the AI.
No matter how bad a situation is, you can always make it worse. - Chris Hadfield : An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth








