Alien Crossfire includes quite a bit more than what could have been done by editing. It includes a number of new facilities, secret projects, unit modules and special abilities and most importantly, there are some special rules for the alien factions that - without any experience on my part - I cannot image to have been possible to implement even by heavy modding.
I was a bit unspecific about the alien factions. They are both from the same race that left the monoliths, but they disagree strongly about what to do with planet. As it happens, ships from each faction arrives in orbit at exactly the same time, they have a dramatic space battle (shown in the SMAX intro movie) in which they are both hit. Because they lose communications with their home planet (see a pattern?) they cannot call for help unless they build some high-tech facilities that work as a special victory condition for the aliens. Even in their current emergency situation they are more open to alliances of convenience with human factions than to cooperate with each other. When they are in the game - and if you put them in, you have to use both - their conflict tends to shape the diplomatic landscape.
One has to concede that Alien Crossfire was a big expansion and it's easy to see that a lot of work went into it even without considering the graphics, new secret project movies, tech audios etc. The alien background story, however, is so cheesy (and has so many holes) that even fan fiction would find it difficult to keep up. In my lurking days, I followed the first few months of the Spartan Chronicles, a cooperative effort. Heavily focused on the Spartan military at the start, this story eventually created a vivid image of one possible interpretation of the SMAC universe. I thought that parts of it were brilliant, other parts I found horrible (I still remember a subplot about a secret submarine that was almost painful to read), but the enthusiasm of all the writers for their storylines was contagious. That story - and a few shorter ones - helped me to get immersed into the SMAC world which by nature (because it's science fiction) is less accessible than even the most unhistoric version of Civilization. Having said that, reading the fiction (even the official background story) is not at all necessary to enjoy the game.
Verrucosus
I was a bit unspecific about the alien factions. They are both from the same race that left the monoliths, but they disagree strongly about what to do with planet. As it happens, ships from each faction arrives in orbit at exactly the same time, they have a dramatic space battle (shown in the SMAX intro movie) in which they are both hit. Because they lose communications with their home planet (see a pattern?) they cannot call for help unless they build some high-tech facilities that work as a special victory condition for the aliens. Even in their current emergency situation they are more open to alliances of convenience with human factions than to cooperate with each other. When they are in the game - and if you put them in, you have to use both - their conflict tends to shape the diplomatic landscape.
One has to concede that Alien Crossfire was a big expansion and it's easy to see that a lot of work went into it even without considering the graphics, new secret project movies, tech audios etc. The alien background story, however, is so cheesy (and has so many holes) that even fan fiction would find it difficult to keep up. In my lurking days, I followed the first few months of the Spartan Chronicles, a cooperative effort. Heavily focused on the Spartan military at the start, this story eventually created a vivid image of one possible interpretation of the SMAC universe. I thought that parts of it were brilliant, other parts I found horrible (I still remember a subplot about a secret submarine that was almost painful to read), but the enthusiasm of all the writers for their storylines was contagious. That story - and a few shorter ones - helped me to get immersed into the SMAC world which by nature (because it's science fiction) is less accessible than even the most unhistoric version of Civilization. Having said that, reading the fiction (even the official background story) is not at all necessary to enjoy the game.
Verrucosus
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