Production machines make what?

Jarod997 shared this feedback 21 days ago
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In SE, a Refinery refined ores into ingots. An Assembler took raw materials and made things. (And include different "tiers" of these machines).

Here in SE2 we have a Refinery which makes things, a Smelter which makes things, an Assembler which makes things, and a Gearforge which makes things. This is all very confusing which machine I need to make what - with the exception of the Gearforge. This is further compounded by the fact that you can (seemingly) upgrade these machines to make (better or more?) things.

This needs to be cleared up somehow. Put one "class" of items in one machine, make the machines do one "type" of job (you were successful with the Gearforge, don't stop now), or put a description on these machines that say what they do - though if their respective production items don't change this is still going to be confusing.

Best Answer
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Can’t agree more.

The Smelter isn’t really doing what its name suggests. And so far, there’s no larger variant of it. It seems like it’s meant to stay relevant throughout the entire game instead of becoming obsolete once you unlock the Refinery — but then why is it so small?

Right now, the production chain feels inverted:


  • The Smelter is the first production block, processing large volumes of raw ore into the most commonly used materials — yet it’s the smallest.
  • The Assembler, which handles medium-tier mass production, is bigger.
  • The Fabricator, making microchips is somehow the largest.

To me, it should almost be the other way around. The highest production volume in the entire chain flows through ore processing. The Smelter should logically be the largest or at least have a much bigger late-game variant. Alternatively, the Refinery could simply be expanded to produce everything the Smelter does.


About Ingots

Ingots are a very clean abstraction layer for gameplay.

Why do we have things like silver rods and lead bars, but not universal refined materials for the most basic resources like iron? We would benefit far more from having a consistent, unified refined material layer for common resources than from having specialized refined items for rarely used ones.

The Assembler and Fabricator already resemble advanced 3D printers. In real life, 3D printers use prepared filaments or powders — not raw ore. In game terms, ingots perfectly represent that abstraction.

Literally every other game uses this kind of abstraction because it helps:


  • Make production blocks simpler and single purpose
  • Simplifies balancing and inventory management
  • Makes the system intuitive for new players, because it is so commonly used

Any new player would understand “ingots” within seconds and instantly know what to do.


Right now, the system feels unclear and fragmented.

If there is a unique gameplay philosophy behind this new structure — that’s completely fine. But could you at least explain the intent from a gameplay perspective? Maybe you’re building something innovative and equally valid — but it would really help to understand the reasoning behind how these production blocks are currently designed (or planned to work).


And if the argument is “simplify things for new players,” then it’s just a big NO from me.

I’m not saying SE1 had a perfect system — it was far from perfect.

Refining times were greatly exaggerated. Even with plenty of power, you often had to build hundreds of refineries just to process certain ores within a reasonable timeframe for a single game session.

There was also no proper waste management. Instead, we had the harmful concept of all voxel materials converting into generic stone ore — which was almost useless and extremely frustrating. Players were often forced to build additional systems just to automatically eject stone during mining. That’s far from an ideal waste-management design.

Waste should be produced after refining, not during mining. And any leftover waste should either:

  • Still have some meaningful use, or
  • Be completely optional via game settings for players who don’t enjoy that mechanic

I could go on listing things that weren’t optimal in SE1.

But at the same time, many things were done very well. Completely skipping over what worked — instead of improving and iterating on it — feels wrong. It undermines the huge effort that went into building solid, tested systems that players already understood and appreciated.

Replies (4)

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Absolutely!

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Can’t agree more.

The Smelter isn’t really doing what its name suggests. And so far, there’s no larger variant of it. It seems like it’s meant to stay relevant throughout the entire game instead of becoming obsolete once you unlock the Refinery — but then why is it so small?

Right now, the production chain feels inverted:


  • The Smelter is the first production block, processing large volumes of raw ore into the most commonly used materials — yet it’s the smallest.
  • The Assembler, which handles medium-tier mass production, is bigger.
  • The Fabricator, making microchips is somehow the largest.

To me, it should almost be the other way around. The highest production volume in the entire chain flows through ore processing. The Smelter should logically be the largest or at least have a much bigger late-game variant. Alternatively, the Refinery could simply be expanded to produce everything the Smelter does.


About Ingots

Ingots are a very clean abstraction layer for gameplay.

Why do we have things like silver rods and lead bars, but not universal refined materials for the most basic resources like iron? We would benefit far more from having a consistent, unified refined material layer for common resources than from having specialized refined items for rarely used ones.

The Assembler and Fabricator already resemble advanced 3D printers. In real life, 3D printers use prepared filaments or powders — not raw ore. In game terms, ingots perfectly represent that abstraction.

Literally every other game uses this kind of abstraction because it helps:


  • Make production blocks simpler and single purpose
  • Simplifies balancing and inventory management
  • Makes the system intuitive for new players, because it is so commonly used

Any new player would understand “ingots” within seconds and instantly know what to do.


Right now, the system feels unclear and fragmented.

If there is a unique gameplay philosophy behind this new structure — that’s completely fine. But could you at least explain the intent from a gameplay perspective? Maybe you’re building something innovative and equally valid — but it would really help to understand the reasoning behind how these production blocks are currently designed (or planned to work).


And if the argument is “simplify things for new players,” then it’s just a big NO from me.

I’m not saying SE1 had a perfect system — it was far from perfect.

Refining times were greatly exaggerated. Even with plenty of power, you often had to build hundreds of refineries just to process certain ores within a reasonable timeframe for a single game session.

There was also no proper waste management. Instead, we had the harmful concept of all voxel materials converting into generic stone ore — which was almost useless and extremely frustrating. Players were often forced to build additional systems just to automatically eject stone during mining. That’s far from an ideal waste-management design.

Waste should be produced after refining, not during mining. And any leftover waste should either:

  • Still have some meaningful use, or
  • Be completely optional via game settings for players who don’t enjoy that mechanic

I could go on listing things that weren’t optimal in SE1.

But at the same time, many things were done very well. Completely skipping over what worked — instead of improving and iterating on it — feels wrong. It undermines the huge effort that went into building solid, tested systems that players already understood and appreciated.

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Um, smelter is tier 1, refinery is tier 2, assembler is tier 3, fabricator is tier 4... Believe I listed them in proper order. You don't upgrade them, you build the higher tier block just like SE1... They all make different components so ALL are needed and not replaceable by upgraded block tier! You will know what you need to build because you won't be able to build tier 4 without tier 3 let alone have it unlocked... Not too complicated here! In the production tab you can toggle between production blocks, meaning it literally is simple to find what you need...


Ingots are obsolete, not even needed in reality if our society wasn't so inefficient. Like, why would you not smelt straight into molds of your product instead of a mold to make a block(which you need to re-smelt to put into your product mold)? An efficient society wouldn't waste their time or resources creating an unnecessary middle step, to create the exact same product at the end. Unless SE2 changes the weight ratios, ingots are literally pointless in game. As it is, the weight of the ore needed to make a component is the exact same as the final component. AKA there is no mass loss, making ingots "purified mass" non existent! Instead of ingots, you have a lot more components to work with.

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I hope, as the game is refined(pun), the production chain will improve and make sense in the future. In it's current form the production chain is a functional place holder. In no way does the current production chain make it feel like it is fun, interesting, intelligent, or will have a good influence on game strategies used by the players.

Honestly, if another game like SE appears with a production chain that has technical appeal, I would evaluate it for its worth and consider jumping ship if it measured up. I do not play other sandbox engineering games as nothing much stands up to the play hours that SE has given me, a good time had.

My problem is that I find myself looking for 'that' new game, I have hope for SE2 to be that game. For the most part Keen is doing an excellent job, the inclusion of the community of players in the development of the game by Keen is par to none.

If there is a need for expediency in having wider appeal, then there should also be an expediency in maintaining their most enduring player base and bringing back those long time players that have left due to frustration.


SE2 can not be a better game by being an easier game at the expense of depth. Ingots, scrap, stone and process waste are part of the depth that has not been re-included into SE2 from SE1 yet.

There are other issues beyond the scope of the original posted comment that I will refrain from mentioning. It is fair reason that not everyone can be satisfied, but the more SE2 tones down its feature appeal the easier it will be for the competition to overtake, and I do see that the competition is looking at SE, seeing a feature and saying 'we can do that'.

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Um ok, and why does SE2 require ingots? We don't require them now for jack squat and you're talking 60 years in our future when their ship launched, and 11,000ish years in our future when it arrived. So why does everything have to abide by your vision of engineering, when they aren't even from Earth in the first place? You had better demand jump drives, ion thrusters, and gravity gens be removed from SE, they don't exist in IRL... Scrap I will give you, the other examples are just your preference and familiarity. I don't need to see every single detail of the smelting process, you aren't collecting the other chemicals you need to smelt besides the ore, this isn't reality TV it's a freaking game. WTF is so much easier about ore turning into components instead of ingots hmm? Your argument on this one is literally stupid(unless SE2 corrects weight ratios through production). If 10kg of iron ore are needed to make 1 steel plate, and that 1 steel plate also weighs 10kg, why in the world would I waste my time making a 10kg ingot for no reason whatsoever? I'll make the steel plate, tyvm!


Curious how not bogging down your PC throwing useless stone out of your ship creating all the moving rocks, is something you miss? Literally, stone was the dumbest thing about SE1. Necessary to start, but once you built your first refining block practically useless and nothing but a waste of memory! If you bring up landscaping.... I'm not here to design roads, there's a game for that already!

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It sounds like creative mode would provide better game for you. IRL ion drives exist and gravity generation is being worked on. Jump drives are a sci-fi element and SE magic is often used where coding and overheads are otherwise expensive, but provide satisfactory game play. The game parts that I have previously mentioned were used and implemented in PC tech several generations back, no biggy with minimum SE2 PC spec.

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Um no, I strictly play survival. Creative is boring... Ion drives irl are useless lol, I wouldn't be claiming they exist when they can barely move a little satellite let alone a ship! Gravity generation is being worked on? There's literally no physics we know of that allows it besides a rotating centrifuge... What?


Edit: You have no idea what se2 is going to run like with all systems implemented without using ejectors on stone. It already has memory issues, locking up your memory and not releasing it causing stutters after long periods of play, cpus running at 75%not doing anything in game, among other issues. I'm not saying the optimization update likely near official release won't fix it or them all, but they do already exist without dumping stone non stop mining.

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As for ingots, we can directly 3d print using meteoric iron today. It is typically 95% pure not requiring any smelting and here's your proof.


"The iron found in iron meteorites was one of the earliest sources of usable iron available to humans, due to the malleability and ductility of the meteoric iron, before the development of smelting that signaled the beginning of the Iron Age."


I don't know about you, but I'd say a vast majority of my mining in SE is done in space. Funny thing there is, in our solar system alone meteorite iron is roughly 500 tons just in known asteroids that we know the composition of. I know here on planet earth some elements like cobalt are typically drawn out of other mineral deposits, but a lot of ores are in big specific deposits too. So, why wouldn't asteroids that aren't oxide ore, but metallic ore, not already be pure enough like se2 has made them? To differentiate between planetary and asteroid deposits, well that might be difficult to code(I'm no programmer).

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What are you talking about? Right now you can build an assembler almost immediately, skipping the smelter altogether, since it’s nearly useless in its current state. And everything is still subject to change. The original production scheme the developers showed us wasn’t linear at all.

Ingots are obsolete in games? I really don’t understand that argument. They worked very well in SE1 and in virtually every other good survival game. If you prefer a system without ingots, that’s fine — but please try to look at this from different angles, like many community members have done, before drawing conclusions or calling someone’s arguments “stupid.”

And I’m not sure what the concept of “stone” has to do with this discussion. There are dedicated topics about stone already. If it worries you, it might help to explore the different perspectives people have shared on it before assuming the worst.

This particular topic is about the confusion created by the new set of production blocks, and I fully agree that the confusion is real.


The game’s “Survival Foundations” are clearly still a work in progress and far from being finished or fully designed. If the developers want honest and constructive feedback, it would really help if they explained their vision more clearly. There are still many unanswered questions about the new production mechanics and their impact on gameplay.

I would personally love to see more in-depth interviews where the developers walk us through how all these survival systems are supposed to fit together in the context of this new game. So far, we’ve seen impressive technical achievements — beautiful planets, water, weather, and other features — but in the end, what truly matters is the game to play.

Right now, “VS2.0” feels more like “Planets and Contracts” than “Survival Foundations.” Hopefully, the survival aspect will receive the same level of attention as development continues.

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You literally can't skip the smelter, you need lead bar buddy! Wow... And you ask what I'm talking about? LOL...

How many times do I have to say it for you to actually read it??? With the mechanics as is in SE2, ingots are completely obsolete because 10kg of iron = 1 steel plate / 1 steel plate = 10kg(numbers are just numbers for example)... WTF you need an ingot for? It saves you no weight and creates an extra step, where's the pro to this???? Absolutely no where! Yes they work great in SE1, I never disputed this and actually agreed with you on some other thread previously. I also stated this exact fact for my reasoning before, not to mention you don't need ingots in the first place! The argument for them under these mechanics literally is stupid, so? Funny how you ignore the fact you just got proven wrong about 3D printing with ore, aka skipping ingots, while still arguing for ingots... Remember, think of the production blocks as 3D printers, because unless we have some mini green aliens locked up inside those little blocks it is an automated process, aka 3D printer... One single smelter alone is also larger than the blocks in game, not to mention a factory!


Let me put it this way, maybe you'll actually pick up what I'm putting down... If our society was like that of Star Trek, it's 1 world instead of 500 countries. Said society wouldn't transport ore 1500 miles to sell to another country, instead it would be mined, smelted and fabricated in one place! Like, is that really that hard to grasp? When you play city building games, do you build your mines on one side of your territory and your smelter on the opposite? No!!! Do you build your houses on the opposite side as your market? No!!! Like, hello McFly! Because playing games like that we go for efficiency right? Can you honestly say our society does anything efficiently? Sure doesn't in this regard, transporting ore/ingots thousands of miles to sell to someone else to actually make the product, that they in turn sell back to you for a profit... Nope! That's not efficiency, that's technically greed, all about the money... Get it yet?


VS2.0(I assume 2.0 added the tutorial, I started actually playing after 2.0 was released purposely so it's all I've seen) is testing the tutorial more-so than survival imo, I mean bro we don't even have O2 yet and you're talking about true survival mode??? LOL... We also have no idea what the starting options will be for survival, though I would assume similar options as SE1. We do know for a fact though, that the tutorial aspect that gives you all the free crap will be an option!


I do agree with all of you on the confusion of the production blocks, but it took me 5 seconds to figure them out after built... I would fully agree on renaming a couple, especially the refinery and smelter. Aside from odd names, there's nothing difficult about them besides being different(no ingots) than YOU are USED to in SE1, familiarity...


I'm not the one who brought up stone, I replied! Again, so? Stone is part of SE1 production chain, totally relevant to this topic "Production machines make what?"


Why would the devs reveal systems they haven't worked on yet? Come on man, really? I can tell you I've heard the AI is supposed to be much improved, including diplomatic actions/reactions, no longer just going *SPLAT* on planet entry when hostile, screenshot of what looked like a player controlled fleet(AI drones flying in a fleet formation with player ship is what it looked like), but so far it's all speculation from screenshots sprinkled with some hints from devs. This is literally off topic, so stopping there with this part.(after you brought up stone not being on topic lol)...

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I'm not talking about IRL, or SE1. I'm referring to how this game is played.

If we look at the production blocks as being a tiered system, fine, I get that.

What I don't understand is the question "Where do I go to make X?". In SE1 it was straight forward. H2/O2 generators made gas, refineries made ingots, and assemblers (of whatever flavour) made "things". In SE2, aside from the H2/O2 generators, all the production blocks make "things" - and that's confusing, even if it's supposed to represent tiered manufacturing.

We don't have to go back to Refineries=Ingots and Assemblers=Things, but how about we do something at least similar in SE2. Tier 1 production (whatever you want to call it) makes "bars, rods, and sheets" type of thing where each item only consumes one raw material (whatever it is). Tier 2 production makes some sort of simple assemblies that mixes raw materials and T1 products (in various combinations). Tier 3 production takes that one step further, and Tier 4 production is your top end "mass spectrometers, motherboards" and the like.

Also, having four different blocks where you can make "things" is super complicated. I can see it bringing a level of depth to the game, but there comes a point where it's just too much. If you want to keep all these production systems, maybe make a "Scada Block" - where you can just input your desired item and it will coordinate all the other connected production blocks to achieve the desired result. (Oooo, something NEW!) Actually, I'm putting that into a new thread...

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Don't forget about backpack - it is kind of "Portable Smelter" now... ;)


The main problem with SE2 system clearly visible on diagram at https://2.spaceengineersgame.com/space-engineers-2-vs2-planets-survival-foundations-live-now/ is that all blocks consume "Raw Materials" and Gearforge consumes all kinds of inputs which is really confusing.


Also refinery does not refine anything. It produces physical items without clear logic how production of "silver rod" is different from production of "steel tube".


And we can anticipate that if the survival will be fully implemented (with food and maybe drink) then we will have 6th block equivalent to SE1 "Food Processor" - because Gearforge despite "Consumables" output in description does not look like something which is suitable for food production....


Also "Gearforge" description says "Weapons & Ammo" but it looks like planned for handheld weapons only (similar to handheld tools) so I don't expect it will produce artillery shells or railgun coils.


I would simplify your idea a bit, without mixing tiers in single block and with my suggestion of "tier" names:


  • Tier 0 - Backpack => Welder Fabricator Module (accepts raw materials and fabricates basic components out of them straight to handheld welder), yes module - so it can be optional or upgraded ;)
  • Tier 1 - Smelter => Fabricator (accepts raw materials and fabricates simple components - bars, rods)
    Tier 1 - Refinery => Refinery (accepts raw materials and refines them into complex MATERIALS = things which can't be used in blocks directly)
  • Tier 2 - Assembler => Assembler (accepts simple components ONLY and assemblies them together into complex components)
  • Tier 3 - Fabricator => High-Tech Assembler => accepts complex components and complex materials and assemblies them together into high-tech components)
  • Tier 4 - Gearforge => Device Assembler => accepts components of any tier and assemblies them into functional devices: tools/weapons (leaves room for portable fully functional "single component blocks" which are carried in inventory and placed on grid ready to go without need of assembly - for example portable light combining battery and light source)
    Also there were some news about "wrappers" that can contain all components needed to build specific block. For me it would be Tier 4 Packager which takes components as input and produces single physical item of component packaging.

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Tier 5 Bio-synthesizer and corpus regeneration chamber.

(like the one from the Fifth Element that rebuilt Leeloo)

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There is a search bar for crying out loud... Not sure what list your block is under? Just type the name in search bar and done... Not complicated at all... It was confusing at first, but makes complete sense if you actually think about what a block's function is... Instead of looking at 200 blocks like SE1, you're looking at a filtered list, how is this a problem?


How is having 4 blocks that make components too complicated? They are tiered in a fashion to make all 4 still feasible and necessary. Unlike SE1 which used 1 block to create EVERYTHING and 1 block to smelt EVERYTHING, it now has 4 blocks in tiers to create components... Personally, I think it is better than REPLACING an old block that is literally pointless to keep with an upgraded block that literally adds only a handful of new items yet renders anything previous as obsolete. In a factory, you had more than 1 block didn't you? So now you replace all your old blocks with new blocks while replacing all piping because the blocks are completely different size, no longer necessary to completely rearrange your base! Oh right, but then I bet you raced through the SE1 block progression to skip this didn't you?


Yeah the naming of a couple production blocks is confusing, but once built it took me 5 seconds to understand what it did. Again, not complicated. How is silver rod different from steel tube? Oh I don't know, maybe the fact it requires silver instead of iron??? You seriously need a written tutorial on the difference in production of every component? Gotta be joking here right?


Anything on weapons is pure speculation, as they aren't implemented yet, so? You nor I have any idea what produces ammo! "Consumables" are med kits, battery packs, etc, as they are 'consumed' upon use. Is food/drink even confirmed to be in SE2? I haven't seen anything from devs saying we're getting food/water, though this does not mean we won't.


Curious, as you rename every block in game, how does gearforge not compute? Gear = tools, guns, clothing, etc... Forge = a process of construction. Makes complete sense as is...

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Confusion is not about blocks because there are just 5 (not 4) of them (1. Smelter, 2. Assembler, 3. Refinery, 4. Fabricator, 5. Gearforge) but about assignment of items as their outputs and that all of these blocks consume exactly same set of raw materials.


And if you say you can memorize in 5 seconds which item is produced by which device then this is of course only because we are all dumb and you are only enlighten one. We already know this. No need to remind us our ignorance. But the game needs more than 1 genius player to be successful....


There is no logical reason why "Mainframe" (which in RL is quite simple assembly of complex parts) and "Laser" (which is opposite - precise processing of advanced semi-conductor and optics) are on equal level of advancement and require huge Fabricator, while "Reactor Core" is produced only by Assembler, and why Electronic Parts are coming from basic Smelter which well... looks like it can (s)melt iron ore into shape of tubes or sheets... but at same time can somehow magically shape motors and electronic parts.


On the other hand Smelter can't melt silver to form rods, can't shape antenna of radio-communication from iron and can't make pressure pipe (made of nickel and lead - both already processed by Smelter for other components).... anyways...


Compare this mess with diagram and description from July 2025 where it was much more logical: https://2.spaceengineersgame.com/space-engineers-2-preview-the-fabricator-survival-production-chain/ and clearly shows that smelter and refinery MELT raw materials, which makes sense that SMELTER is "basic refinery" and melts IRON but can't melt SILVER which is a task for bigger REFINERY which can melt both.


The reason might be very simple. The logic existed in July 2025 where possible production chain of increased processing and assembly could look like: Silicon => Electronic Parts (Smelter) => Motherboard (Assembler) => Mainframe (Fabricator) and it was changed later without rework of complete system.


Other issue is that currently all production blocks consume RAW materials, so it is not only about remembering the outputs (components) but also inputs. Instead: RAW -> SIMPLE -> COMPLEX -> HIGH-TECH we have total mix, and all eat same RAW resources.


As the result player must feed devices manually (and remember inputs) or they will just compete over (currently half baked and bugged) conveyor network to grab ores not only common like iron or cobalt.... but also rare like lead or gold.


Good luck with trying to separate iron for production of Steel Plates in Smelter, Heavy-Duty Plates in Assembler and Stainless Steel in Refinery in a same time for bigger builds.


And without "metals" (I'm scarred to mention "ingots") mistakes can't be undone so very learning experience for players who run out of ore, waste time for scouting and mining trip just to get stockpile of useless parts because they forgot to clear queue of other device which managed to consume that ore first.


Just few examples other than iron:


  • Chromium is consumed by Smelter (Chrome Coating) and Assembler (Chemical Synthetizer, Reactor Core)
  • Cobalt is consumed by Smelter (Metal Grid), Assembler (Combustion Chamber, Hard Drive) and Gearforge (Jetpack Fuel Tank, Medkit), Refinery (Permanent Magnet)
  • Copper is consumed by Smelter (Wire), Assembler (Chemical Synthesizer, Compressor, Ion Chamber, Motherboard, Radio-Comm Module), Gearforge (Medkit, Suit Battery)...
  • and so on... and so on.... all details are here:
    https://spaceengineers2.wiki.gg/wiki/Category:Natural_Resources

Food production block

I can't imagine SE2 without introducing food in SURVIVAL game mode, especially when finally it was added in SE1. Better late than never. But SE1 is old game and it is not 2015 anymore. Competition in sci-fi based survival games grown up. In SE2 we even don't have even oxygen now, but this is preview and completely understood - no oxygen, no food. Let's wait.

Ammo

As member of dumb population I might have difficulties with basic reading but even me can read "Gearforge" -> "Weapons & Ammo" on diagram which I linked earlier. So I expect Gearforge manufactures ammo. All kinds of ammo.

And my simple mind will be confused if it happens that I will build Gearforge just to learn that it is only for subset of ammo (hand weapons). But let's wait.


Last but not least:

Forge is not a "process of construction" but heating and shaping a metal. One can forge a sword or horseshoe, not a precision device like welder, drill or medkit assembled from many parts produced in various technologies other by heating and shaping a metal.... this is not Medieval Engineers.

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Perhaps you don't know the definition of construction, but it broadly means the creation of something from other somethings, combining things to create something else, or even creating things from itself by changing itself... A forge is most definitely a process of construction, just not constructing a building... That's a wower right there...


I never said food wouldn't be in game, literally pointed out it very well might be... All I said was I don't think food/water has been confirmed by devs... I also know SE1 didn't have food until recently, but like you kind of expect food to be coming to SE2.


Confusion most certainly IS in the naming(like I said only on a couple blocks), or what exactly do you think a smelter does really? I never said I memorized what blocks made what in 5 seconds, I said I understood what they did in 5 seconds, AKA I understood the smelter didn't actually smelt but it was producing components... So, you were being a smart arse completely twisting my words into your little narrative for what reason? English is real hard apparently? I guess you really can't read? It's also literally just a push of a little button to cycle through your production buildings to find what you need to build, so what's the problem???


Mainframe(1943)/Laser(1960)/Reactor(1942)... Your statement in that paragraph, is literally stating you're confused why the smelter is making components... Yet say it's not the naming of blocks that's confusing... The fact that block is named smelter is your confusion... OMG... And whining that some component is in the wrong tier, even though IRL the reactor core was made first of the 3 you list! LOL you go buddy, you're on a roll here!


All production blocks don't consume raw materials either, the fabricator has literally ZERO raw ore input LOL!!! Another claim blown out of the water...


I admittedly didn't bother opening your link from 6 months ago, knowing everything they publish always says WIP on it... It's 6 months old... I've been in game, and own multiple gearforges, and also know what they make. Knowing what it makes, I can almost guarantee you that hand weapons are made here. Ammo however, I wouldn't be so sure. On one hand I can see all ammo made in one place, but on the other I can see them mixing them in the tiers of blocks. In other words, artillery being tier 3 and gatling ammo tier 2, which means different block. We'll find out soon, so who really cares? Speculation is just that, no matter what your WIP drawing says...


I've made both steel plates and heavy armor at the same time and it worked just fine automatically out of my cargo container. Perhaps you should make sure you have enough ore, pipe properly, or learn how to queue properly, because the system works just fine! Nah, instead you make these false claims it doesn't work. I've literally ran 3 or 4 production blocks simultaneously while I made mining runs, your rep just hit the gutter... You can't use forgetting a queue in production as an excuse for literally anything, what the??? That's your(or mine) own fault!!!

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I agree that the system still needs work. I look at the SE2 flowchart and it hurts my brain. Also, it makes it look like the Gearforge is the end-all block, when actually the Gearforge is probably one of the first. I think part of my confusion is the naming of things.

Smelter & Refinery basically do the same thing, just one is WAY bigger. However, without ingots these blocks feel a bit confusing, like something in between a refinery and a basic assembler. So these blocks now sort of do two things: smelting and assembling, but also eliminating a logical step in the production process (making ingots.) I liked SE1 where you had a BASIC refinery and big refinery. Strightforward enough, and implied that the basic did only a limited number of things.

To make simple components I go where? At first I thought gearforge because it was a small production block. Well that makes tools. Then why isn't it called the TOOL forge or TOOL kit? No, where I need to go to make simple items is... the Smelter? Seems odd.

If I need to make the next level of components, which seem very arbitrarily selected, I go where? Personally I would think a Fabricator. Why? Well you have to fabricate parts before you assemble them into more complex components (Assemblies!). You don't assemble then fabricate. So these two feel backwards to me.

So the last block in the construction chain is the Fabricator. Something that drives me kind of nuts is the visuals of this block. Don't get me wrong, it looks AMAZING. But what does it show? A GEAR being made. One might even say FORGED. So I confuse this block with the Gearforge (which makes tools.) A look at the list of items the fabricator makes, none of them are gears, or even seem like they would need a big old gear?

I think it would help if components were more clearly categorized into complexity. An example of a confusing aspect is every production block makes a different version of plates. Plates seem pretty basic to me? Motors, which are made by the Smelter, are an assembly of relatively simple parts. So they should be made by assembler? It all gets very confusing and arbitrary for gameplay purposes.

My last issue is the backpack. I don't quite know how I feel about it. Yes, it makes things easier, but also sort of too easy? Like why would I ever make a smelter if I can just backpack make everything? I don't know what the best solution here is, but I don't think it's quite fully baked as is.

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3

Exactly my thoughts:

Smelter/Refinery melts raw materials and give them basic shapes ("filaments") => Fabricator (3D printer which consumes filaments and fabricates parts from various materials) => Assembler (automated assembly line which takes required parts and assemblies complex devices).


I understand that Assembler is high-end device so there is a need for limited "Basic Assembler" which will assembly less-complex devices (like drills, welders or medkits) from smaller parts. According to Keen's diagram it also produces consumables so I would probably call it "Equipment Assembler" maybe.


But why "big" assembler "Fabricator" can't do it?

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I like the term "filaments" for 3D printers. Just make refinery and smelter produce "filaments" and call it a day :) They will play a role of ingots ofc, but we can pretend that we have now something "new" and "cool" :)

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