Friday 20 April 2012

Battle Pirates Cheats Guide - Resources


There are four types of resources in Battle Pirates: oil, energy (wind), metal, and zynthium. These are used to make new buildings, upgrade existing buildings, do research in two labs, make, repair, or refit ships, and make defensive walls.
You can make oil rigs, wind turbines, metal foundries, and zynthium refineries in your base to get a small trickle of resources on a lengthy timer. Unlike most other Facebook MMORTS games, however, the resource generators in your own base won't give you enough resources to play very fast at all.
So where do you really get resources in Battle Pirates?






Salvage Fleets


A salvage fleet is a boat filled with roughly equal amounts of all four resources. These spawn on the Battle Pirates map next to active player bases, at a level appropriate to the player. Initially they belong to the Draconians, the computer-controlled pirates in the game, and have a red flag with a black dragon. Salvage fleets that have been captured by another player fly a red flag with a skull, and salvage fleets that you've captured fly a white skull flag.
As salvage fleet level goes up, so does the amount of resources it contains, but also how well-defended it is.
Level 1 salvage: up to 25,000 total resources - next to level 1-5 players
Level 2 salvage: 25,000-50,000 total resources - level 5-10 players
Level 3 salvage: 50,000-100,000 total resources - level 10-15 players
Level 4 salvage: 150,000-200,000 total resources - level 15-20 players
Level 5 salvage: 300,000-400,000 total resources - level 20-25 players
Level 6 salvage: 600,000-800,000 total resources - level 25-30 players
Salvage fleets are an excellent way to get lots of resources quickly when you need some of everything. On the downside, they appear somewhat randomly and can take some searching to find.


Salvage Etiquette


As a general rule, s/he who put in the work of capturing the salvage should get to keep it. If you're inclined to play well with others, don't steal other people's salvages. (Unless it's been sitting there for several hours.) Otherwise: be aware that just because you don't see any of their fleets in the area at the time, they can still see you steal it.






Mines


Then there are mines. These are islands of a single resource type in the middle of the ocean, surrounding a Draconian base, ranging in level from 1 to 10. As mine level goes up, so does the speed of mining. Like the salvage fleets, the defending Draconians are more powerful for higher level mines, though not as powerful as the same level of salvage. A level 6 mine has the same guarding fleet as a level 4 salvage. Unlike the salvage fleets, you won't always have to fight to capture a mine.


How Mines Work


Mines start out with a defending Draconian fleet. The first player fleet to attack it will face the full healthy fleet. If the Draconians win, the second fleet to attack will face a damaged fleet, and so on until the Draconians lose all their ships. The victorious player gets a small bonus to their own resource generators while they own the mine. They can mine from it, defend it without mining, or release it.
The Draconians send out fleets regularly (about once per hour) to recapture player-owned mines. If the owner doesn't have a fleet there, the mine returns to the Draconians and the next player to attack it will face a full healthy fleet. If the owner is there but loses, the next player will face a damaged fleet. And finally, if the owner voluntarily releases the mine when they're done mining, the mine will fly a Draconian flag but won't have a defending fleet at all - the Draconians think they already own it and therefore they don't need to send a fleet to fight for it. This makes it much easier for the next prospective miner.
The owner can also release the mine while mining if a Draconian fleet heads toward it. This will cause the fleet to touch the mine, discover their own flag, then turn around and go back to their base. The owner can then recapture and resume mining.






Mine Etiquette
First, you can't permanently own a mine even if you could somehow defend it from all other players, which you can't unless you don't plan to do anything else in the game except defend mines. It's not worth the repair bills, really. Eventually the Draconians will wear your fleet(s) down while you sleep, while other players attack your unguarded base. Instead, think of the resource mines more like gas stations.
High level mines have massively powerful fleets and are extremely difficult to capture. Releasing the mine voluntarily causes these fleets not to be there. Thus, the nice thing to do is to release the mine whenever you're done using it, especially if it's a high level one. Even if you're planning to come right back to mine some more, releasing it in between ensures that the Draconians won't steal it in your absence.
Finally, when first approaching a mine, send your fleet to a spot next to it rather than capture it directly. Sometimes someone else is heading for the same mine and gets there first. If your fleet is set to capture, it will attack their fleet.






Attacking Other Bases
Last but not least, you can attack other bases - any player base within five levels of you in either direction. How much you get depends on how much your target had at the time of your attack and what buildings you destroy. Resources are stored in the resource generators, the warehouses, and the outpost. You get a small percentage for warehouses (4% at the time of this article) and a larger percentage (8%) for the outpost.
A Word About Resource Management
Since most of your resources will come from your own actions on the map - whether salvaging, mining, or hitting other players - you have nearly full control of exactly how much you have on hand at any given time. The best way to avoid attacks from resource thieves (aka farmers) is to just not have anything to steal when you're not online. Keep it spent as fast as you take it in. Take advantage of damage protection bubbles as a good time to hoard, but spend it all before the bubble lifts.
Good resource management won't deter attacks from everyone. There are many other reasons why people attack in Battle Pirates. You might've attacked them, or annoyed them at the mines, or your base is next to their enemy whom they couldn't defeat so they hit you instead. Or they were bored. Resource theft is far from the prime reason for many players.


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