FTL: Faster Than Light: Difference between revisions

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- Free up some power by turning off Medcenter when nobody needs to be healed!
==General Advice==


- Hit as many systems in each sector as you can without risking your supply levels and hull- the scrap and items you get from doing so are what keep you ahead of the power curve.
* It's a good idea to start on easy difficulty. The game's still no pushover until you get a grip on the systems and it gives you extra currency (scrap) so you're more free to experiment with different upgrades. It also isn't too bad an idea to leave advanced mode disabled until you've beaten the game once.


- Open doors change oxygen levels faster than closed ones. Generally, keep an open flow from your O2 system to any part of your ship you want to have good air. If you're suffocating boarders try to keep them away from your oxygen system. Close doors on breaches if you're not currently fixing them. If you have to do repairs in a low oxygen area, close doors leading to other low oxygen areas and open doors leading to ones with better O2 levels. Do all this shit while paused!
* Try mousing over everything, the game's pretty good about providing info. The ship upgrade screen has extra tabs if you want to review what bonuses your crew gets due to their species or more detailed descriptions on your weapons.


- If you want to take out the enemy weapon system in the early game, as soon as combat begins put the Artemis on their shields and your burst laser on the weapons. The Artemis fires slightly faster and will drop their shield before the laser gets there, letting all shots hit the weapon system. This will work on any enemy with only one shield point, because a system's HP is equal to the amount of power capacity it has, and a shield system requires 2 power per shield point: even if their shield generator is at level 3, the two Artemis damage will drop it to under two power, allowing your lasers through.
* Visit as many systems as your supplies and hull allow - the scrap and items from them keep you ahead of the power curve.


- Look at your enemy's systems before you begin combat! Pause to do so if needed. If they have a teleporter, a cloaking system, a drone control etc., these are things you need to be aware of.
* Check the map for merchants before spending your scrap on upgrades, and visit them as late as you can to have as much available scrap as possible.


- Identify your enemy's drones! It's easy to waste valuable missiles if you're not paying attention and they have a drone up shooting them down. Mousing over a drone will tell you what it is- do this while paused.
* Rejecting someone's surrender offer means fewer supplies but more raw scrap. Accepting a new crew member from a surrendering enemy is usually a good deal.


- Upgrade your sensors and doors! Level 2 Sensor upgrade costs only 25 scrap, Level 2 doors costs only 20. The sensor upgrade lets you see the enemy crew, where their ship is on fire, where it's breached, where they're out of oxygen, etc. The doors upgrade makes boarders have to attack closed doors to pass through them and slows fire spread and oxygen loss through closed doors. These upgrades will also increase the systems' health and don't require power to maintain.
* Wiping out an enemy crew tends to give better rewards than blowing them apart or accepting surrenders, but it takes a bit of preparation. You'll need to be able to board ships and win fights, set fleshy targets on fire, hit the crew with anti-bio weapons, or destroy their O2 generator and keep it broken long enough to suffocate them. Some ships, such as the final boss, can't be crew wiped.


- Upgrade your shields! For the vanilla ship in particular, your starting weapons are quite good for a while. It takes 100 scrap total to get your shield from 1 to 2 points- 50 for two levels of shield tech and 50 for two generator points. The amount of survivability this confers is enormous.
==Ship Management==


- Look at the map before you spend your scrap- is there an adjacent store? You can see distress calls and merchants in every node you've ever been adjacent to. Try to hit merchants in a roundabout way so you have as much scrap as possible when you get there, and make sure to check your map before you upgrade to see if you can go look at a merchant first. I've never seen a store node be dangerous, so you can just upgrade there if there's nothing you want.
* Upgrade your shields!  The amount of survivability this confers is enormous and for the vanilla ship in particular, your starting weapons are quite good for a while.


- It pays (literally) to be mean. Rejecting someone's surrender offer means less supplies (fuel, drone parts, missiles) and more raw scrap. If they're offering a crew member, as slavers usually will when attacked, that's usually a good deal- if not, decide if you need the supplies in their offer or raw scrap more.
* Upgrade your sensors and doors. The sensor upgrade lets you see inside the enemy ship, while the doors upgrade forces boarders to attack closed doors and slows down fire spread and oxygen loss through them.
 
* You can free up some power by turning off Medcenter when nobody needs to be healed.
 
* Open doors change oxygen levels faster than closed ones. Generally, keep an open flow from your O2 system to any part of your ship you want to have good air. If you're suffocating boarders try to keep them away from your oxygen system. Close doors on breaches if you're not currently fixing them. If you have to do repairs in a low oxygen area, close doors leading to other low oxygen areas and open doors leading to ones with better O2 levels.
 
==Winning Fights==
 
* Look at your enemy's systems before you begin combat to see if they have a teleporter, a cloaking system, a drone control, etc.
 
* If the enemy ship has shields, it's usually better to manually fire your weapons so they land simultaneously rather than shooting them asap or letting them auto-fire. Ion weapons can be an exception if you're using them to lock down shields and you may want to tweak the timing for things like missiles that you'd prefer to land first.
 
* Missiles are great for punching through shields, but don't waste them on small fry. Keep enemy missile launchers disabled if at all possible.
 
* Mousing over a drone will tell you its function. Don't waste valuable missiles if an enemy has a drone shooting them down.
 
* It's pretty hard to outright kill ship boarders with asphyxiation until the ship doors are well upgraded. You can still use it to weaken them and boarders will avoid low O2 areas which can be used to funnel them in/out of key areas. Usually the best option to fight in is the medbay since friendly crew can still be healed while fighting and even lvl1 makes them near immortal. There's some early impossible-seeming boarding events that can be solved just by sending all the crew to medbay, venting the rest of the ship, then intentionally letting the attackers into the medbay room with the crew and closing the door behind them.
 
* Drones tend to be a bit mediocre, but one notable superstar is the defense drone I, which targets incoming missiles. Missiles penetrate shields, so they're always a concern but the drone's an easy counter. It'll also shoot down boarding drones, making them an overall godsend in the last sector.
 
* When you do get to the final boss fight, you'll need some means to avoid damage. 3 or 4 shields, a powerful engine and a competent pilot may provide you with enough dodge rating to survive long enough to cripple its offense, but using a stealth system to avoid nasty volleys outright helps a lot. Other than that, prioritize destroing the more dangerous weapons systems first.


[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:Games]]

Latest revision as of 07:52, 30 November 2020

General Advice

  • It's a good idea to start on easy difficulty. The game's still no pushover until you get a grip on the systems and it gives you extra currency (scrap) so you're more free to experiment with different upgrades. It also isn't too bad an idea to leave advanced mode disabled until you've beaten the game once.
  • Try mousing over everything, the game's pretty good about providing info. The ship upgrade screen has extra tabs if you want to review what bonuses your crew gets due to their species or more detailed descriptions on your weapons.
  • Visit as many systems as your supplies and hull allow - the scrap and items from them keep you ahead of the power curve.
  • Check the map for merchants before spending your scrap on upgrades, and visit them as late as you can to have as much available scrap as possible.
  • Rejecting someone's surrender offer means fewer supplies but more raw scrap. Accepting a new crew member from a surrendering enemy is usually a good deal.
  • Wiping out an enemy crew tends to give better rewards than blowing them apart or accepting surrenders, but it takes a bit of preparation. You'll need to be able to board ships and win fights, set fleshy targets on fire, hit the crew with anti-bio weapons, or destroy their O2 generator and keep it broken long enough to suffocate them. Some ships, such as the final boss, can't be crew wiped.

Ship Management

  • Upgrade your shields! The amount of survivability this confers is enormous and for the vanilla ship in particular, your starting weapons are quite good for a while.
  • Upgrade your sensors and doors. The sensor upgrade lets you see inside the enemy ship, while the doors upgrade forces boarders to attack closed doors and slows down fire spread and oxygen loss through them.
  • You can free up some power by turning off Medcenter when nobody needs to be healed.
  • Open doors change oxygen levels faster than closed ones. Generally, keep an open flow from your O2 system to any part of your ship you want to have good air. If you're suffocating boarders try to keep them away from your oxygen system. Close doors on breaches if you're not currently fixing them. If you have to do repairs in a low oxygen area, close doors leading to other low oxygen areas and open doors leading to ones with better O2 levels.

Winning Fights

  • Look at your enemy's systems before you begin combat to see if they have a teleporter, a cloaking system, a drone control, etc.
  • If the enemy ship has shields, it's usually better to manually fire your weapons so they land simultaneously rather than shooting them asap or letting them auto-fire. Ion weapons can be an exception if you're using them to lock down shields and you may want to tweak the timing for things like missiles that you'd prefer to land first.
  • Missiles are great for punching through shields, but don't waste them on small fry. Keep enemy missile launchers disabled if at all possible.
  • Mousing over a drone will tell you its function. Don't waste valuable missiles if an enemy has a drone shooting them down.
  • It's pretty hard to outright kill ship boarders with asphyxiation until the ship doors are well upgraded. You can still use it to weaken them and boarders will avoid low O2 areas which can be used to funnel them in/out of key areas. Usually the best option to fight in is the medbay since friendly crew can still be healed while fighting and even lvl1 makes them near immortal. There's some early impossible-seeming boarding events that can be solved just by sending all the crew to medbay, venting the rest of the ship, then intentionally letting the attackers into the medbay room with the crew and closing the door behind them.
  • Drones tend to be a bit mediocre, but one notable superstar is the defense drone I, which targets incoming missiles. Missiles penetrate shields, so they're always a concern but the drone's an easy counter. It'll also shoot down boarding drones, making them an overall godsend in the last sector.
  • When you do get to the final boss fight, you'll need some means to avoid damage. 3 or 4 shields, a powerful engine and a competent pilot may provide you with enough dodge rating to survive long enough to cripple its offense, but using a stealth system to avoid nasty volleys outright helps a lot. Other than that, prioritize destroing the more dangerous weapons systems first.