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Post by khamya9 on Dec 12, 2014 14:50:02 GMT -5
So on the north/south axis all squares outside the green zone are brown and allow refueling. On the east/west axis, four are not. Not sure if this is intended, or if all should be brown or all red. But I tested and it is not just a display bug, the refueling works as the map colors show.
The 7x7 Grid looks like this ( r = red, b = brown, g = green, p = planet)
R r r b r r r R r b g b r r R r g g g r r B g g p g g b R r g g g r r R r b g b r r R r r b r r r
I'm guessing either the third and fifth rows are missing two browns, or the second and sixth have too many.
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Post by khamya9 on Dec 17, 2014 16:28:02 GMT -5
Update: still present in 2.0.3
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Post by Cory Trese on Dec 18, 2014 0:22:38 GMT -5
It is intentional, but I might change it.
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Post by Awesomdary on Dec 18, 2014 1:55:41 GMT -5
It is intentional, but I might change it. It makes invasion/defending on the east/west axis a bit harder, but in general I don't lose sleep over it... But I do tend to move in above or below when attacking, and then move up or down almost in lines... and keep my ships further back when defending on the east/west axis, so I can get my ships in a refuel spot when they go to shoot the enemy.
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Post by Cory Trese on Dec 18, 2014 10:22:57 GMT -5
I find the asymmetry of it pleasing, and it makes for some interesting positioning advantages / disadvantages.
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Post by Brutus Aurelius on Dec 18, 2014 16:06:52 GMT -5
I find the asymmetry of it pleasing, and it makes for some interesting positioning advantages / disadvantages. I find that it makes sense, for the farther you go from the settlements, the less fuel you can carry and not burn, while still having fuel for return trips.
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Post by khamya9 on Dec 18, 2014 16:58:43 GMT -5
I find the asymmetry of it pleasing, and it makes for some interesting positioning advantages / disadvantages. I find that it makes sense, for the farther you go from the settlements, the less fuel you can carry and not burn, while still having fuel for return trips. The distance makes sense, the assymetry is unusual. Didn't think it was intentional. But now I know. And knowing is half the battle. YO JOE!
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