Difference between revisions of "Combat"
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | {{Gameplay_Nav}} | + | <!--Top Nav Box--> |
+ | {| align=center | ||
+ | ! {{MainSection_Nav}} | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | {| align=center | ||
+ | | {{Gameplay_Nav}} | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | <hr> | ||
+ | <!-- End of Nav --> | ||
+ | |||
{{TOCright}} | {{TOCright}} | ||
RimWorld's Combat System may seem a little daunting to new players at first, however a few simple guidelines will have you ready to repel attacks and hold ground like a Pro. | RimWorld's Combat System may seem a little daunting to new players at first, however a few simple guidelines will have you ready to repel attacks and hold ground like a Pro. |
Revision as of 13:59, 26 February 2015
|
---|
|
RimWorld's Combat System may seem a little daunting to new players at first, however a few simple guidelines will have you ready to repel attacks and hold ground like a Pro.
In every fight there is 1 very important life saving rule to remember,
Always use whatever Cover is available!
Combat Basics
The Various Character roles play a big part in combat. Fighting type characters Commissar/Assassin/Pirates are ideal for combat, use these types first. Keep your commonly used weapons close to your base's front line, so that characters can equip them easily.
It's often handy to keep one unarmed character with only firefighting duties nearby during a fight, if a character catches fire they will run around in panic and likely die. So this extra character can help them out before they panic.
Characters will need rest if they take a lot of damage. This is when you can use the less combat skilled characters, have your injured character drop the equipped weapon and un-recruit them, then have your reserves pick up the weapon and fight in their place.
Security Defense Turrets with a wall of sandbags around them are an effective way to repel attackers, a few well armed characters with a turret will be hard to beat. Have someone on hand to deal with fires and to repair the turret.
Cover
Place your Sandbags in a U shape or zig-zagged pattern, as the extra bags will provide more cover spots for your characters. Walls can be used for lean-around cover and are great for flanking positions. Take care not to place your Sandbags too close to security defenses, as they explode when destroyed, damaging everything around them in a 3 tile radius (starting "outside" the turret).
Loose rubble near your base can be used by attackers as cover, be sure to have your characters clear away rubble as soon as possible. Ranged attackers will be much more exposed with all the rubble removed.
If you have the resources spare, you can make multi-level defenses, with rows of cover you can fall over. This may seem wasteful, but dead characters cost more than sandbags.
Enemy attackers will move around your defenses so keep your characters behind cover and fall back if you're being overwhelmed.
Flanking
Once enemies have moved into cover and begun shooting, they tend to stay in that spot, even if some of your colonists find their way around and manage to flank them. Since flanking shots are much deadlier than if you were shooting over rock rubble, you should try to do this whenever you can; I've had plenty of luck with flanking a trio of enemy snipers by running from rock to rock, using their long cooldown between shots to my advantage, and prioritizing the ones with the best shooting skill first. If you design your defense network with this sort of thing in mind, you can gain a massive advantage over most enemies that come your way.
Aftermath
Your characters will slowly become tired and hungry, eventually leading to a mental break if you don't take them off draft (R). Return all drafted colonists to normal control so they may work on cleanup and repair. Select dropped weapons and corpses and uncheck forbidden to allow colonists to move them. Build graves, set up a dumping stockpile accepting corpses, or set a bill for butcher table or crematorium to dispose of bodies and prevent colonists from taking a mood penalty.