Turret/Large versus Small Ship Fixes and Targeting based on Power Output

Elor Yosnak shared this feedback 3 years ago
Submitted

Sorry, this is gonna be long. But I seriously think it would improve the game a lot.

Problem Statement

Space Engineers has a huge issue with PvP and PvE Combat when it comes to stealth, and when it comes to Large versus Small ship.

Firstly, there is no stealth. There is currently no reason not to have every turret on a base/bigship set to attack every possible option (small ship, station, character), and the Turrets do not need you to cross into a field of view, just cross into a targeting range and the turret can shred you, without you even necessarily knowing that you'd made a mistake.

Secondly, Large versus Small ship, the small ship will lose. I've made some lightly modded small ships that can do damage but they will still be destroyed very quickly by a large ship.

There are a few changes and additions that could revolutionize this system, and for relatively little difficulty.

Changes and Additions

1) Add a Spool-Up Period to Gatling Turrets

Just a Quality of Life fix really. They're almost pinpoint accurate, and can cause incredible damage to a ship from even an accidental slip into range. If a 1-3 second spool up was added, this in and of itself could greatly increase the ability of smallship combat.

2) Nerf Interior Turrets

Interior turrets right now can be vicious, with the same pinpoint accuracy coupled with near infinite ammunition capacity, and not significantly decreased damage over time against small ships. A quick fix would be to limit the ammunition to perhaps five magazines, but an additional nice fix would be to slightly decrease damage in general.

3) Target Grid based on Power Output

This is the game changer. This game already has statistics for Power Generated by Grid. So make the Turrets target grids based on how much power they are using. Decoys could make a false power signature, i.e. not deliver power, but tell turrets that there was +1 mega watt to the signature or something, as well as warheads adding to a signature (or not) This could be scaled by range, perhaps adding a certain amount of "signature" every 100 metres something gets closer to the turret from whatever the maximum range is. (if the signature is 5 at 800, then it's 6 at 700 etc.)

For example: A pirate Gatling turret is at point A. Three objects are positioned 500m away, at points B C and D. At Point B, there is a fighter, with 2 batteries and a reactor, and fixed weapons. At point C there is a cargo rover, with 1 battery, no weapons, and at point D there is a large-grid ship with many reactors, batteries, and weapons.

The turret will first target the largeship at D, then the fighter at B, then the cargo rover at C.If the rover had a Turret, maybe the Pirate Gatling would target it over the fighter, but it would still target the large ship first.

4) Targeting options effect power usage

Turret options right now mean very little. You can have them on or off, but it's really just a matter of preference. With this change, Anti-personnel turrets (Interior Turrets) would be relatively unaffected, but Anti-Ship Turrets would have a rather larger change.

Simply put, attacking large signature grids would be default, and cost no extra power. This should really encompass most if not any large ship or station. Attacking medium signature grids (perhaps the output of a "default" "complex" fighter like the Deterrent) would cost some extra power, and attacking small signature grids (perhaps the output of one small grid large battery) would cost even more power. (This inverse relationship between signature and power required denotes difficulty to detect the smaller signature) There should/could also be a cutoff for how little power the turrets can detect, i.e. a rover operating on one small small grid battery might be invisible to a missile turret.

Really, the big thing with this is that the power increase from large signature to medium to small should not be negligible. It should be large enough that there is a reasonable downside to having every turret on your ship target everything.


Conclusion

So, Back to the original issues. PvP/E, and Stealth. Stealth is added in two ways. One, "Stealth" ships can be built, to lower their power signatures below a certain threshold. Perhaps you make a ship that's very slow and weak, but because it has such a low signature, it can get in within 500 metres of a turret instead of only 800 metres. And Two, ships can "Run Dark", or turn off any system that is using power, in order to hide from an enemy. As weapons (and especially turrets) use power, this would mean that those would have to be turned off too.

PvP/E Fixes are a bit more obvious perhaps.

A Spool up time for large grid Gatlings in and of itself makes smallship assault more viable, and reducing inventory for interior turrets allows for one well hidden interior to not be able to just spray and pray your ship away.

But more importantly, Making turrets attack based on power usage adds real functionality to options that are already in the game. It gives a reason to make a fighter with fewer batteries, and fewer guns. It gives a reason to build decoy ships in combat, it makes it much less likely for sub-grid custom turrets to be instantly destroyed by Auto-turrets, it gives a reason to player-control turrets, as stealthy vessels or even simply vessels whose signatures are overpowered can now be a huge threat.

You already have a power usage statistic. You already have numbers for every ship. Yes, you'd have to add in a few things, and yes you'd have to add in a "fake" number for decoys. Yes, you'd have to change a little about how turrets work. But you already have the functionality. All you have to do is a few tweaks, and you could open up Space Engineers to a huge array of different tactics, clever designs, and new players.

I hope you've read this Keen.

And I hope you think about it too.

Replies (3)

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But then you need a radar to find ships with power off. And the signature should depend on the size.

Everything needs a balance.

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Well, yes? I mean, your turrets would just not try to nuke things which are turned off. If you felt a huge desire to destroy Jeff's toggled off miner, then you would have to control a turret manually, or use fixed guns.

The whole point of auto-guns is to take down things that are a threat to you. Any ship that is completely toggled off is no longer a threat, so why would we need to shoot it with auto guns? And as mentioned, decoys, warheads etc. should add to signature, so that a toggled off ship wouldn't be able do anything other than sit disabled.

Why do you think signature should depend on size? What would that add? If a small ship has the same or increased power usage compared to a larger ship, that probably means it has more weapons, or at least more systems right? Which means it's more of a threat, and easier to notice by sensors right?

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Sounds like good ideas on a whole but how would you deal with the spool up period of turrets making it possible to dip in and out of range without risk?

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For one thing, a spool up and down period wouldn't need to have no gunfire during the spool up period, just an exponential or linear increase to full potential. This would mean that dipping in and out of range would be an effective strategy, but would not make you completely invulnerable, and you'd probably take a good few bullets in the amount of time it takes to duck in and out of fire. As right now a large ship gatling gun deals 150 damage and a light armour block (small ship) has 100 health, that could result in a not insignificant amount of damage to your ship. Design, strategy, and piloting would still be a factor.

For another thing, a short spool down period could stop griefing, and would make the system overall more balanced, with a fighter ducking in and out of range being effective at damage mitigation only if done carefully, as if done too quickly the turret would already be at peak efficiency, and obliterate the fighter.

The purpose of the spool up period is really just a quality of life fix. It shouldn't (ideally) make any kind of jogging in and out very quickly equivalent to invulnerability, just mitigate the damage dealt at the very beginning of an engagement to avoid current issues like getting instantly piked out the cockpit, or losing half of a mining/scout ship to not realising you were as close as you were to a turret. Small Ship Decoys could also, in theory, be useful again, as instead of being nearly instantly vaporised, they (and surrounding armour) would be able to eat the damage from the spool up rate of fire even if they couldn't eat the full rate of fire damage.

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I should specify, any time it's talking about power output, it should be talking about power draw, or usage. Got confused halfway through, sorry about that.

On another note, I think increasing the amount of time for a turret to compensate for velocity change would be very helpful, as it would allow for manoeuvrable ships to dodge fire much more effectively.

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