I just played a "Beeline to Hab Dome" game and complained the entire time, then turned around and broke my Transcend speed record.
I had Hab Domes for maybe 22 turns before transcending ... how big an impact could Hab Domes have had over 22 years? How much longer would it have taken if, after researching the tech, I simply didn't build any, leaving all bases at size 16?
I'm still trying to figure out whether the relentless focus on getting to Hab Domes had anything to do with it or not. For most of the game it "felt" like things were going slowly, which is completely at odds with what was really happening.
Did that "feeling of being behind" cause me to make better decisions? Or was it the Hab Domes themselves, miraculously compressing the rest of the game into 22 years of frenetic growth?
I'm nonplussed, so I thought I'd put the question to the Apolyton SMAC-X Academy. Beeline to Hab Domes: clever strategy or Dumbo's "magic feather"?
(For you non-Americans, Dumbo was a Disney movie in which a flight-capable animal incorrectly attributes its ability to fly to a "magic feather" rather than intrinsic aerodynamic qualities.)
I had Hab Domes for maybe 22 turns before transcending ... how big an impact could Hab Domes have had over 22 years? How much longer would it have taken if, after researching the tech, I simply didn't build any, leaving all bases at size 16?
I'm still trying to figure out whether the relentless focus on getting to Hab Domes had anything to do with it or not. For most of the game it "felt" like things were going slowly, which is completely at odds with what was really happening.
Did that "feeling of being behind" cause me to make better decisions? Or was it the Hab Domes themselves, miraculously compressing the rest of the game into 22 years of frenetic growth?
I'm nonplussed, so I thought I'd put the question to the Apolyton SMAC-X Academy. Beeline to Hab Domes: clever strategy or Dumbo's "magic feather"?
(For you non-Americans, Dumbo was a Disney movie in which a flight-capable animal incorrectly attributes its ability to fly to a "magic feather" rather than intrinsic aerodynamic qualities.)
Comment